68m girls face genital mutilation in 15 years – UNFP

The United Nations Population Fund has projected that about 60 million girls were in danger of facing genital mutilation between 2015 and 2030 worldwide.

According to the UN, the new figures project that the current estimates of 3.9 million girls mutilated each year will rise to 4.6 million by 2030, unless massively scaled-up efforts are taken urgently to prevent that from happening.

“The increase is due to projected population growth in communities that practice mutilation. More than 200 million women live with female genital mutilation today.

“The new figures show just how far we have to go to eliminate female genital mutilation,” said UNFPA Executive Director, Dr. Natalia Kanem.

“The good news is we know what works. Greater political will, community engagement, and targeted investments are changing social norms, practices and lives. We need to quickly step up these efforts to make good on our collective pledge to end female genital mutilation by 2030.”

“The new numbers come from a more robust method to generate age-specific risk data for mutilations. The data were then combined with United Nations world population estimates to project overall risk. The new figures now also include data from Indonesia, where the revised method captured the approximately 1 million girls facing mutilation in their first year of life.”

According to her, although the risk of a girl being mutilated is about one-third lower than it was three decades ago, more of them will face mutilation as girls’ populations increase.

The world marked the International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation yesterday.