Against my will: Defying the practices that harm women and girls and undermine equality.
Against my will: Defying the practices that harm women and girls and undermine equality.
July 1, 2020
Every day, tens of thousands
of girls have their health,
rights and futures stolen.
Some are subjected to female
genital mutilation. Some are
forced into “marriages” as
children, and still others are
neglected or starved, simply
because they are female.
In many instances, parents who subject
their daughters to harmful practices
may do so with good intentions.
They wrongly accept that female
genital mutilation must factor into
acceptance by peers in communities
where this practice is widespread.
They mistakenly believe that marrying
off a child will secure her future.
Some are unaware of the physical and
psychological health risks.
Good intentions, however, mean little
to the girl who must abandon school
and her friends to be forcibly wed, or to
the girl who faces a lifetime of health
problems because of mutilation from a
harmful rite of passage.
In 1994, at the International Conference
on Population and Development,
ICPD, world governments called for
universal sexual and reproductive
health and decisively demanded an end
to harmful practices.