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Kenya

  • Too many girls will not finish their education in Kenya.

    Too many girls will not finish their education in Kenya. Photo: Ashley Hamer/ActionAid

    The girls disappearing from school because of FGM

    Posted in Blog on 1 September 2016

    In the UK 1st September means back to school. No doubt some parents are frantically making sure their children are fully equipped for the new school year, while many girls and boys are wishing the summer holidays would never end. But in Kenya, when children return to the classroom, some faces will almost certainly be missing - the faces of girls. Girls who are absent not by choice. Not because they don't want to study. But because during the holidays they have undergone female genital mutilation (FGM).

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  • ActionAid. Photo: ActionAid

    Why medicalisation is not a solution for FGM

    Posted in Blog on 31 August 2016

    28 Too Many is a values based charity working to end female genital mutilation (FGM). Our primary focus is on research and enabling local initiatives to end FGM in the 28 African countries where it is practised and across the diaspora.

    Recently, we published a report on The Medicalisation of FGM. Despite much progress towards ending FGM in recent years, the number of cases recorded worldwide annually is still staggeringly high. Equally worrying though, is the increase in the number of health professionals who are carrying out FGM procedures: the 'medicalisation of FGM'.

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  • Maria, 66, has performed female genital mutilation (FGM) on more than 100 girls in Kenya. She gave up after going to a talk by ActionAid and learning about the risks to pregnant women. Photo: Ashley Hamer/ActionAid

    FGM: The heartbreaking confessions of a former cutter

    Posted in Blog on 22 August 2016

    In the fight to end FGM, Maria’s story shows that change is possible. The 66-year-old cut more than 100 girls in a job that spanned four decades. Yet she knew little about the long term health risks of FGM, which stands for female genital mutilation. That was until she attended a talk by ActionAid. What she discovered horrified her enough to put the blade down forever. It also unlocked a painful secret from her past. Here is her story.

     

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  • Lucy, four, lives in a Mukuru slum. Your sponsorship could change the life of a girl like her.

    Lucy, four, lives in a Mukuru slum. Your sponsorship could change the life of a girl like her. Photo: Sheldon Moultrie/ActionAid

    Six things you should know about sponsoring a child

    Posted in Blog on 4 July 2016

    Sponsoring a child is a really fulfilling thing to do - for you, the child and their whole community. And because ActionAid does child sponsorship differently to other charities, people often have questions about our approach and what to expect. So we thought it was worth answering them here. If you're thinking of becoming a child sponsor, then read on!

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  • Lucy, four, lives in Mukuru slum, Kenya, where young girls are particularly vulnerable to sexual abuse. Photo: Sheldon Moultrie/ActionAid

    Kenya

    Posted 5 September 2015

    Find out about Kenya: facts, statistics, ActionAid's charity work in Kenya and how you can donate to help people living in poverty.

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  • Margaret, 10 years old. Mwakirunge Dumpsite, Mombasa. Photo: Kate Holt/ActionAid

    Meet the kids scavenging on rubbish dumps to survive

    Posted in Blog on 30 January 2015

    15 million people in the developing world today survive by salvaging waste. Many of them are children. We lift the lid on the worldwide scandal of young kids forced to scavenge on rubbish dumps to survive.

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