Job offer : web community moderator (Africa) Deadline: as soon as filledStarting date: 1st November 2016Location: African country part of the UNFPA-UNICEF Joint programme on FGM/C*Employer: GAMS Belgium About the project “Building bridges between Africa and Europe to tackle FGM/C”…
WHO guidelines on the management of health complications from female genital mutilation “These guidelines are intended primarily for health-care professionals involved in the care of girls and women who have been subjected to any form of female genital mutilation (FGM).…
A State-of-the-Art Synthesis on Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting – What Do We Know Now?august 2016 “Efforts to end female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) are a rising priority on many national and global agendas. Thus it is imperative to have a clear understanding…
In an article in International Health Policies, Fabienne Richard, Midwife, MSC, PhD in Public Health and Director of GAMS Belgium (founding member of the Concerted Strategies against FGM) contributes to the debate on the medicalisation of FGM. As a reaction…
Natalie Kontoulis is the Communications and Advocacy officer of the END FGM European Network. She had previously been working on European policy for the UK government and as a translator at the European Commission.
“I realized that I wanted to work on Human rights and gender issues. The issue of FGM really interested me, it was something that I became passionate about because I saw it as a very extreme form of gender-based violence. On a more personal note, I had a boyfriend who was from Guinea. We had never spoken of FGM.”
We interviewed Katrien de Koster, coordinator of the activities of the Flemish regional office of GAMS Belgium. Individual counselling, creation and distribution of tools, video exchange with the Fula people in Vélingara (Senegal), group activities, alerts of risks of FGM… Katrien…
“(…) in most communities in which FGM is practiced, women do it, and now they are aware of the harmful consequences. They begin to understand that it is wrong and wish to abandon it. But the fact that men don’t speak about it, can restrain their newly-developed courage to talk about the practice. But if some men stand up and join the movement to say “enough, we don’t want it!” It can motivate them, it can give them hope to know that some people understand that yes, there is a suffering, and it prevents one to blossom. I do think so, yes.”
PRESS RELEASE –APRIL 1, 2015 Launch of the MEN SPEAK OUT project BRUSSELS, APRIL 1, 2015 GAMS Belgium, FORWARD UK, HIMILO foundation in Netherlands and the Institute of Tropical Medicine in Antwerp are pleased to announce the launch of…