
NEW! Position
Statements of Medical Societies
in
English-Speaking Countries
Courtesy of www.circumcision.org
The BMA does not believe that parental preference alone constitutes sufficient grounds for performing a surgical procedure on a child unable to express his own view. . . . Parental preference must be weighed in terms of the child's interests. . . . The BMA considers that the evidence concerning health benefit from non-therapeutic circumcision is insufficient for this alone to be a justification for doing it. . . . Some doctors may wish to not perform circumcisions for reasons of conscience. Doctors are under no obligation to comply with a request to circumcise a child.
2002 Royal Australasian College of Physicians
Circumcision of newborns should not be routinely performed.
2000 American Medical Association
The AMA supports the general principles of the 1999 Circumcision Policy Statement of the American Academy of Pediatrics. (below)
1999 American Academy of Pediatrics
Existing scientific evidence demonstrates potential medical benefits of newborn male circumcision; however, these data are not sufficient to recommend routine neonatal circumcision.
1996 Australian College of Paediatrics
The Australasian Association of Paediatric Surgeons has informed the College that neonatal male circumcision has no medical indication. It is a traumatic procedure performed without anaesthesia to remove a normal functional and protective prepuce [foreskin].
We do not support the removal of a normal part of the body, unless there are definite indications to justify the complications and risks which may arise. In particular, we are opposed to male children being subjected to a procedure, which had they been old enough to consider the advantages and disadvantages, may well have opted to reject the operation and retain their prepuce [foreskin]....The 1989 United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child states that State parties should take all effective and appropriate measures with a view to abolishing traditional practices prejudicial to the health of children.
"No
national medical organization in the world recommends
routine
circumcision of male infants."
Male Circumcision and the Rights of the Child
Jacqueline Smith*
"Indoctrination can harm the child, most notably
by effectively closing off the alternatives
for the adult the child will become. An individual
can choose only among the options of which she
is both aware and can consider seriously.
If parents limit the child's exposure to religious
and moral views identical to their own, the child
will see only one option and choose it:
she will likely hold the same beliefs
when she becomes an adult."1
Introduction
In this article, I will address the issue of male circumcision
relating to the rights of the child. In most countries the issue
is hardly discussed or even ignored. In the Netherlands, only
rarely male circumcision is the subject of debate. The
Netherlands Government worries more about the safety and hygiene
of the circumcisions taking place, resulting, inter alia, in
subsidising education for circumcisers.2 This is in sharp
contrast to the intensive debate on genital mutilation of girls,
which took place in 1992 and 1993.3 This discussion formed the
direct reason for a study carried out by the Netherlands
Institute of Human Rights (SIM).4 In the latter study, the only
explicit mentioning of male circumcision concerned the fact that
genital mutilation of girls frequently goes further than mere
circumcision, a small incision or the removal of the prepuce of
the clitoris. The only form of female genital mutilation which is
anatomically comparable with the circumcision of boys is that
form of circumcision in which the clitoral prepuce is cut away.
This form, however, occurs very rarely.5
The choice to make a dissociation between the two practices was
at that time a pragmatic, political decision, related to the
vehemently discussion in the Netherlands,6 and because the fight
against female genital mutilation would be more difficult if male
circumcision were also to be challenged.7 The main conclusion of
the study was that female genital mutilation is a harmful
traditional practice in the sense of Article 24(3) of the UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child and that the States Parties
accordingly should take all effective and appropriate measures to
abolish this practice.8
In discussing the results of the research with Peter Baehr, he
asked me whether the conclusions drawn in the report would also
apply to male circumcision. Although the issue of male
circumcision was not dealt with in the research on female genital
mutilation, it was frequently mentioned in the literature and
other material studied at that time.9 I take this opportunity to
address the issue of male circumcision, using mainly the material
collected for the study on female genital mutilation. Studying
additional literature on male circumcision, I learned that this
custom has been as much the subject of extreme controversy as is
the case with female genital mutilation and that the debate on
routine neonatal male circumcision is intensifying, particularly,
but not only in the USA.10
After a description of male circumcision in section 1, section 2
will give some examples of what authors on female genital
mutilation have said about male circumcision. Sections 3 and 4
will deal with the human rights and legal aspects of male
circumcision. Finally, some concluding observations will be made.
