Michigan Senate votes to outlaw female
genital mutilation
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[May 18, 2017]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - The Michigan Senate approved
legislation on Wednesday 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.
The legislation, which now goes to the state House of Representatives,
was spurred by the case of an emergency room physician charged last
month 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.
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.
State Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Rick Jones, a sponsor of the
legislation, cited recent expert testimony before his panel describing
Michigan as a "hotspot" for genital mutilation due to its large
community of immigrants from countries where such surgery is still
routinely performed.
"It's been hidden. But now that we're aware, we want to make a very
strong statement to the world - never again in Michigan," he said.
Aside from carrying tougher penalties than federal statute, Michigan's
legislation would allow arrests and prosecution by local law
enforcement.
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It also would close a federal loophole by outlawing transportation
of girls under age 18 within state boundaries for purposes of
undergoing genital surgery, Jones said. Parents or guardians who
bring children to Michigan from abroad or are found to have taken
them overseas for such procedures could likewise be charged.
The federal law, enacted in 1996, targets practitioners of female
genital mutilation as well as individuals who carry a child across
state lines to undergo the procedure.
The package of four Republican-sponsored Michigan bills cleared the
state Senate unanimously, and Jones said he expects swift House
passage and enactment by the governor in a matter of weeks.
Jones said female genital mutilation bans have been passed or were
under consideration in several other states, including Minnesota and
Texas, but he believed Michigan's would be the toughest.
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 Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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