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EMERGENCY humanitarian appeals can
normally be found at ...
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the Disasters Emergency Commitee
>>The
number of people on Earth now is approximately...
>> Twenty
four thousand people die from the direct effects of famine every
day... That's one person every 3.6 seconds
>>
Forty two million people world-wide
are suffering and dying from Aids.
>>
In Nigeria, women who commit adultery
are sentenced by being buried up to their necks and stoned to death.
>>
The barbaric practice of female circumcision
is forced on approx. six thousand girls per day around the world
...
more on this issue below
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Humanitarian
Paths to Explore
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water
babies or dust babies?
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thinkthefuture
An
estimated four billion people will be affected by
water shortages by 2050.
This
forecast is increasing tensions over the management
and allocation of humankind's most basic need.
is
there an answer?
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Looking-Glass
and VeggieGlobal Good-Cause Support Programmes on
Humanitarian Issues.
With humanity across the
world colliding with each other either through war, famine
or natural disasters, there is always a crisis that needs
support from those who can afford to do so. That is why Looking-Glass
brings you selected good-cause projects that need your help
via the Good-Cause Support programmes.
One of these is the Society of Women's Guidelines in Nepal
... find
out more
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Find More Charities and Humanitarian
based organisations at our Directories
Gateway
Female
Circumcision
an article from
LGGN
the Looking-Glass News Site
In June 2003, participants from 28
African countries assembled for a high profile conference on female
genital mutilation (FGM). Its purpose was to discuss efforts to
ban the world's most barbaric non-consenting "operations" on girls.
In a declaration that stops short
of an outright ban, governments agreed in principle to adopt legislation
against FTM wherever it is politically feasible. This will also
require practicing countries to educate their citizens to change
attitudes to women and thereby eradicate such mutilations forever.
Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) is
an invasive and irreversible procedure usually performed on non-consenting
girls before puberty.
More commonly known as female circumcision, part or all of the clitoris
is surgically removed.
Many health problems result from the surgery, and contrary to belief,
FGM is argueably said to be a non-religious practice.
The cultures and countries where this barbaric practice is forced
on 6,000 girls per day (about one every 15 seconds) believe that
this brings health benefits and makes women more physically beautiful.
In fact, these views are not shared by the rest of the world and
the operation can bring on chronic infections, abscesses and benign
tumors amongst other more serious long-term effects such as chronic
urinary tract infections, stones in the bladder and urethra, kidney
damage and more.
Apart from a long list of health risks,
this terrible abuse on female genitalia leaves the girl with reduced
or no sexual feeling for the rest of their lives.
Surprisingly, it is normally older women who carry out circumcision
on the younger girls.
Often, no steps are taken to reduce the pain. The girl is immobilized
and held down legs apart. Mutilation can be carried out by any cutting
instrument to hand - usually broken glass, tins, scissors, razor
blades etc.
After the mutilation, thorns or stitches may be used to hold the
two sides of the labia together. In many cases the girl's legs may
be bound together for up to 40 days.
FGM is practiced extensively in more
than 28 African countries as well as Egypt, Oman, Yemen and the
United Arab Emirates.
It also occurs, in some immigrant communities, across Asia and the
Pacific, Latin America and even Europe and North America. Religious
links to FGM are unclear, since the practice occurs in both Muslim
and Christian countries.
However, the practice is said to be more widespread in predominantly
Muslim areas.
In Egypt, FGM was banned in 1997 but it remains extremely widespread,
where most Egyptian mothers say they want their daughters to be
circumcised.
The elder generations of countries
where FGM is predominant assume such mutilation is normal practice
although the young girls clearly find it absurd and deeply damaging.
But sadly, they somehow become accustomed to this practice as they
get older - and subsequently allow the same mutilation to be performed
on the next generation.
You can find out more on FGM at:
Amnesty
International
Find More Charities and Humanitarian
based organisations at our Directories
Gateway
Read more humanitarian articles at
the Looking-Glass
Global News Site
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