Female genital mutilation denies sexual pleasure to millions of women
Two doctors in Saudi Arabia want to change cultural attitudes to female genital mutilation by gathering evidence of its links to sexual dysfunction
It was encouraging to see the uncompromising light of science being shone on the
practice of female genital mutilation
Crucially, the illumination came from two specialists in reproductive medicine within Saudi Arabia, a country where FGM is frequently practised.
their talk, entitled "Female circumcision is detrimental to women's sexual
satisfaction", may seem so blindingly obvious as to be worthless
the study is part of an effort to build a collection of rigorous evidence about
the long-term effects of FGM so that attitudes can be changed from within the
countries where it is practised.
"The change must come from inside, not from outside, because otherwise they will
reject it."
It affects 100m to 140m women worldwide