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BURKINA FASO: Genital mutilation -- a knife-wielder and a victim tell their tales - OCHA IRIN
Tuesday 22 March 2005
 
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BURKINA FASO: Genital mutilation -- a knife-wielder and a victim tell their tales


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]



©  IRIN

Razor blades, knives or in some cases shards of glass are used to cut the genitals

OUAGADOUGOU, 18 Mar 2005 (IRIN) - With her wrinkled face and toothless smile, Adama Barry does not look like a repeat offender as she shuffles from her cell in Ouagadougou’s only prison.

But the Burkinabe grandmother, dubbed “Ma Barry” by the prison warders, is serving her fifth sentence for mutilating or cutting the genitals of babies and young girls.

The Burkina Faso government has been waging a decade-long war to wipe out female genital mutilation (FGM). Part of that fight was a law, passed in 1996, making the practice a criminal offence punishable by up to three years in prison, or 10 years if the victim died.

Since then Barry, who says she is 55 but looks much older, has been hauled into jail five times. Her most recent arrest was in August 2004 after an anonymous tip to an anti-circumcision hotline reported that she was part of a group who had carried out genital mutilation on 16 girls between two and seven years old.

When asked why she had carried on wielding the knife, she said simply, “Satan was stronger than me.”

But, talking to Barry in one of Maco Prison’s dusty corridors, it becomes clear that tradition, social pressure, financial troubles and a lack of education also played their part. She said she couldn’t remember a time when she was not circumcised. “I was born like that,” she joked.

As an adult, Barry inherited the circumciser mantle from her aunt. “She asked me to come and learn. I said I didn’t have the strength or the courage to it, but then she asked me who was going to do it when she died?” the frail prisoner recalled. “So, little by little, I learned the practice.”

Barry said she took on the apprenticeship late in life because tradition dictates that only post-menopausal woman can circumcise girls. She earned around 1,500 CFA (US $3) for every girl she operated on and usually did several at the same time.

The money from circumcisions provided a big boost to Barry's income: previously, she had peddled peanuts and kola nuts on the streets of the capital, earning just enough to buy food.

The old woman recounts how her father took her out of school early, and talks wistfully about her classmates who stayed on and are now “big men doing important jobs.”

The grandmother doesn’t know how many girls she has circumcised, but more surprisingly, says doesn’t believe in the practice and hates making the initial cut.

“My hands shake and I still feel frightened. When the girls or the babies start to cry, I feel really sorry for them,” Barry said. “It’s the parents that bring the children, so I guess they have their reasons. I don’t see the advantages of it myself.”

Despite her lack of belief and previous stints in jail, she continued doing circumcisions until 2004. “The last time, when the parents came to ask me, I refused and told them it was against the law, but they kept coming back - three times they hammered on my door and insisted,” she recalled. “So I ended up doing it and I was arrested straight away.”

For this, her fifth offence, she was sentenced to three years in jail. Doctors who treated her victims said that one of them would have bled to death without immediate medical help because an artery had been severed.

In the yard on the way to the women’s quarters there is a mural of a girl bleeding from between her legs with a knife at her feet. A big red cross has been painted across the picture.

Barry looks at the painting as she goes back to her cell and says when she is freed this time, she will not be picking up the knife again. “Whoever it is that comes knocking, my answer will be the same: ‘No. No. No.’”

"I saw the knife and knew"

Across town, a young victim of female genital mutilation recalls the weekend that changed her life.

Kady is still living with the repercussions
As a carefree six-year-old, Kady went to visit her grandmother, expecting a weekend of sweets and treats. She left with blood dripping from her wounds after a bungled circumcision carried out in a dirty toilet.

Kady is now 18 but looks no more than 13: the botched genital cutting she suffered as a child seemed to stunt her growth and stopped her periods.

It is therefore no surprise that she is now firmly behind Burkina Faso’s drive to wipe out the practice. Speaking to IRIN at her home in the capital she recalled the day when she made the 40-km journey to her grandmother’s village of Sapone.

“They asked us to go round for sweets and eggs. When we arrived, three women caught me, bundled me into the toilet, pinned me down and undressed me,” Kady explained.

“I saw the knife and knew what was going to happen. I cried out, but I couldn’t find the words to speak.”

The lips of her vagina were cut and then stitched together, leaving just a small hole to allow urine and menstrual blood to escape. Then the old women made Kady jump over a fire, telling her it was part of the cure to ease the pain.

After two days, the pain had gone, but the psychological scars were still raw.

“I wouldn’t wash in front of the other kids - they laughed and teased me because I looked different down there,” she said.

Things got worse a few years later. The hole closed up completely and Kady’s medical problems began.

“Everyone got their periods and I didn’t. I wasn’t growing - all my friends towered above me. I spent the whole time feeling sad.”

It was only after her father died in 2000 that anyone thought of getting medical help for Kady. Her aunt took her to several doctors and two years ago she had an operation to repair the damage.

“Now I’m like everybody else,” she says, her face breaking into a wide smile. “I’ve even grown a bit, and the doctors say I should continue to do so.”

Kady hasn’t seen her grandmother since her circumcision but, if she ever bumped into her, she knows what she would say.

“I’d tell her not to do this to any more girls. It’s so dangerous, and can cause so many problems afterwards. I’d say, ‘Please grandmother, just don’t’.”

[ENDS]


Other recent BURKINA FASO reports:

Dial SOS Circumcision and stop girls being cut,  18/Mar/05

Thousands of migrants now living as strangers in their homeland,  18/Feb/05

Returning migrants struggle to pay for AIDS treatment,  1/Feb/05

Government needs help to increase numbers on ARV, aid workers say,  31/Dec/04

ECA and UNCTAD launch proposal to promote African investment,  22/Nov/04

Other recent Children reports:

UGANDA: Children suffering gross abuses in northern conflict, 22/Mar/05

NIGERIA: Fighting the many heads of the child-trafficking beast, 21/Mar/05

NIGERIA: Measles kills more than 500 children so far in 2005, 21/Mar/05

NEPAL: Focus on former bonded labourers, 21/Mar/05

MIDDLE EAST: MIDDLE EAST: Weekly round-up Number 13 for 12-18 March 2005, 18/Mar/05

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