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MPs: Failure to tackle FGM a 'national scandal'
Failure by authorities to tackle the growing practice of female genital mutilation in the UK is a "national scandal", according to MPs. The Home Affairs committee hit out at the abuse of thousands of girls which it said could have been prevented.
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Approx 170,000 women in UK 'have undergone FGM'
An estimated 170,000 women and girls in the UK have been subjected to FGM, according to a report from MPs.
The Home Affairs committee also found:
- In two London boroughs almost one in 10 girls are born to mothers who have suffered the procedure and are therefore themselves at risk.
- FGM is most commonly carried out on girls between the ages of five and eight.
- In some cases it is carried out by a health professional, but is more commonly undertaken by a traditional practitioner with no formal training, without anaesthetic, using knives, scissors or even pieces of glass.
- The committee said there was still very little information on the girls most at risk.
- The immediate effects can include severe pain, bleeding, shock, infection and occasionally death.
- In the long term, many women and girls experience mental health problems, such as depression and post-traumatic stress.
- Police in the UK have investigated more than 200 cases over the last five years.
MPs blame courts and police for poor FGM record
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and Association of Chief Police Officers (AOCPO) have been "too passive" and lacked leadership when tackling FGM, MPs said.
In a damning report into UK efforts to stop the practice, MPs said:
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MPs hit out at failure to tackle FGM
The failure to curb the growing practice of female genital mutilation (FGM) in the UK is a "national scandal", according to a group of influential MPs.
The Home Affairs select committee criticised authorities for not intervening to help thousands of girls who were subjected to "severe physical child abuse".
In a hard-hitting report, the cross-party groups of MPs estimated 65,000 under the age of 13 were at risk of FGM.
The committee blamed a "misplaced concern for cultural sensitivities over the rights of the child" for authorities failing to protect youngsters from the practice, which is largely associated with Africa.
While FGM has been outlawed in Britain since 1985, the first prosecution only took place this year - days before the Director of Public Prosecutions Alison Saunders was due to appear before the committee.