Saturday, 7 February 2015

Cameroonian Mothers In UK Subject Daughters To Breast Ironing

This report by Independent.co.uk is dated months back, but it still is relevant, and draws attention to a custom I wouldn't have thought could be exported out of the shores of this country. Beats my imagination why anyone who is seemingly educated would contemplate a thing like this.

The custom that takes place in Cameroon may have been imported to the UK

A hidden form of abuse known as “breast ironing”, in which girls as young as 10 have their chests pounded with hot objects to disguise the onset of puberty, could be taking place in Britain.
The mutilation is a traditional practice from Cameroon designed to deter unwanted male attention, pregnancy and rape by delaying the signs that a girl is becoming a woman. Experts believe that the custom is being practiced amongst the several thousand Cameroonians now living here.

A conference on how to prevent the abuse both in the UK and overseas held in Ealing, west London. Its organisers, a charity called CAME Women’s and Girl’s Development Organisation (Cawogido), is already working with the Met Police and social services to tackle the problem.

The Independent understands a woman was arrested in London because police believed she had performed the procedure on her daughter. She was later released without charge, although the Metropolitan Police was unable to confirm the report but the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo) said that the practice was known to them. An Acpo spokesman said: “Similarly to the way we deal with cases of female genital mutilation, we would treat this as a form of child abuse. Police would take steps to safeguard the child or young person and build a case of child abuse to put to the CPS for a decision on charging.”

The UN has identified breast ironing as one of five forgotten crimes against women and estimates that some 3.8 million teenagers are affected. As well as being painful, it exposes girls to health problems including abscesses, cysts, infection, tissue damage and even the disappearance of one or both breasts.

Margaret Nyuydzewira, co-founder and chair of Cawogido, said: “Breast ironing is a practice that happens in the privacy of people’s homes so it’s hard to see who is doing it. I am sure it is happening here, but people are not willing to talk about it. It’s like female genital mutilation: you know it’s happening but you’re not going to see it.

“I was contacted by a police officer who arrested a lady for breast ironing her daughter. There was a discussion of what the laws were and in the end they released her because it was a cultural practice. My argument is if it harms kids it should be against the law.” Breast ironing is common in Cameroon but rarely discussed. Research in 2006 by a Cameroonian women’s organisation and Germany’s Association for International Co-operation (GTZ) found that one in four females in the country had experienced it. In more than half of cases it is mothers who perform the procedure, believing they were protecting their daughters. While most widespread in Cameroon, similar customs have been documented in Nigeria, Togo, Republic of Guinea, Côte d’Ivoire and South Africa.

Cameroonian journalist and women’s rights advocate Chi Yvonne Leina is founder and coordinator of Gender Danger, a grassroots women’s organisation that is fighting to end breast ironing. While her cousin was subjected to it by their grandmother, Leina managed to resist and is now lobbying to wipe out the practice altogether.

She said: “Mothers don’t want other people to know they’re doing it. When my grandmother said she was going to iron my breasts I told her I would shout and scream if she did and tell the neighbours. She didn’t do it as she knew her secret would be out.”

Leina believes the only way the practice will stop is if women talk to each other about it. She said: “We need the silence to be broken. When we move from place to place we carry on our cultures, so anywhere where there’s a high concentration of Cameroonians I would expect it to happen.”

Case study: My mother ‘ironed’ my breasts until they disappeared

"My breasts developed fast when I was 12 and my mum said she’d have to iron them so they’d disappear and come out later. There’s a particular leaf in Cameroon that people use. They put it in the fire and then when it was really hot they press it and massage it on the breast. It was very painful and I cried a lot. But that didn’t work, so later they used a long stick like a pestle heated in the fire. They repeated it after two days and again until the breasts disappeared. It was so painful I couldn’t sleep. When I was 18 my breasts did develop but with a lot of malformation.

7 comments:

Unknown said...

I don't know what type of mother will be doing that type of barbaric thing to the daughter.This is the highest level of stupidity.If i have a mother who intends doing that to my sister i will put her in jail.When a lady is not emmotionally driven it is a problem when she is,it is a problem.Man is never stisfied,however let that type of decision of breast ironing come from the owner of the breast not someone else.

