• Lawmakers in Gambia are set to vote on Monday regarding legislation aiming to repeal a 2015 ban on women's genital cutting.
  • The bill is supported by religious conservatives, citing religious purity and cultural values, with Gambia's top Islamic body endorsing the practice as a virtue of Islam.
  • Jaha Dukureh, who underwent the procedure herself and witnessed her sister's death from it, voiced concern that repealing this law could lead to the erosion of other laws protecting women's rights.

Lawmakers in Gambia will vote Monday on legislation that seeks to repeal a 2015 ban on female genital cutting, which would make the West African nation the first country anywhere to make that reversal.

The procedure, which also has been called female genital mutilation, includes the partial or full removal of external genitalia, often by traditional community practitioners with tools such as razor blades or at times by health workers. Often performed on young girls, it is incorrectly believed to control a woman’s sexuality and can cause serious bleeding and death. It remains a widespread practice in parts of Africa.

Jaha Dukureh, the founder of Safe Hands for Girls, a local group that aims to end the practice, told The Associated Press she worried that other laws safeguarding women’s rights could be repealed next. Dukureh underwent the procedure and watched her sister bleed to death.

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"If they succeed with this repeal, we know that they might come after the child marriage law and even the domestic violence law. This is not about religion but the cycle of controlling women and their bodies," she said.

Gambia women

Women are seen queuing with their children at the rural hospital at Basse in Gambia. Lawmakers in Gambia will vote Monday on legislation that seeks to repeal a 2015 ban on women's genital cutting, which would make the West African nation the first country anywhere to make that reversal. (Tim Graham/Getty Images)

The bill is backed by religious conservatives in the largely Muslim nation of less than 3 million people. Its text says that "it seeks to uphold religious purity and safeguard cultural norms and values." The country’s top Islamic body has called the practice "one of the virtues of Islam."

Gambia's former leader, Yahya Jammeh, banned the practice in 2015 in a surprise to activists and with no public explanation. The United Nations has estimated that more than half of women and girls ages 15 to 49 in Gambia have undergone the procedure.

On Monday, a crowd of men and women gathered outside Gambia's parliament, some carrying signs protesting the bill. Police in riot gear held them back.

The chairperson of the local Center for Women’s Rights and Leadership, Fatou Jagne Senghore told the AP the bill is "aimed at curtailing women's rights and reversing the little progress made in recent years."

The president of the local Female Lawyers Association, Anna Njie, said the practice "has been proven to cause harm through medical evidence."

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UNICEF said earlier this month that some 30 million women globally have undergone the procedure in the past eight years, most of them in Africa but some in Asia and the Middle East.

More than 80 countries have laws prohibiting the procedure or allowing it to be prosecuted, according to a World Bank study cited this year by a United Nations Population Fund Q&A published earlier this year. They include South Africa, Iran, India and Ethiopia.

"No religious text promotes or condones female genital mutilation," the UNFPA report says, adding there is no benefit to the procedure.

Girls are subjected to the procedure at ages ranging from infancy to adolescence. Long term, it can lead to urinary tract infections, menstrual problems, pain, decreased sexual satisfaction and childbirth complications as well as depression, low self-esteem and post-traumatic stress disorder.