1. A Description of
Male Circumcision
History and Prevalence
Male circumcision is probably one of
the oldest of all surgical procedures.11 Male circumcision
preceded female genital mutilation, both operations existed long
before Judaism and Islam were introduced.12 In the absence of any
historic, medically confirmed documentation, the origins of the
practices have provided much room for speculation but have
revealed very few facts. Although the origin of the practice is
not entirely clear, it almost certainly began as a religious
rite.13 In all societies where female genital mutilation is
practised, male circumcision is also performed.14 But throughout
history the male operation has existed in many more societies
than operations on females.15 Currently, approximately one-fifth
of the world's male population is circumcised, particularly on
religious grounds. In Western society, mostly in the Anglo-Saxon
countries like Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and
especially the USA, circumcision is usually performed for
non-religious, "medical" reasons. There is, however,
enormous variation between the circumcision rate in the UK (5-6
percent) and that in the USA (60 percent). In Britain neonatal
circumcision declined from an incidence of around 30 percent in
the 1940's to a very low level at present. Still, it remains a
common operation, with over 30.000 procedures annually.16 To
compare, it is estimated that there are between 85 and 115
million girls and women throughout the world whose genitals have
been mutilated.17
One can distinguish several types of male circumcision of which
the simple or routine infant circumcision, which is the removal
of the foreskin or prepuce, is most commonly practised.18 In most
cases, no anaesthesia is used. In general, the operation is
perceived by the medical staff as a relatively minor procedure,
with no or hardly any risks for the child.19 Regarding the risks
of male circumcision, some authors have reported a complication
rate as low as 0.06 percent, while at the other extreme rates of
up to 55 percent have been quoted. This reflects the differing
and varying diagnostic criteria employed. A realistic figure
seems to be 2-10 percent.20 Although haemorrhage (bleeding) and
sepsis (infection) are the main causes of morbidity, the variety
of complications is enormous. The literature abounds with reports
of morbidity and even mortality as a result of circumcision.
Other complications mentioned in the literature are, inter alia,
psychological and possible sexual complications.21
Religious Reasons for Male
Circumcision
In the Jewish community circumcision
(brit milah) is a religious ritual and is usually performed on
the child's eight day22 of life by a Mohel. The rite of
circumcision is one of the most ancient practices of Judaism. The
commandment to circumcise male children was given to Abraham in
the Torah (Genesis 17:7-14).23 Circumcision is (in general) a
common denominator among movements: Reform, Conservative,
Re-constructio-nist, Orthodox, all circumcise their male children
and require male converts to undergo some form of circumcision.24
Anaesthetic is not used.
In the United States, the Jewish community has begun to question
the practice, using arguments based on the religion. For
instance, according to Jewish law, it is forbidden to hurt living
things. Even the necessary causing of pain is considered cruel in
Judaism. Also the fact that circumcision involves the surgical
alteration of a perfectly natural God's given part of the body,
which stems from Jewish thought plays a role. The opinions range
from supporting the view that a carefully considered decision
against circumcision can be reconciled within Jewish tradition to
the statement that "the ritual of circumcision is one of the
mistakes Judaism carries within it and should be considered not
differently from the way they are considered by society in
general, no matter how centrally important they seem to Jewish
culture".25 Bringing a Jewish boy into the covenant
symbolically in a ceremony officiated by a rabbi is an
alternative proposed by some authors.26
Religious circumcision is also practised by Muslims: the
procedure is performed between the ages of four and 13 years.
Curiously, however, the Koran contains no specific ordinance on
this subject.27 However, according to the Sunnah (sayings and
practices of the Prophet) "circumcision is a sunnah for men
and excision an honour for women".28 In the literature, also
medical reasons are mentioned (removal of the prepuce under which
impurities may gather and allow germs to spread and cause
infection),29 and historic, pragmatic reasons.30 Also within the
Islamic doctrine, arguments against circumcision can be found,
either based on the Koran itself,31 or on the Sunnah. However,
these arguments are, to my knowledge, only used against female
genital mutilation.
Within Christianity, male circumcision has no religious
significance.32 Other religions and cultures practice male
circumcision especially as a requirement for "manhood"
within certain puberty rites.33
Non-Religious Reasons for
Circumcision
Male circumcision evolved from a
religious ritual or puberty rite into routine surgery for health
reasons in the Anglo-Saxon countries. During the existence of the
non-religious circumcision different reasons have been adopted
ranging from prevention from masturbation, which, it was
believed, caused blindness and/or insanity (mid 19th Century), to
most recently HIV prevention. Initially, it was also advocated as
a cure to prevent alcoholism, asthma, hernia and, for instance,
headaches. Since the turn of the century, other reasons have been
given to perpetuate the practice: hygiene,34 avoidance of
sexually transmitted diseases, prevention of penile cancer and of
cervical cancer, protection against urinary tract infections in
infancy, and decreasing the risk of AIDS. Until today, male
circumcision remains in the medical literature a very
controversial issue. Many advantages for circumcision have been
claimed, but as one is disproved and discarded, others are found.
