Yes, there should be severe penalties for them, the doctors and teachers who encouraged and facilitated this mutilation of an innocent child. Quote Anti Woke Memes @AntiWokeMemes · Feb 2 0:08 Should moms who do this get prison time?!
Replying to @WHLeavitt and @TrustDML Ban Muslim cities Ban Muslim immigration Ban Sharia law Ban Burka Ban child marriage Ban genital mutilation Ban wife beating Ban honor killing Ban halal meat Ban polygamy Ban call to prayer Ban public prayer Load image 32 KB
The curtain is late but finally coming down on the most heinous medical child abuse our nation has ever experienced! The surgical and medical mutilations of children will go down in history as a grotesque crime against vulnerable children by a sick medical ‘establishment’ that Show more Quote Colin Wright @SwipeWright · 1h BREAKING: The American Society of Plastic Surgeons come out against "gender-affirming" surgeries for anyone under 19 years old, making them the first major US-based medical association to officially narrow their guidance. Former ASPS president Scot Bradley Glasberg
People use the epithet 'racist' to discredit their opponents Most 'racists' are not racists. They are culturalists And I dislike strongly any culture that approves of Female Genital Mutilation, Halal animal torture, cousin marriage, and generalised humiliation of women in the Show more Quote Katie Lam @Katie_Lam_MP · 21h It's crazy Rebecca was the only MP on this committee brave enough to say what we all know to be true. Britain has no real history of FGM, cousin marriage or mandatory face coverings for women. Fear of being called racist must never stop us calling out these imported practices. x.com/Rebecca_SPaul/…
It’s not enough to punish the doctors and psychologists for the surgical butchery sold to minors as “gender-affirming care.” The activists, school clubs, and teachers who shepherded kids toward it need to be held accountable too. junonews.com/p/us-doctors-b … Load image
Epstein, bad. Protect the children. PPC post against Pierre's paid CPC propagandists supporting Bill C4/CPC policy- Bad bad PPC , good CPC, genital mutilation and Epstein eugenics good Make this make sense. Please.
— 🇨🇦Dr.Virginia J Johnson says #HonkHonk (@LovesCanada8) February 3, 2026
Replying to @Glinner So, wanting to protect your child from genital mutilation makes you a pedophile...The scary thing is that these people aren't even trolling. They really do seem to think that.
Replying to @Rebecca_SPaul Well said! Note that my ridiculous regulator, the Institute and Faculty of Actuaries objected to my criticising the practices of child marriage, child sex, sexual slavery, wife beating and Female Genital Mutilation within Islam. They said it was "professional misconduct". I Show more
"There are going to be potentially hundreds, if not thousands. across the world of detransitioners who had been mutilated." @ChloeCole As lawsuits mount, the truth is coming out. Children were subjected to irreversible medical interventions without real safeguards or informed Show more 0:57 2 MB Load video
Finally the world is healing. This is child mutilation. Also, all the doctors involved need to loose their licenses and jailed, and the parents stripped from their rights immediately. (Unfortunately) We finally have a precedent that can be used to do that. Quote Iris Caldor @iriscal · Feb 1 It has begun. Legal precedent has been set. Doctors will look at this case, and suddenly decide they have better things to do than take on $2M liability by pushing Frankenstein Healthcare on young, confused, vulnerable children. It will start at the surgical level, with x.com/nypost/status/…
International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation
International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) seeks to raise awareness and advocation for the cessation of this harmful practice, affecting women and girls worldwide. The day provides an avenue to educate people about the dangers of female genital mutilation, highlighting its immediate and long-term physical, psychological, and socio-economic impacts. Significant strides are taken globally to ensure this practice is eradicated, detailing how FGM violates human rights, specifically the rights of women and girls.
In South Africa, although the practice isn't widespread, there is evidence of its occurrence within certain cultural and religious groups. The commemoration of International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation in South Africa seeks to address this issue by amplifying awareness and discourse about the harmful consequences of this practice. This remembrance has roots in a resolution by the UN General Assembly in 2007 that called for a global effort to eliminate female genital mutilation. In response, South Africa, along with all African Union countries, signed the 'Saleema Initiative' in 2008 to protect girls from this harmful tradition.
On the International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation, South Africa rallies together with other nations to stand against this practice. Various activities including educational workshops, public discussions, and awareness campaigns are held. These events are often spearheaded by various human rights and health organizations, stressing the importance of enforcing existing laws against FGM, advocating for stricter penalties against violators and calling on community elders and religious leaders to renounce the practice. International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation is observed each year on 6th February.
Top 8 Facts for 2026 International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation in South Africa
The upcoming observance of the International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation on February 6, 2026, is centered on the official theme Towards 2030: No end to female genital mutilation without sustained commitment and investment, which emphasizes that the global goal of eradication by 2030 requires intensified financial and political support.
While often perceived as a practice foreign to South Africa, research indicates that various forms of the procedure are still practiced locally among some Venda, Southern Ndebele, and Indian communities, as well as certain Sotho populations in areas like Matatiele.
South African law provides robust protection against this practice through the Children’s Act, which explicitly prohibits the genital mutilation of female children, and the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act, which outlaws any cultural practice that discriminates based on gender.
Globally, an estimated 4 million girls are projected to be at risk of undergoing the procedure in 2026 alone, highlighting a critical window for intervention as the international community enters the final five years of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals.
Experts highlight that for every dollar invested in ending the practice, there is a ten-fold return in economic benefits due to improved health outcomes and the increased educational and economic participation of women and girls.
In the South African context, the practice is increasingly recognized as a form of gender-based violence, a category of crime that the government has recently intensified efforts to combat under the national Emergency Response Plan on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide.
The 2026 observance also highlights the "medicalization" of the practice, a concerning trend where health professionals perform the procedure under the false belief that it is safer, despite it having no medical benefits and violating fundamental human rights.
Activists in South Africa play a leading role in the regional movement, using the country's influential media landscape to amplify the voices of survivors and to challenge the patriarchal norms that often underpin the continuation of this practice across the continent.
In the News and Trending in South Africa for International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation
Top things to do in South Africa for this observance
Traditional values and practices can be harmful especially if those practices carry unnecessary risk. It is believed that older generations are more likely to carry on such traditions despite scientific evidence against them. According to the U.N, adolescent girls aged 15-19 are less supportive of female genital mutilation than women aged 45-49. The U.N recommends investing in youth-led movements to help achieve gender equality and to eliminate violence against women and girls. Learn how you can become involved in their latest campaign Generation Equality.
Learn more about the health risks of female genital mutilation and how you can help prevent the practice of it.
Read a book to learn more about FGM: Listening to African Voices: Female Circumcision and the Politics of Cultural Survival - by Ellen Gruenbaum A Woman's Odyssey Into Africa: Tracks Across a Life - by Harriet Gordon Mandel
Attend or organizing awareness seminars or workshops: As part of the efforts to educate the public about female genital mutilation, lectures and workshops are commonly held throughout the country.