| 08 Février 2018
February 2018 - Nine years ago, one community in Sudan decided to follow WHO  recommendations and abandon the practice of female genital mutilation  (FGM).
 Since then, Tuti Island, a community of 21 000 residents located at the  juncture where the White Nile and Blue Nile rivers merge, has been held  up as a trailblazer in a growing movement to end FGM.
 
 Today, more than 1000 communities in Sudan have abandoned the practice  which has no health benefits and continues to violate the human rights  of 200 million women and girls in Africa, the Middle East and Asia.
 
 “Tuti Island is a shining example of how a community can initiate and  sustain an effort to end FGM,” says Dr Wisal Ahmed, team leader in WHO  Sudan’s Women’s Health Unit. “We hope the other communities who have  declared abandonment in the past four years can also sustain progress.”
 Sudan has one of the highest rates of FGM in the world, with most girls  undergoing the practice between 5–9 years of age. Eighty-seven percent  of women aged 15–49 years have been cut, and the majority have undergone  the severest form – infibulation – where the genitals are stitched up  after cutting, leaving only a small opening for urine to pass.
 
 However, there are indications that the practice is decreasing among  younger girls, explains Dr Ahmed. “Only a third of girls aged 0–14 years  undergo FGM compared to 9 out of 10 girls aged 15–49 years.”
 
 A multisector programme to target the country’s high FGM prevalence
 
 Five years ago, WHO, joined the UNICEF and UNFPA programme supporting  the Government of Sudan, called “Sudan Free From Female Genital  Cutting”. As part of the programme, funded by the United Kingdom of  Great Britain and Northern Ireland’s Department for International  Development (DFID), WHO has been working to strengthen the health  sector’s response to FGM by halting “medicalization” – the practice of  FGM is performed by midwives and other healthcare providers.
 
 “FGM is a human rights violation breaching the health profession’s code  of ethics to ‘do no harm’. WHO and partner UN agencies are opposed to  the medicalization of FGM,” says Dr Naeema Al-Gaseer, WHO Country  Representative for Sudan.
 
 Working with the Sudan Ministry of Health, midwifery schools, and health  professional associations and regulatory bodies, WHO is ensuring health  professionals adhere to the recommendations laid out in its Global strategy to stop health-care providers from performing female genital mutilation.
As part of pre-licence training, all paramedical and midwives in the  country now receive information about the harms of FGM. To date, nearly  1000 health professionals have undergone the training. And, more than  2700 medical professionals in Sudan have pledged to abandon FGM and its  medicalization.
 
 Using WHO recommendations on the management of health complications from  FGM, the country is also working to ensure women who have undergone FGM  receive the care, treatment and counselling they need, and are not  repeatedly harmed when seeking care, especially after childbirth.
Educating young girls about the dangers of FGM is another component of  the multisector programme. Since more than 70% of girls in Sudan attend  primary school, WHO, in partnership with the Ministry of Education and  Ministry of Health, developed and integrated FGM content within the  school curriculum. Now girls learn that FGM is not a religious rite and  has significant short- and long-term negative health consequences.