The medical debate centres around the controversy whether male
circumcision can be regarded as harmless. With regard to whether
or not routine neonatal circumcision has health benefits, the
medical literature contains contradictions35 and also the
professional groups find it difficult to reach a conclusion.36 A
good example is the American Academy of Pediatrics
</library/statements/aap/> (AAP) which issued several
statements on routine neonatal circumcision, contradicting one
another.37 Also, mainly in the United Kingdom, controversy exists
on whether too many circumcisions are being performed to manage
minor foreskin (phimosis) problems in childhood, which could be
managed conservatively.38
Especially in the United States, where neonatal circumcision in
90 percent of the cases is performed as a routine medical
procedure, numerous activist groups have emerged in the past
decade, in response to the demand by parents for more accurate
information in order to have the possibility of an informed
choice on circumcision.40 The similarity with the grassroots
level organisations in Africa, which are in the forefront in the
fight against female genital mutilation, is striking.41 Most of
the organisations are of the opinion that, whilst the
consequences of the circumcision of boys and the circumcision of
girls differ, the violence involved is the same.42
2. Authors on
Female Genital Mutilation about Male Circumcision
"As the clitoris is
regarded as the masculine element in the [girl] child, it is
believed that the foreskin on the penis which is regarded as the
female element in a male should be removed."43 From a
biological and health view the operations on girls are not the
counterpart of male circumcision.44 However, although perhaps the
extent and also the complications of the operation are different,
the fact remains that healthy tissue is removed from a healthy
person without his or her consent.
In addition, there are many parallels between female genital
mutilation and male circumcision, especially with regard to the
background (religious requirement or tribal tradition) and the
reasons and justifications given to perform the operation.
According to Lightfoot-Klein:
"[c]hildhood genital mutilations are anachronistic blood
rituals inflicted on the helpless bodies of non-consenting
children of both sexes. The reasons given for female circumcision
in Africa and for routine male circumcision in the U.S. are
essentially the same. Both falsely touch the positive health
benefits of the procedures. Both promise cleanliness and the
absence of "bad" genital odours, as well as greater
attractiveness and acceptability of the sex organs. The affected
individuals in both cultures have come to view these procedures
as something that was done for them and not to them."45
Toubia wrote: "The unnecessary removal of a functioning body
organ in the name of tradition, custom, or any other non-disease
related cause should never be acceptable to the health
profession. All childhood circumcisions are violations of human
rights, and a breach of the fundamental code of medical
ethics."46 Also Hosken states that:
"It is self-evident that any deliberate physical mutilation
especially of the female genital organs is a violation of this
person's integrity and her human right to health as much as the
mutilation of male genital organs is. The excision of the penis
which is equivalent of excision of the clitoris is instantly
recognized as a severe physical genital mutilation with permanent
consequences and is a criminal offense. The same is true of what
is done to female children resulting in permanent health and
psychological trauma. Both are human rights violations."47
3. Human Rights and
Legal Aspects of Male Circumcision
From the literature, it
becomes apparent that there are two opposite sides in the debate
on routine male circumcision. One side advocates the practice,
primarily on a preventative health basis or on religious grounds
(see supra). The other side opposes the practice, primarily on
human rights and preservation of bodily integrity grounds. In the
remaining of this article, I will elaborate on the arguments
presented by the latter group.48
Human Rights
A number of rights are raised in the legal discussion concerning
the phenomenon male circumcision: the rights of the child in
general, the right to health, wherein legal-ethical arguments
with regard to the actions of the medical profession play a role,
the right to physical integrity, the right of parents to bring up
their children according to their own traditions and culture and,
as the continuation of that, the right to cultural
self-determination.
The Rights of the Child in General
Taking as a basis the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and
the Declaration on the Rights of the Child , male circumcision
can be conceived as being a breach of the universally accepted
human rights and rights of the child.49 The Universal Declaration
of Human Rights,50 which is nowadays generally accepted as
customary international law, prohibits in Article 5 acts of
torture and inhuman treatment. Article 12 provides for a right to
privacy and Article 3 reads: "Everyone has the right to
life, liberty and security of person."
The Convention on the Rights of the Child
</library/ethics/UN-convention/>, in Article 19(1) provides
that the States party to the Convention
"shall take all appropriate legislative, administrative,
social and educational measures to protect the child against
every form of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse,
neglect or negligent treatment, maltreatment or exploitation,
including sexual abuse, while in the care of parent(s), legal
guardian(s) or any other person who has the care of the
child."
