We work with parents, community leaders, government authorities, partners, children and young people to raise awareness, transform social norms and put an end to harmful practices. We are striving to end FGM so girls can make decisions about their own sexual and reproductive health and well-being.
We believe in the power and potential of every child and won’t stop until we are all equal.
Plan condemns all forms of FGM. It is a violation of human rights, drives and results in gender inequality and is a form of violence against girls and women.
We have used the term FGM on this page as it is widely used and commonly understood. Plan International prefers the official UN terminology, female genital mutilation/cutting or FGM/C as this term is inclusive and accommodates differing viewpoints.
Effectively ending all forms of FGM requires transforming the social norms that surround the practice. We work together with entire communities, including girls themselves, grandmothers and older women, community and religious leaders, men and boys, health professionals, teachers, and the justice system to tackle the root causes of FGM.
Effective action to end all forms of FGM must transform social norms and involve and engage entire communities in the process, including girls themselves, grandmothers and older women, community and religious leaders, men and boys, health professionals, teachers, and the justice system.
We do this by:
Facilitating training sessions for all groups within communities that explain the harmful physical and emotional consequences of FGM.
Bringing community members together – including teachers, parents, young people and religious leaders – to participate in open dialogues on FGM.
Establishing networks of community groups and volunteers that advocate for change and raise awareness.
Establishing girls’ clubs so they can learn about their sexual and reproductive health rights and have the knowledge to decide what happens to their bodies.
Supporting vulnerable groups such as internally displaced populations who may be influenced by the practices of their hosts.
Collaborating with young people to launch media campaigns that promote behaviour change and raise awareness on FGM.
Hosting discussions with young people so they have safe spaces to discuss FGM which may be taboo in their homes and communities.
Promoting male engagement and activism to end FGM.
Supporting youth-led advocacy activities against FGM.
Facilitating peer-to-peer social media platforms where young people share experiences and support each other.
Advocating for legal frameworks and effective legislation that will help end FGM.
Providing technical support to government officials to consolidate voices of NGOs, religious leaders and the government, from community level to national level on FGM.
Linking government agencies, local authorities, children’s organisations and youth groups to create powerful partnerships to end FGM.
Collaborating with local agents to initiate task forces that tackle cross country border cutting, by preventing cutters crossing country borders to carry out FGM.
Addressing the medicalisation of FGM by collaborating with health care professionals.
Barwaaqe: I will create awareness so FGM can be stopped for good
Barwaaqe is adamant that if she ever has daughters, she will never force them to undergo FGM.
In Tanzania’s Geita and Mara regions, 13,670 people – including girls, boys, parents, teachers and health workers – gained knowledge and skills to keep girls safe from harmful practices.
An additional 39,390 people have been reached through campaign messaging, advocacy work and community events.
There have been 47 girls’ clubs established in schools so girls have spaces to learn about their rights and gain new skills and knowledge they can use to raise awareness and call for an end to FGM.
Egypt
In Egypt, 3,474 girls and young women gained access to FGM-related healthcare and 3,919 received mental and emotional support.
In Egypt’s Asyut governorate 3 villages were supported to prevent FGM.
Training was given to 107 community-based health care providers and 2,198 students from the Faculty of Medicine in Egypt on the harms of FGM and how to advocate against it. Health units collaborated on social awareness campaigns on FGM within their communities, hosting and facilitating discussions, holding outreach sessions at schools and providing clear messages on the abandonment of FGM.
A discussion was held with representation from government ministries and medical bodies, leading to the production of policy papers that called for the resourcing and training of health care professionals to prevent FGM.
Mali
In Mali, 92 villages have declared themselves FGM free.
Across 5 regions, 180 village committees have been set up to end FGM.
Guinea
In Guinea’s Coyah district, 10,368 men were supported to understand and engage with the issue of FGM.
As part of Plan International Guinea’s FGM project, 19 communities in Guinea have formally abandoned female genital cutting, potentially protecting thousands of girls.
Sudan
In Sudan, 31 religious leaders and 171 male facilitators were trained to raise awareness and advocate against FGM.
Ethiopia
In Ethiopia, 7,480 people attended an FGM event which resulted in a reported 231 cases of FGM being prevented and 69% of people who carry out FGM attending choosing to end the practice and become volunteers to raise awareness of the negative impacts of FGM.
Somalia
The Children’s Act was passed in Somalia after multiple projects drove action from community level to national level, consolidating voices of NGOs, religious leaders and the government. This was followed by an FGM policy submission to Parliament for debate.
Kenya
To address the issue of cutters working across the borders of Tanzania and Kenya, a cross-border task force was formally established comprising of government ministries, community leaders and local NGOs working to prevent FGM. The task force is working to raise awareness in schools on FGM in border towns where there is high prevalence.
Mothers stand strong against female genital mutilation
Mothers Rahma, Saafi and Cawo explain why they will never let their daughters undergo the practice.
It takes a village: ending FGM by creating new rituals
Rural communities in Guinea are creating new rituals that bring together the whole community with the aim of abolishing female genital mutilation (FGM), for …
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