Unknown said...

It is a very sad occurrence indeed, a heineous act which is a manifestation of ongoing violence against girls and women. Cameroon is unfortunately one of the countries with the highest rates of breast ironing woldwide. According to wikipedia: Breast ironing is practiced in all ten regions of Cameroonnand has also been reported across West and Central Africa, in Benin, Chad, Ivory Coast, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea-Conakry, Kenya, Togo and Zimbabwe. Breast "sweeping" has been reported in South Africa. All of Cameroon's 200 ethnic groups engage in breast ironing, with no known relation to religion, socio-economic status, or any other identifier. A June 2006 survey by the German development agency GIZ of more than 5,000 Cameroonian girls and women between the ages of 10 and 82 estimated that nearly one in four had undergone breast ironing, corresponding to four million girls. The survey also reported that it is most commonly practiced in urban areas, where mothers fear their children could be more exposed to sexual abuse. Incidence is as high as 53 percent in the Cameroon's southeastern region of Littoral. Compared with Cameroon's Christian and animist south, breast ironing is less common in the Muslim north, where only 10 percent of women are affected. Some hypothesize that this is related to the practice of early marriage, which is more common in the North, making early sexual development irrelevant or even preferable. A rise in the incidence of breast ironing in recent times has been attributed to the earlier onset of puberty, caused by dietary improvements in Cameroon over the last 50 years. Half of Cameroonian girls who develop under the age of nine have their breasts ironed,[8] and 38% of those who develop under the age of eleven. Additionally, since 1976, the percentage of women married by the age of 19 has decreased from nearly 50% to 20%, leading to an increasingly long gap between childhood and marriage. The later age of marriage may be due to changed social norms that allow girls and women to attend school through university and to hold jobs in the formal sector. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breast_ironing)

Mothers claim therefore to do the practice to "protect" their daughters from the eyes of men. I wonder what type of protection this is and why girls should be the ones to suffer for the alleged lascivious eyes of men. A mother had a burn while cooking one day and wept because the pain made her to realise the excruciating pain she subjected her daughter to. Our organisation, the Positive Peace Group, focused on breast ironing on our of our weekly editions of our radio program, ACCESS POINT (Thursdays 4-5pm, Saturday 7pm, Sunday 8am), on Radio Health International (95.7 FM) and the revelations were quite shocking. You can listen to an online versions of the human rights and peace program from Friday February 14 on www.positivepeacegroup.org and join us in raising awareness and condemning such heinous violations of human rights, especially sexual violence (Female Genital Mutilation, rape, breast ironing, sexual harassment etc) and other forms of violence.

Unknown said...

Goodness gracious Denis, from these stats, the problem is even more widespread than I thought. I kinda understand where the mothers are coming from, their heinous acts are born out of the desire to protect their daughters from lechers and paedophiles. Unfortunately, they're going about it in the wrong way, subjecting their daughters to physical and psychological trauma. How bout teaching their daughters all they need to know on sex-Ed, teaching them about the dangers that lurk out there. This will empower the kids rather than subdue them which is what breast ironing does.
Kudos to you n your team Denis, for the advocacy!!!

Unknown said...

I used to think breast ironing was practiced by uneducated ignorant mamas in the remote villages. How sad that some women who can't be bothered to educate their kids properly go for the easy option without thinking of the pain the kids go through and the after effects on the poor kids. If they are doig that to deter paedophiles then they cant be more wrong coz breast has got nothing to do with paedophiles. It is the age they are after not the looks, because they are sick disgusting evil men.

Loveline said...

Thanks Chinwe& co for the awareness and advocacy. Hope it gets to the right quarters.

Unknown said...
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Unknown said...

Thanks a lot Moity, Loveline and others for the warm encouragements. We keep up the efforts to strive for attitudinal and policy change in relation to violence against women and girls in particular and violence in general. Sure it's getting to the right quarters both in the private and public, unofficial or official spheres and we keep 'hammering the rock' till it breaks. Please do not hesitate to support us when and in any way you can.