Fatu & Shekou: One World, Two Docs

Fatu & Shekou: One World, Two Docs Sex, STDs, and contraception are challenging but necessary topics of discussion between parents and their daughters.

Fatu & Shekou | One World, Two Docs 🌍👩🏾‍⚕️👨🏾‍⚕️🇸🇱🇺🇸
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https://youtube.com/?si=nLJWjF3kwtP37PjC This book is written by a gynecologist, and contains frank medical advice given in an easy to read, and unbiased way to encourage teenage girls and their parents to start, or con

tinue discussions about their bodies, sex, STDs, and contraception. It is from your doctor to you, includes real life pictures, discusses what to expect during that first gynecology visit, and includes what every teenage girl should know as they grow into adulthood.

All eyes on Gambia. I hope the Supreme Court will do the right thing to protect our girls 🇬🇲🙏🏾🌍“The Supreme Court is hea...
01/28/2026

All eyes on Gambia. I hope the Supreme Court will do the right thing to protect our girls 🇬🇲🙏🏾🌍
“The Supreme Court is hearing arguments that should chill anyone who cares about human rights. Media reported that one witness, a prominent Muslim leader, attempted to justify the violence against women and girls, saying that “female circumcision” is part of Islam and isn’t harmful. When asked about two babies who died from the procedure, he replied: “We are Muslims and if someone dies, it’s God’s will.” He went on to say that the practice’s benefit is reducing women’s s*xual desire, “which could be a problem for men.”

The plaintiffs’ courtroom arguments don’t hold up to scrutiny. There’s no requirement for FGM in Sharia (Islamic law). It’s not part of the Sunna (Prophetic traditions) or considered an honorable act. The practice predates Islam and isn’t universal among Muslims—it’s a cultural practice that some communities have incorrectly linked to faith.”

“Jan 28 2026 (IPS) – Gambia’s Supreme Court is considering whether a law protecting women and girls from female ge***al mutilation (FGM) is constitutional. The practice, common in Gambia, often involves forcibly restraining girls while parts of their ge***als are cut, sometimes with the wound sewn shut.

FGM constitutes torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment under international human rights law. It can result in death or life long health problems such as infections, fetal deaths, obstetric complications, and psychological effects. Now the Supreme Court will decide whether women and girls will continue to be protected from such harmful practices.

Religious leaders and a member of parliament failed to get parliament to overturn Gambia’s 2015 FGM ban in 2024. They have taken their fight all the way to the Supreme Court, contending that the ban violates constitutional rights to cultural and religious freedom. This effort isn’t just a setback for one small West African country—it’s part of a global backlash against women’s rights that threatens to unravel decades of progress protecting women and girls from a widespread form of gender-based violence.

There’s no medical justification for FGM, according to the World Health Organization. Medicalization of FGM, in which the procedure is carried out by health personnel, does not reduce the violation of human rights. Regardless of where and by whom it is performed, FGM is never safe.”

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