Freetown

On my way to Freetown in the early hours of 28th of May (around 6:15am), I saw a group of people (about 30) at a stream in a neighborhood called Fulawan in Bo city. When I got closer to them I realized they were a group of women trying to bathe some nine children who were already naked and they aged between three to ten years. When they noticed me coming too close to them they tried to stop me but I refused. As if my presence tormented them, they tried to get to me but I knew what was coming so I quickly took to my heels in a bid to protect my dear life. While running away, I heard them heaping all sorts of insults on me and shouting slogans for me to know that they were members of the female genital mutilation (FGM) bondo society.

Upon arrival in Freetown, I made frantic efforts to contact the local and central government officials in the region about my experience but to no avail. They were either evasive or were not ready to talk about it. When I finally contacted the Chief Administrator of the Bo City Council, Mr. William Alpha, he pretended to be very busy with other official work and so could not talk to me. In a similar vein, I contacted the Complaints, Discipline and Internal Investigations Department (CDIID) at police headquarters in Freetown where two officers who spoke on condition of anonymity explained to me that the government has not made any pronouncement against FGM so there is nothing they can do. Efforts to get the Minister of Social Welfare also proved futile as officials at the ministry said he was too busy with other commitments. Asked whether I could talk to any senior official in the ministry, I was told that there was no one to talk to me.

Series of incidents in the past two years tend to make mockery of the Gender Based Violence Act enacted in 2007 which states that “it is illegal to subject anybody under the age of 18 to harmful treatment, including any cultural practice that dehumanizes or is injurious to the physical and mental welfare of the child”. For instance, in February 2009, four female Journalists working for the UN radio were paraded naked along the streets of Kenema for speaking about FGM on radio. In September, a 17-year old girl and her aunt had to run for their lives after bondo women from Freetown and Kossoh vowed to lynch them for talking about FGM on radio. In December 2009, I saw some 17 under-aged FGM initiates being paraded at Dwarzack in Freetown. In May this year, a Senior Secondary School pupil (name withheld to respect the dead) of a prominent school in Bo went on a visit to Pujehun and was taken to the bondo bush and forcefully mutilated; she reportedly passed away during the process.

Henry Williams, murmured that “Presidential and Parliamentary elections are coming in 2012 so no politician is willing to take on a battle they cannot win. Opposing FGM is political suicide and no one is ready to die, not even the President”.

Why does it seem that most reports of FGM are being executed by adult females??

I have yet to receive a fully rcoherent reply to this enquiry.