Michigan governor signs
laws banning female genital mutilation
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[July 12, 2017] By
Timothy Mclaughlin
(Reuters) - Michigan Governor Rick Snyder
on Tuesday signed legislation making genital mutilation of girls a state
felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison, both for doctors who
perform the procedure and parents who transport a child to undergo the
surgery.
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Genital mutilation of girls, typically involving removal of all or
part of the clitoris, is banned by several international treaties
but remains a common cultural or religious practice in some African
countries, including Somalia, Sudan and Egypt.
The package of 13 bills signed by Snyder, a Republican, was spurred
by the case of an emergency room physician, Jumana Nagarwala, who
was charged in April under federal law with performing genital
mutilation on two 7-year-old girls at a suburban Detroit medical
clinic.
Another doctor and his wife who ran the clinic also have been
charged in that case, believed to mark the first U.S. criminal
prosecution of its kind. The three defendants could face prison
terms of up to five years if convicted.
The three, who are members a small sect of Indian Muslims known as
the Dawoodi Bohra, according to local media reports, have pleaded
not guilty, court documents show.
Shannon Smith, an attorney for Nagarwala, has argued in court that
her client used a "scraper" on the girls' genitals to perform a
religious ritual but said that Nagarwala did not cut the girls, the
Detroit Free Press reported in April.
"Those who commit these horrendous crimes should be held accountable
for their actions, and these bills stiffen the penalties for
offenders while providing additional support to victims," Snyder
said in a statement.
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"This legislation is an important step toward eliminating this
despicable practice in Michigan while empowering victims to find
healing and justice."
The practice was outlawed in the United States in 1996, but
Michigan's laws are now tougher than the federal regulations. Prior
to Tuesday, 25 states had laws against the practice, according to
Equality Now, a women's rights organization.
A health professional convicted of female genital mutilation can
also have their registration or license permanently revoked, under
Michigan's new laws.
The World Health Organization has estimated that more than 200
million girls and women alive today have undergone genital
mutilation, which can cause lasting health problems.
(Reporting by Timothy Mclaughlin in Chicago; Editing by Richard
Chang)
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