News Links
- Home
- News
- Business
- Editorial
- Draft Constitution
- Columnists
- Commentaries
- Cartoon
- Madd Madd World
- Pictures
- Special Reports
- Politics
- Parliament
- World News
- OdD nEwS
- Blogs
- Magazines
- Real Estate
- Agriculture
- Environment
- Travel
- Art & Literature
- Fashion
- Relationships
- Children
- Education
- Letters
- Point Blank
- Careers
- Celebrating Life
- Feedback
Poll
Your Say
Girl bleeds to death after undergoing FGM
Related Stories
What defines a woman?
An old man paid bride price but I escaped at night
Mrs Amina Siraj: First woman chief, North Eastern
Official decries high rate of FGM
Meru elders ban FGM
Girl defies culture, goes to class with baby
By Boniface Ongeri and Kepher Otieno
A woman was yesterday arrested after her seven-year-old daughter bled to death after female circumcision.
It is female circumcision season in Wajir District, despite concerted efforts to discourage the practice.
"She was brought to the hospital more than 24 hours after circumcision. By then it was too late to save her life," said Mrs Ardo Mohammed, a nurse.
She said the girl underwent infibulation, the worst form of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) common in North Eastern Province.
Police intercepted family members planning to bury the girl. An elderly circumciser was also arrested after a brief search.
Deputy OCPD Job Lesinayu said they would be charged with murder.
But relatives want the two released, arguing the death was pre-ordained.
Ritual’s defence
"No parent would want to see her child die. At least the police should allow her to mourn her daughter," a former councillor, Mr Kunow Ibrahim, said.
It has also emerged that the child was among three girls cut by the circumciser.
And the tragedy has not dampened the cultural mood with scores of other girls facing the knife.
Elsewhere, an estimated 85 per cent of the more than 100 girls who underwent the rite in December, last year in Kuria District have dropped out of school and forced into marriages.
Local anti-FGM campaigners, led by Maendeleo Ya Wanawake branch chairperson Beatrice Robi, yesterday criticised parents for allowing their daughters to be married early.
Outdated practice
Speaking during the burial of Nathan Tolo, father of The Standard Senior Online Editor, Dan Okoth in Rongo, Ms Robi attributed early marriages to poverty and outdated cultural practices.
Tolo, a pioneer teacher and church leader, died early this month, after an illness and was buried at his Kodero Bara home.
Robi said the drop-out rate was alarming and would affect the education of girls in the region.
"We have carried out a survey and found that 85 per cent of the girls have been married off. This is wrong," she said.
She also told The Standard they had compiled a list of the affected girls, and would hold a workshop to sensitise parents against the rite.
Read all about: FGM Female Genital Mutilation
Business
Kenya ranks top in EU grant list—envoy
The European Commission (EC) has given Sh1 billion in grants to local private sector.
The money will support 15 Non-State ...more
Sports News
ET: for SA
After two years of trudging the road to the Fifa World Cup finals in South Africa, the mosaic of 32 finalists is complete.
...more
Today's magazine
Woman's Instinct
Forensic dentist and beauty queen She struts the runway like she was born to do it and makes heads turn with her enchanting features, long mane and the fact that she is usually the only Asian on most catwalks in Nairobi. But 29-year-old Amrit Khalsi has another life: She traded the haute couture designer outfits for a lab coat and the runway for the Kenyatta National Hospital morgue.
Adverts



