A 17-year-old
girl, Miss Patricia Youmgbo, has been declared missing by family
members after she reportedly fled home to avoid circumcision.
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN )
learnt that the girl’s decision to run away from home followed the death
of her younger sister, Joy after she was forced to undergo circumcision on Jan.
15.
An uncle to the
missing girl, Mr Jonah Youmgbo, said that Patricia had
fled the family home in Amassoma, Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of
Bayelsa since Feb. 14. Youmgbo said
that the two sisters, who lived in Lagos ,
had come home in December 2011 to spend the Christmas with their grandmother in
Amassoma.
He said that the
girls’ grandmother and some extended family members had ordered the girls to be
circumcised before returning to Lagos .
The decision of
the family led to the forced circumcision of Joy, a development that triggered
the excessive bleeding that eventually led to her death.
Youmgbo, who
lamented the death of the teenager, said thatJoy, who was full of life before
the forced circumcision, died from injuries as a result of the crude
traditional practice of female genital mutilation. He explained
that the victim, suffered severe excruciating pains for days after the
mutilation of her genital before her death.
Youmgbo said
that medical reports obtained after the death of Joy, showed that the
15-year-old died of “Post Circumcision haemorrhage”. It
was the fear of falling victim of the same circumcision that made the elder
sister, Patricia to flee the community since Feb. 14.
Youmgbo, who is a
brother to the girls’ father, said that a case of missing person had since been
reported at the Amassoma Divisional Police headquarters.
He used the
opportunity to call on Nigerians and Ijaw people in particular to desist from
the“obnoxious” tradition of female genital mutilation.
When NAN contacted the Bayelsa Police Public Relations
Officer, Mr Eguavoen Emokpai, (ASP), who expressed shock at the
development, however, said he had not received any report on the incident.
Emokpai said
he had been unable to reach the Divisional Police Officer in charge of the
Amassoma Police Division for confirmation due to poor telephone network.
WHO, an
organisation that had been in the forefront of global campaign to stop the
female genital mutilation..
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