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| Sudanese women walk in the capital Khartoum's district of Jureif Ghar (AFP Photo/ASHRAF SHAZLY) |
Khartoum (AFP) - Sudan's highest governing body Friday ratified a law criminalising female genital mutilation, a widespread ritual in the African country, the justice ministry announced.
The
sovereign council, comprising military and civilian figures, approved a series
of laws including criminalisation of the age-old practice known as FGM or
genital cutting that "undermines the dignity of women", the ministry
said in a statement.
The reform
comes a year after longtime president Omar al-Bashir was toppled following
months of mass pro-reform protests on the streets in which women played a key
role.
Sudan's
cabinet in April approved amendments to the criminal code that would punish
those who perform FGM.
"The
mutilation of a woman's genital organs is now considered a crime," the
justice ministry said, punishable by up to three years in prison.
It said
doctors or health workers who carry out genital cutting would be penalised, and
hospitals, clinics or other places where the operation was carried out would be
shut.
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| Sudanese women lift national flags by burning tyres as they take part in a demonstration on Sixty Street in the capital Khartoum, on May 23, 2020 (AFP Photo/Ashraf SHAZLY) |
Prime
Minister Abdalla Hamdok hailed Friday's decision.
"It is
an important step on the way to judicial reform and in order to achieve the
slogan of the revolution -- freedom, peace and justice," he tweeted.
The premier
vowed that Sudan's new authorities would "forge ahead and review laws and
make amendments to rectify flaws in the legal system".
Long
decried as barbaric
Nearly nine
out of 10 girls in Sudan fall victim to FGM, according to the United Nations.
In its most
brutal form, it involves the removal of the labia and clitoris, often in
unsanitary conditions and without anaesthesia.
The wound
is then sewn shut, often causing cysts and infections and leaving women to
suffer severe pain during sex and childbirth complications later in life.
Rights
groups have for years decried as barbaric the practice, which can lead to
myriad physical, psychological and sexual complications and, in the most tragic
cases, death.
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A doctor
gives medical advice about female genital mutilation to a woman
in Egypt, where
the practice is already banned (AFP Photo/Mohamed el-Shahed)
|
The
watershed move is part of reforms that have come since Bashir's ouster.
"It is
a very important step for Sudanese women and shows that we have come a long
way," women's rights activist Zeinab Badreddin said in May.
The United
Nations Children's Fund has also welcomed the move.
"This
practice is not only a violation of every girl child's rights, it is harmful
and has serious consequences for a girl's physical and mental health,"
said Abdullah Fadil, the UNICEF Representative in Khartoum.
The UN says
FGM is widespread in many countries across Africa, the Middle East and Asia,
affecting the lives of millions of girls and women.
In Sudan,
rights campaigners say the custom has over the past three decades spread to
remote regions where it was previously not practised, including Sudan's Nuba
mountains.
In
neighbouring Egypt, as in several other countries, genital cutting is now
prohibited. A 2008 law punishes it with up to seven years in prison.
Sudan's
anti-FGM advocates came close to a ban in 2015 when a bill was discussed in
parliament but then shot down by Bashir who caved in to pressure from some
Islamic clerics.
Yet many
religious leaders have spoken out against genital cutting over the years.



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