CAIRO - Egypt on Thursday finally banned all female circumcision, the
widely-practised removal of the clitoris which just days ago cost the life of a
12-year-old girl.
 Two girls sit next to an old knife
that is used to perform female circumcision during a rite of passage
ceremony in 2001. Egypt has finally banned all female circumcision just
days after the death of a 12-year-old girl. [Agencies]
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Officially the practice, which
affects both Muslim and Christian women in Egypt and goes back to the time of
the pharoahs, was banned in 1997 but doctors were allowed to operate "in
exceptional cases".
On Thursday, Health Minister Hatem al-Gabali decided to ban every doctor and
member of the medical profession, in public or private establishments, from
carrying out a clitoridectomy, a ministry press official said.
Any circumcision "will be viewed as a violation of the law and all
contraventions will be punished," said the official, adding that it was a
"permanent ban".
A survey in 2000 said the practice was carried out on 97 percent of the
country's women.
In the latest fatality, 12-year-old Bedur Ahmed Shaker was taken by her
mother to a private clinic in Minya, a town on the Nile south of Cairo, for the
operation. She died before she could be transferred to hospital.
Her mother accused the woman doctor of negligence, charging that her
daughter's death was linked to the anaesthetic and not the removal of the
clitoris, for which she had paid 50 pounds (nearly nine dollars). Police have
arrested both women.