The Daily Star, AFP, March 15, 2013
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| Rached Ghannouchi, leader of the Islamist Ennahda party that heads the new Tunisian government, speaks during a press conference in Tunis on March 15, 2013. AFP PHOTO / FETHI BELAID |
TUNIS: The
head of Tunisia's ruling Islamist party Ennahda insisted Friday that his group
was opposed to female circumcision, after one of its MPs caused a storm by
reportedly saying the operation was "aesthetic."
"We do
not approve of female circumcision, a practice supported neither by Ennahda nor
by religion, and which is not a part of our culture," Rached Ghannouchi
told a news conference in Tunis.
"Whoever
approves of female circumcision cannot remain within our ranks," he added.
Ennahda MP
Habib Ellouze sparked outrage in the north African country with comments he
reportedly made last week in an interview published in an Arabic newspaper.
"In
the (African) regions where it is hot, people are forced to circumcise girls
... because in these regions clitorises are too big which affects the
spouses," Ellouze was quoted as saying in the Sunday edition of Maghreb.
"There
are more circumcisions but it is not true that circumcision removes the
pleasure for women. It is the West that has exaggerated the issue. Circumcision
is an aesthetic surgery for women," he reportedly said.
But Ellouze
on Monday accused the newspaper of distorting his quotes, saying the journalist
"attributed remarks to me that I have not said."
Ennahda,
which heads the Tunisian government, is regularly accused of orchestrating a
creeping Islamisation of society and seeking to limit the rights of women. It
denies the charges.
The
International Organisation of Migration says around 100 to 140 million women
have suffered female genital mutilation around the world, mainly in Africa.

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