Volunteer mapping project has saved 3,000 girls from FGM in Tanzania, charity says

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by polymute

Some 3,000 Tanzanian girls have escaped female genital mutilation (FGM) in five years after using a volunteer-created mapping project, a British-Tanzanian charity has said.

The project has helped rescue teams find teenage girls who have run away from home to avoid being cut and take them to safe houses.

Volunteers and locals have cooperatively mapped vast parts of the East African country’s rural expanse, with more than 14,000 volunteers placing roads and buildings using satellite images, while locals provide their expertise of the landscape.

Crowd2Map, which was created in 2015 by Janet Chapman, has added almost five million buildings in Tanzania to previously empty areas on OpenStreetMap.

Ms Chapman, who is also chair of the Tanzania Development Trust (TDT), said rescue teams of activists typically receive a phone call in the dead of night reporting that girls are going to be cut in a certain village.

She said: "Together with the police gender desk and social welfare, they go and rescue the girls and bring them back to the safe house.

"Previously there were no maps meaning it was often hard to find these girls in time. Now they (activists) can use their phones to navigate offline, to find them quickly."

FGM is “a procedure where the female genitals are deliberately cut, injured or changed, but there's no medical reason for this to be done”, according to the NHS.

Despite being against the law to inflict FGM on under-18s in Tanzania, the process continues to take place in rural areas. The average age of FGM victims in Tanzania is 14, Ms Chapman said.

Mapping has helped connect girls to safe houses in Tanzania. FGM survivor and activist Rhobi Samwelly created the project Hope for Girls and Women which works to provide girls with safe houses as refuge and a place for education, as well as training volunteers to use smartphones.

The activist has previously addressed MPs and the United Nations on the issue of FGM.

Ms Samwelly, who is also is TDT's representative for Mara region, said: "At Hope for Girls and Women we are so glad for the Crowd2Map project. It has helped us a lot and makes our work reaching villages and rescuing girls much easier.

"Also, girls now know the safe places in their village to flee to. We thank everyone involved in the project."

durian_burps on November 7th, 2020 at 02:41 UTC »

Where can we send money?

EducatedRat on November 7th, 2020 at 02:31 UTC »

This shit. I was a student nurse on the late 90s. I had a vague idea of what FGM was. Not a lot. No internet of real use back then. I got asked to help with a cath placement when I was on student rotation at a hospital. There was a language barrier, and the patient was out of it and having a hard time understanding what we needed to do. She hadn’t peed in a long time, and cathing was necessary.

It took three of us, and her anatomy was . . . challenging to cath. The whole time the patient was panicking, but what really broke me was when she stopped fighting and just sobbed. Like just broken and sobbing.

The nurse I was working under later told me the family translated what she was saying and she was literally having flashbacks to when she’d had FGM done to her. Of all the heartrending things I ever saw nursing, that one still comes back to haunt me decades later still.

temeces on November 6th, 2020 at 23:29 UTC »

Fuck this shit. Not the aid but the people who think that this is ok to do to another human.