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Pope decries genital mutilation, sex trafficking of women; praises Moroccan efforts to rescue boy trapped in well

Vatican City
Reuters

Pope Francis condemned female genital mutilation and trafficking of women for prostitution on Sunday, calling them humiliating affronts to women’s dignity and urging officials to do everything possible to end both.

“This practice, which is unfortunately common in various parts of the world, humiliates the dignity of a woman and gravely attacks her physical integrity,” Francis said, speaking on the UN International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation.

Vatican Pope Francis

Pope Francis delivers the Angelus noon prayer from his studio window overlooking St Peter’s Square at the Vatican, on Sunday, 6th February. PICTURE: AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia.

According to the United Nations, FGM is concentrated in about 30 countries in Africa and the Middle East but is also practiced by immigrant populations elsewhere. More than four million girls are at risk of undergoing FGM this year, the UN says.

Francis, speaking to pilgrims and tourists in St Peter’s Square for his weekly blessing and address, noted that the practice was often carried out in conditions that endangered a girl’s health.



In a related appeal, Francis called for more efforts to stop human trafficking, particularly of women and girls for forced prostitution.

“This is a deep wound inflicted by the shameful search for gain without any respect for the human person,” he said ahead of the Catholic Church’s International Day of Prayer and Awareness Against Human Trafficking this Tuesday.

“There are so many girls that we see on the streets who are not free. They are slaves of traffickers who send them to work and beat them if they don’t return with money. This happens today, in our cities,” he said.

They include Rome where authorities say criminal gangs lure women to Italy with the promise of jobs and then force them into prostitution, threatening to harm their families back home if they go to the police.

Calling both FGM and trafficking of persons, “wounds of humanity,” Francis urged leaders “to act decisively to stop both the exploitation as well as humiliating practices that afflict above all women and girls”.

Catholic nuns in Rome are at the forefront of fighting trafficking of women. In 2016, Francis visited a Rome safe house where a charity protects women freed from pimps.


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Meanwhile, the Pope praised the people of Morocco for coming together to try to rescue a small boy trapped in a well and said he was saddened that their efforts were not successful.

Rayan Awram, five, fell into the well in the hills near the northern city of Chefchaouen on Tuesday, triggering a huge rescue effort that gripped the country and many around the word. The child died before rescuers were able to reach him on Saturday evening.

“The people clung together, as a whole, to save Rayan, they worked together to save a child,” the pope said during his weekly blessing in St Peter’s Square.

“[The rescuers] tried their best, unfortunately they did not make it, but that [was] an example,” he said.

Italians in particular were moved by the story of Rayan because it was similar to a tragedy in 1981 when scores of rescuers tried to save the life of Alfredino Rampi, a six-year-old boy who was trapped in a well for three days before he died.

 

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