In a first, West African country moves toward ending ban on female genital cutting

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Updated March 19, 2024 at 1:00 p.m. EDT|Published March 19, 2024 at 9:04 a.m. EDT
Fatou Baldeh, center, a Gambian activist who was recently honored as one of the State Department’s International Women of Courage, is seen inside the National Assembly in Banjul, Gambia, on Monday. She said it was triggering for survivors of female genital cutting to have to listen to men debate their bodies and their experiences, but they knew the importance of having their presence in the room. (Carmen Yasmine Abd Ali for The Washington Post)
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BANJUL, Gambia — Gambia’s National Assembly has voted to advance a bill that would overturn a ban on female genital cutting, putting this tiny West African country on a path to being the first nation in the world to roll back such a protection.

Many of the women who filed into the National Assembly building on Monday to witness the proceedings had experienced the horror that comes with cutting, which has been practiced for generations here. One woman said she was taken by her family at age 8 to a ceremony in which she was pinned down and cut. Another learned on her wedding night that her vaginal opening had been sealed. A third experienced years of infections and later infertility after being cut without her parents’ permission.