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London mum guilty of mutilating daughter in landmark FGM trial

by Emma Batha | @emmabatha | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 1 February 2019 18:29 GMT

Though the practice was outlawed 30 years ago, this is Britain's first conviction for female genital mutilation

By Emma Batha

LONDON, Feb 1 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A London mother was found guilty of subjecting her 3-year-old daughter to female genital mutilation on Friday in Britain's first conviction for FGM - more than 30 years after the practice was outlawed.

The Ugandan mother-of-two, who cannot be named for legal reasons, could face up to 14 years in jail.

Police and anti-FGM campaigners said the conviction sent a strong message that FGM was child abuse and would be prosecuted.

"It's going to send a shockwave around the community. It's a wake-up call. It will be a huge deterrent," activist Hibo Wardere told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

British interior minister Sajid Javid welcomed the "landmark conviction".

"(FGM) is a sickening, depraved form of child abuse and we will do all we can to ensure all perpetrators are brought to justice," he tweeted.

FACTBOX - How widespread is female genital mutilation in Britain?

Justice Philippa Whipple adjourned sentencing until March 8.

Police launched an investigation after the girl's parents rushed her to hospital on Aug. 28, 2017, following severe bleeding and doctors found three cuts to her genitalia.

In the following months the mother performed dozens of witchcraft spells - two involving cows' tongues with nails embedded in them - to try to silence investigators and the director of public prosecutions.

The girl's Ghanaian father, who was also on trial, was acquitted of FGM and of failing to protect his daughter from the risk of FGM.

During the trial, the 37-year-old mother told London's Central Criminal Court that her daughter had hurt herself falling from a kitchen worktop at their east London flat.

But the girl told police she had been held down and cut by a "witch". Her older brother later wrote a letter to police saying his mother had cut her.

Four doctors, including two leading FGM experts, said the cuts had been made with a sharp implement such as a scalpel and could not be explained by a fall.

The obstetrician who treated the girl told the jury her injuries were like cases of botched FGM he had seen in his native Sudan.

The court heard the mother turned to witchcraft to try to halt police investigations following her arrest.

Aside from the cows' tongues, police found 40 limes in a freezer at her home containing the names of people involved in the case with messages such "I freeze your mouth" and "I freeze you out of my life".

The mother, a former care worker, said she did not come from an ethnic group that practised FGM and no motive was given in court.

An expert on FGM said the practice was not connected to witchcraft.

However, the jury heard that the mother had sought help from a "prophet" to "cleanse" her daughter, via an online contact in Nigeria.

"CLOAK OF SECRECY"

Police and prosecutors in Britain have faced mounting pressure to secure a conviction for FGM, which was outlawed in 1985. Two previous trials ended in acquittals.

Lynette Woodrow of the Crown Prosecution Service said FGM had an "appalling physical and emotional impact".

"We can only imagine how much pain this vulnerable young girl suffered and how terrified she was," Woodrow said.

"We will not hesitate to prosecute those who commit this sickening offence."

Detective Inspector Allen Davis, the police lead on FGM, said the case showed that FGM was happening in Britain "behind a cloak of secrecy".

"We really need information from people in communities who know FGM is happening – which young people are at risk, and who is doing the cutting," he added.

An estimated 137,000 women and girls in England and Wales have undergone FGM, which affects diaspora communities from many countries including Somalia, Sierra Leone, Eritrea, Sudan, Nigeria and Egypt.

The internationally condemned practice typically involves the partial or total removal of the external genitalia.

Campaigners say the ritual - often justified for cultural or religious reasons - is underpinned by the desire to control female sexuality.

Britain's national children's charity, the NSPCC, described FGM as a "horrific practice" and said it hoped the case would give others the courage to speak out and end the silence around FGM.

World leaders have pledged to eradicate FGM, which affects at least 200 million girls and women globally, according to U.N. data.

(Reporting by Emma Batha @emmabatha; Editing by Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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