During the annual Universal Periodic Review of Human Rights at the 41st United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) session, Costa Rica urged India to take progressive steps to curb the practice of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) in the country.
On November 10, 25 member states recommended that India undertake enhanced action on this front. This is the first time that India has come under the global body바카라s radar for the prevalence of FGM, with Costa Rica calling on India to adopt the World Health Organisation바카라s definition of the practice and act to 바카라criminalise it and implement a national plan to eradicate it.바카라 Here바카라s all you need to know about India바카라s stance on FGM:
What is Female Genital Mutilation?
The WHO defines FGM as 바카라all procedures involving partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injuries to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons.바카라 Amongst the communities that practice it, it is seen as a coming of age ritual or custom that is meant to maintain the 바카라religious purity바카라 of the female body, by regulating and moderating sexual desires.
There are four types of FGM:
Type I - Partial or complete removal of the clitoris or clitoral hood.
Type II - Partial or complete removal of inner and/or outer labia including pricking/piercing.
Type III - Narrowing of vaginal opening by creating a covering seal.
Type IV - All other harmful procedures to the female genitalia for non-medical purposes.
It is primarily performed on girls on the verge of puberty or sometimes even earlier, between the ages of 1-15. The WHO cautions that more than three million girls are at risk of FGM globally every year.
How prevalent is it in India?
Presently there are no government estimates available to ascertain the incidence of FGM in India. In 2017, in response to a petition in the apex court, the Ministry of Women and Child Development had said that 바카라At present there is no official data or study which supports the existence of FGM in India.바카라
However, according to a report published by The Guardian in 2018, in India, Type I and Type IV procedures of FGM are prevalent amongst the Bohra sect of Shia Muslims, primarily in the states of Maharashtra, Kerala, Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Madhya Pradesh.
The report referred to a survey conducted by a WeSpeakOut against FGM, a coalition of Bohra women who commissioned the study, out of 83 female respondents, 75% had suffered some form of FGM, locally referred to as 바카라khatna바카라 or 바카라khafd바카라 in their early years. Mullanis, or traditional cutters perform the ritual cutting, which is a harrowing experience for the women.
What are the dangers associated with FGM?
The Guardian quotes Dr Sujaat Jenuddin Vali, a gynecologist who examined Bohra women during the course of the study, who revealed that 바카라Half of them feel some kind of irritation, while 30% either feel discomfort while walking/urinating or have lost sensitivity in the area.바카라
Besides the lifelong physical and psychological trauma that FGM is associated with, in the short term, the surgery causes excruciating pain, excessive bleeding, and can cause fever, infections, shock or even death. In the longer run, it can cause urinary and vaginal complications, and may even significantly complicate childbirth.
Furthermore, it curtails women바카라s sexual choices. Aaerfa Johari, a Bohra journalist, who underwent FGM at the age of seven, told The Guardian that 바카라We all were minors and unable to make our own choice. How can anyone say that her sexual life couldn바카라t have been more pleasurable? Nobody can give me that guarantee and that바카라s what frustrates me.바카라
Is there a law banning FGM in India?
Presently, there is no legislation that bans the practice in the country. In fact, the government바카라s denial to acknowledge its prevalence has stalled any such effort. Another hiccup in the enactment of a law is its conflict with freedom of religion enshrined under Articles 25 and 26 of the Constitution.
In 2017, a Public Interest Litigation filed in the Supreme Court by Human Rights activist Sunita Tiwari raised the issue. The PIL contends that the practice is violative of women바카라s constitutionally guaranteed right to equality (Article 14), protection against gender based discrimination (Article 15), right to life, bodily integrity and privacy (Article 21).
It also highlights that the right to freedom of religion is restricted on grounds of public order, health, and morality. Moreover, Tiwari바카라s advocate has submitted that the practice of FGM has no religious sanction in the Quran. In fact, the International Conference on Population and Reproductive Health in the Muslim World, held in 1998 at Al Azhar University, Egypt, had recognised that harmful practices such as FGM emanate from a misunderstanding of Islamic tenets.
The defendants in the case led by the Dawoodi Bohra Women바카라s Association for Religious Freedom have, however, contended that 바카라khatna바카라 is the practice of circumcision to attain 바카라religious purity,바카라 which is undertaken by both men and women in the community and is thus not discriminatory. They oppose a ban on the practice and reiterate that the right to perform religious practices is constitutionally protected under Articles 25 and 26.
So what has been the progress on the legal front?
In 2018, a bench of judges led by then Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi admitted the PIL and expressed concern over the harmful effects of the practice. Justice Gogoi opined that FGM has to scrutinised from the lens of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act since 바카라these petitions have been filed by women. And if they do not want it, then it cannot be imposed.바카라
The bench further upheld that even if FGM is defended as an 바카라essential religious practice,바카라 does not mean it is above constitutional morality. 바카라If we do not go by the constitution, then morality is left to the mob,바카라 the order said.
Based on a majority verdict, the PIL was subsequently clubbed with a batch of petitions addressing women바카라s rights in relation with religious freedoms: with Hindu women바카라s entry into the Sabarimala temple, Muslim women바카라s entry into mosques, and the entry of Parsi women married to non-Parsis into fire temples. In November 2019, the batch of petitions were referred to a seven judge bench.
Currently, since the Indian Penal Code (IPC) does not recognise FGM as a crime, the complaints are filed under Section 326 (voluntarily causing grievous hurt) which entails imprisonment of upto ten years.
Are there any international precedents?
Since 2003, the UN observes February 6 every year as the International Day for Zero Tolerance to FGM. The Sustainable Development Goals call for its elimination before 2030. The WHO has tagged FGM as a 바카라grave human rights violation,바카라 while a 2012 UN General Assembly has called for the worldwide elimination of FGM.
In this regard, more than 30 countries including the United States of America, the United Kingdom, and 27 African nations have banned the practice.
Activists insist that India must not look at a human rights issue through the lens of religious freedom when assessing its legality. Enacting a law to ban FGM will be the first step in tackling a deep rooted social issue.