Abstract

Female genital mutilation is a term used to describe a wide range of traditional practices that involves partial or total removal of external female genital for cultural, religious and social reasons. This cultural practice is a violation of human rights of child and women. This article is, therefore, aims at argue against the practice of Female Genital Mutilation. In doing so, the paper divides into three parts. The first part will discuss about the concept, origin, types and rationales of the practice of FGM, and highlight the practice from the Ethiopian experience. The second part will also examine the tension between the Universalist and cultural relativist approaches in regards to the practice of FGM. Universalists argument is against the practice of FGM as a harmful cultural practice that violates human rights of child and women. Whereas cultural relativists are supporting for the continuity of the practice as there is no culture which can evaluate other cultural practices as moral, ethical and valid or not, and as it is performed for the sake of cleaning the vagina of girls and make them ready to marry. The third part, which is the main focus of the paper, will analyses the human rights of child and women that violates by the practice of FGM like the right health, the right equality and sexual and physical integrity. Finally, the paper will end by the concluding remarks of the writers.

Highlights

  • Like many other concepts, there is some difficulty in defining the term female genital mutilation (FGM), sometimes known as female circumcision (FC)

  • FGM is a cultural practices that comprises all types of female genitalia, which ranges from Clitoridectomy/removing the tip of the clitoris up through infibulation/removing of all of the external female genitalia including some part of vagina using different methods [4,5,6]

  • Female genital mutilation has been an issue of the United Nations since1948 within the context of the universal declaration of human rights and it was seen as a harmful tradition practice in the 70s and 80s, during the United Nations year for women 1975-1989 [23]

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Summary

The Concept of Female Genital Mutilation

There is some difficulty in defining the term female genital mutilation (FGM), sometimes known as female circumcision (FC). Alexia [1] noted that there are different traditional practices of cutting of female genitals named as female circumcision, female surgeries, female traditional surgery, cutting and excision; FGM is a collective name that can be used in common. In other words, it is a term for any procedure performed for cultural or otherwise nonmedical reasons involving partial or complete removal of the female external genitalia or damaging them in some other ways. FGM is a cultural practices that comprises all types of female genitalia, which ranges from Clitoridectomy/removing the tip of the clitoris up through infibulation/removing of all of the external female genitalia including some part of vagina using different methods [4,5,6]

Origin of FGM
Rationales behind the Practice of FGM
FGM from Ethiopian Experience
Cultural Relativist Perspectives
International Human Rights Instruments against FGM
Human Rights Violated by FGM
Right to health The International Human Rights law including the Universal
Legal Documents
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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