A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, September 8, 2018
Muslim groups call for female circumcision to be medicalised


2018-09-07
A number of Sri Lankan Muslim groups have called on the government to medicalise female circumcision.
In representations made to the Parliamentary Committee on Women and
Gender, members of the All Ceylon Jamiyathul Ulama, All Ceylon YMMA
Conference, Centre for Islamic Studies and United Religions Initiative
urged the Health Ministry to withdraw a recent circular prohibiting
medical professionals from carrying out female circumcision.
In their submission, the joint Muslim groups stated that the Muslim
community is very concerned about moves to ban this obligatory Islamic
duty on the grounds that it is Female Genital Mutilation (FGM).
“We wish to categorically state that the practice of female circumcision
is an obligatory Islamic duty, that it confers numerous benefits and is
not Female Genital Mutilation. As such we condemn all moves to ban the
practice of female circumcision by legislation and/ or by government
bodies and urge that no moves be taken in this direction which we will
regard as an unwarranted intrusion on and infringement of our religious
duties guaranteed by the law and constitution of the Democratic
Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka”, the Muslim representatives said in
their submission. “We also request the Ministry of Health to withdraw a
recent circular it issued prohibiting medical practitioners from
performing the procedure and to issue a fresh circular excluding Islamic
female circumcision a.k.a hoodectomy from the definition of FGM”
Joint Spokesperson Noor Hazeema Haris said that although Muslims
wholeheartedly support the abolition of traditional practices harmful to
women and children such as FGM, in case it is shown to exist in Sri
Lanka, the Islamic practice of female circumcision is vastly different.
She pointed out that this religious obligation practiced by the Muslims
of the country for centuries in keeping with the requirements of the
Islamic faith is not FGM. This was evident from the Joint Ministry of
Health (MOH) and WHO report on Violence and Health in Sri Lanka in 2008,
which states categorically that FGM does not exist in Sri Lanka.
She pointed out that while countless Sri Lankan Muslim Women have
undergone childbirth deliveries in Governmental and Private Hospitals
over the past decades, not a single case has arisen where Muslim women
have been shown to have undergone FGM. It is therefore very clear that
Sri Lankan Muslim women have never experienced FGM.
She further pointed out that female circumcision practiced by Muslims is
a very minor procedure similar to male circumcision where the prepuce
of the clitoris is removed. This is the same as hoodectomy which is a
legal cosmetic procedure chosen by women to improve genital hygiene and
enhance their sex lives.
“It is something that is arranged and done by women. Those who say this
is male oppression against women are mistaken. It is we who do it just
like our mothers and grandmothers and countless generations of our women
have done. We continue to practice it because we know it benefits us.
Even educated Muslim women support it wholeheartedly”, she added.
The submission concluded that female circumcision like male circumcision
is a religious obligation for Muslims and that their religious rights
as Sri Lankan citizens are safeguarded by the Constitution of Sri Lanka.
Since this is a religious obligation, almost all Muslim Women and girls
would have to undergo the procedure by hiring the services of
traditional female circumcisors known as Ostha Mamis in case doctors
refuse to perform this procedure citing the above mentioned circular.
This could lead to serious medical complications which would amount to
FGM.
If as medical complications have arisen among some women circumcised by
Osthamaamis as alleged by Women’s Rights groups, it is all the more
reason to medicalise the procedure instead of prohibiting it, which will
only drive the procedure underground and put girls and women at
unnecessary risk.
“We therefore urge the Parliament of Sri Lanka to reject any legislation
drafted with a view to prohibit the practice of female circumcision as
it will be infringing on the rights of Muslims to the free practice of
their faith.We also urge that the Ministry of Health immediately
withdraw the said circular and if needs be, issue a fresh circular
prohibiting FGM, but exempting the Islamic procedure of female
circumcision from the definition as done in other Muslim countries like
Indonesia” concluded the submission.
The Muslim Representatives included M.N.M.Naphiel, President of the All
Ceylon YMMA Conference, Asiff Hussein, Vice-President Outreach, Centre
for Islamic Studies, Noor Hazeema Haris, Co-ordinator of United
Religions Initiative, Sheikh M.F.M Farhan, Manager, All Ceylon
Jamiyyathul Ulama and Sheikh M.A. Haris, Co-Ordinator of the Fatwa
Committee of All Ceylon Jamiyyathul Ulama.
The committee agreed to give them a hearing and requested that medical
evidence be submitted to prove that female circumcision of the type
prescribed in Islam causes no harm and benefits women as stated by the
joint representatives.
