News

A nightmare within a nightmare: Taking on sexual and gender-based violence in humanitarian crises

UNFPA holds sessions raising awareness about gender-based violence, and the availability of support services, in a displacement camp in Yemen. © UNFPA Yemen
  • 28 May 2019
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News & Updates

News
AL HUDAYDAH/SANA’A GOVERNORATES, Yemen – Rokia Dukhna, 22, had been determined to become a midwife since her own mother endured a tragic experience during childbirth.  Ms. Dukhna grew up in the village of Al-Qahira…
10 February 2025 Read Story
Updates
New York, UNITED NATIONS – The Government of Germany has committed a total of €12 million to UNFPA’s Maternal and Newborn Health Fund until 2027. This funding demonstrates Germany’s steadfast commitment to protect…
13 January 2025 Read Story
News
UPPER EGYPT, Egypt – “People tell me we inherited this practice – that they’re doing it because their neighbours are doing it,” Georgi Wahba told UNFPA, the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency. In his…
02 January 2025 Read Story
When school holidays mean FGM
10 Aug 2017
For some girls, school holidays are not all fun and sunshine.
In countries like Guinea, Nigeria and Somalia, the vacation period could be called "cutting season," when the break from school means girls have time to undergo, and recover from, female genital mutilation (FGM).
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
“This is the peak season, when parents bring their children to be cut,” said Asha Ali Ibrahim.
In her community in Somalia, she is a circumciser, a role she inherited from her mother. She supports her family with income from the practice, and is considered the keeper of a cultural tradition. “Circumcision is important as a transition to adulthood," she said.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
Most of the girls she cuts are from her neighbourhood or the nearby displacement camp.
They are usually 7 to 10 years old. But she sometimes cuts girls visiting Somalia from abroad, who tend to be a little older. “It is a bit cumbersome to carry out the procedure on tissue that is more mature,” she said.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
The most common type of FGM in Somalia involves cutting the genitals, then sewing them closed.
This practice can cause significant and long-lasting medical problems, including haemorrhage, infection, complications in childbirth and even death
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
Ms. Ibrahim is clear-eyed about some of the dangers. She has taken girls to hospital when they bled excessively.
When her own daughter was cut seven years ago, the girl developed an infection and has never fully recovered.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
Ms. Ibrahim tries to prevent these problems.
She uses a new razor for every girl she cuts, and she treats their wounds with a powder she creates out of traditional herbs and antibiotic capsules.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
She gets many of her supplies from local pharmacies.
Her other tools include lidocaine, disposable syringes and cotton wool. She says she pours raw egg onto the wound to promotes healing, then uses a thick thread to sew the girls closed. Afterward, she cleans up with methylated spirits.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
Though she knows FGM is risky, Ms. Ibrahim denies it has serious consequences like childbirth complications.
Her granddaughter is due to be cut this season, but the procedure has been delayed because the girl has been ill.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
But Cibaado Ismail knows all too well the risks are real.
Her daughter died in childbirth at age 17; the baby died as well. Ms. Ismail blames FGM. “I have since banned all my 10 female grandchildren from being cut,” she said.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
At the Hargeisa Institute of Health Sciences, Asha Ali Suldan teaches midwifery students to discourage FGM.
The school – as well as local organizations, religious leaders and youth – have partnered with UNFPA to encourage community members and policymakers to abandon the practice.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
Ms. Suldan teaches her students how to manage FGM-related complications during childbirth, including how to cut open women who have been sewn shut.
The institute’s midwifery curriculum was recently revised, with help from UNFPA, to cover the wide range of problems that can occur due to FGM.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
Religious leaders are also working to end the practice.
Sheikh Almis Yahye Ibrahim preaches about the harms of FGM to roughly 5,000 people at his mosque. He is one of six sheikhs in the Arab region who have formed a network calling for FGM’s abandonment.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM
But the biggest difference will be seen among the country’s youth.
In Hargeisa, youth activists with the group Y-Peer talk to health workers, community members and other young people about ending FGM. “I wouldn’t marry any girl who has undergone FGM because I don’t want to live with the health complications,” said Mustafa, one of the youth activists.
© UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
When school holidays mean FGM
When school holidays mean FGM

Somalia Humanitarian Emergency

The humanitarian situation in Somalia remains fragile, as a result of continued armed conflict, flooding, desert locust infestation and COVID-19. Access to health care, including skilled birth attendance, is limited, and women and girls face serious protection concerns, including gender-based violence. GBV survivors face fear of reprisals, stigmatization and difficulty accessing safe and appropriate services. UNFPA coordinates the GBV sub-cluster as well as the reproductive health working group in Somalia.

Humanitarian needs

Last updated on - June 2024
 
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Disclaimer
  • Results data are reported and updated as they become available.
  • -Targets and UNFPA's populations of concern, including women of reproductive age and pregnant women, are estimated using the MISP calculator.
  • -Funding estimates are based on country planning processes, including inter-agency humanitarian response plans and regional refugee and resilience plans.

News

For many girls, school holidays means FGM “cutting season”

Asha Ali Ibrahim, a local circumciser, with her granddaughter, who is due to be cut this year. © UNFPA/Georgina Goodwin
  • 10 August 2017
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News

Four women’s rights activists you need to know

For International Women's Day, UNFPA is celebrating four activists who are blazing a trail for women. Images from left to right courtesy of Tanzila Khan, Deli Barroso, the NGO Atina and Arthur Nazaryan/Delphin Films.
  • 06 March 2017
1

News

Thousands reached in Somalia reproductive health campaign

The outreach campaign provided antenatal care, postpartum services, family planning counselling and many other services. © UNFPA Somalia
  • 20 January 2017
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News

10 things you should know about women & the world’s humanitarian crises

Over 250,000 refugees have fled the violence in Burundi since last April. © UNFPA/Sawiche Wamunza
  • 23 May 2016
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News

Midwives on the frontlines of fighting maternal death in Somalia

Two midwives place an intravenous drip for a patient at the maternity ward of Banadir Hospital in Mogadishu. © UN Photo/Tobin Jones
  • 05 May 2016
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News

Eliminating FGM one midwife at a time

Edna Adan visits a maternal and child health center during a community outreach activity in Gumburaha. © Arthur Nazaryan/Delphin Films
  • 09 April 2015
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