A teenage girl died after undergoing a botched female circumcision in
Sierra Leone, police said Thursday, just days after the death of a
10-year-old girl in Guinea.
Female genital mutilation is widespread in the neighbouring West
African countries, with about 90 percent of women in both countries
undergoing circumcision.
Teenager Fatmata Turay died after she was circumcised in an
initiation ceremony in the village of Mabolleh in north Sierra Leone;
and three women involved, including the girl’s aunt, have been arrested,
police said.
“There will be an investigation into the circumstances which led to
the death of this girl,” said vice minister of social affairs Rugiatu
Turay.
The death came just days after a 10-year-old girl in Makpozou, a
forested area in the south of Guinea, died in similar circumstances,
according to the country’s social action ministry.
The child died in a circumcision camp for young girls, the ministry said.
Guinea’s government urged communities that practise FGM to “stop
sacrificing the girls,” and said it was committed to the fight against
the “vile practice.”
Female circumcision is common in West Africa, where it is considered a
female rite of passage and where practitioners can earn up to $50 per
girl.

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