The deaths of three girls have reinvigorated efforts to ban female genital mutilation (FGM) in Sierra Leone, where the practice is still widespread despite…
Sierra Leone, one of five countries that legally allow female genital mutilation (FGM), is facing renewed pressure to make it a crime after the deaths of three girls from the procedure on the same day made international news.
Adamsay Sesay, 12; Salamatu Jalloh, 13; and Kadiatu Bangura, 17, died in January after being cut on the first day of the Bondo initiation, a two or three week ritual that takes place in the bush, in which adolescent girls or young women are inducted into Sierra Leone’s secretive, pervasive, women only Bondo Society.
A CNN team was in Sierra Leone interviewing an anti-FGM activist, Rugiatu Neneh Turay, when she received a call alerting her to Jalloh’s death. They travelled with her to a village in the Kambia district of North West Province where they found the child’s body, five days after death, laid out in a hut awaiting police autopsy.
FGM deaths are often covered up, the bodies hastily buried, said Turay, unless somebody opposed to the practice complai
Following CNN As Equals’ reporting into the death of two girls who died after having their genitals cut in Sierra Leone, the Ministry of Gender responds.
turay fgm bondo sierra leone as equals intl cmd – CNN Interactives cnn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cnn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.