Article 37 provides that the States shall ensure that a child is
not subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment. For present purposes, Article 24(3) of
the Convention is the most important. This paragraph reads:
"States Parties shall take all effective and appropriate
measures with a view to abolishing traditional practices
prejudicial to the health of children."
This part of Article 24 was extensively discussed during several
meetings of the Working Group.51 During these discussions, it was
proposed that the subject of female genital mutilation be
included explicitly in the article, in order to clarify the
content of the article and to indicate that it concerned
practices "of a serious nature."52 However, also
restraint with regard to subjects which imply differences in
cultural values was advocated.53 Finally, agreement was reached
on the condition that the term "traditional practices"
would encompass all those practices that are included in the 1986
report of the Working Group on Traditional Practices Affecting
the Health of Women and Children.54 A last attempt from the
Netherlands to refer explicitly to female genital mutilation
within this article failed.55
Veerman considers the Convention on the Rights of the Child
<http://www.cirp.org/library/ethics/UN-convention/> to be
innovative, for, among other things, "[I]t will be the first
binding instrument that specifically states that
"traditional practices" such as female circumcision
(...) are harmful."56 It is, according to Veerman, generally
known that the "traditional practices" named in Article
24(3) refer in the first place to female genital mutilation, and
that these vague terms are used in order to avoid problems.57 The
question is whether the article is also applicable to male
circumcision. If one considers the latter procedure not "an
infringement upon the health or rights of boys and young men as
it implies no permanent damage to health,"58 then Article
24(3) is not relevant. However, given the fact that male
circumcision is painful and can have harmful implications, one
could also argue that this custom also falls under the
definition, especially because of the vague terms used.
Regional human rights instruments,59 to which in this context
reference can be made, are the African Charter on Human Rights
and Peoples' Rights
<http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/z1afchar.htm>,60 and
the Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the African Child
<http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/africa/afchild.htm>.61 The
latter Charter refers in Article 1(3) specifically to "[A]ny
custom, tradition, cultural or religious practice that is
inconsistent with the rights, duties and obligations contained in
the present Charter shall to the extent to such inconsistency be
null and void." Article 14 deals with physical, mental and
spiritual health. There is no mention in this article of
traditional practices; however Article 21(1) is dedicated wholly
to traditional practices. The paragraph reads:
"States Parties to the present Charter shall take all
appropriate measures to abolish customs and practices harmful to
the welfare, normal growth and development of the child and in
particular: a) those customs and practices prejudicial to the
health or life of the child, and b) those customs and practices
discriminatory to the child on the grounds of sex or other
status."
The Right to Life
Male circumcision is also conceived by some authors as a threat
of the right to life. The operation can lead to medical
complications, which occasionally result in death.62
The Prohibition of Discrimination
One could also argue that male
circumcision constitutes a violation of the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination
<http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/d1cerd.htm>.63
Article 5(b) contains an explicit reference to personal security,
stating that:
"In compliance with the fundamental obligations laid down in
Article 2 of this Convention, States Parties undertake to
prohibit and to eliminate racial discrimination in all its forms
and to guarantee the right to everyone, without distinction as to
race, colour, or national or ethnic origin, to equality before
the law, notably in the enjoyment of the following rights: (...)
(b) The right to security of person and protection by the State
against violence or bodily harm, whether inflicted by government
officials or by any individual group or institution
(...)."64
As circumcision is perceived as inflicting bodily harm, this
article could be applicable.
The Prohibition of Torture
Male circumcision can be conceived as a form of cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment, in view of the way in which it often takes
place and in view of the pain which accompanies it. In the
Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment
<http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/h2catoc.htm>65 it is
stated that: "The States party to this Convention undertake
to take all effective legislative, administrative, judicial or
other measures for the prevention of and eventual punishment for
torture." The States also may not deport or return a person
to his native country if there are grounds to believe that that
person shall run the risk of torture. In addition, Article 16(1)
expressly provides that each State party undertakes: "to
prevent in any territory under its jurisdiction other acts of
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment which do not
amount to torture as defined in Article 1, when such acts are
committed by or at the instigation of or with the consent or
acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in
official capacity (...)"
The Right to Health
A number of the documents on
international human rights, including the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights </library/ethics/UN-human/>, the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
<http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/a_cescr.htm> and the
Convention on the Rights of the Child
</library/ethics/UN-convention/>, contain provisions which
lay down the right to health. If one adheres to the opinion that
male circumcision is medically unnecessary, and that consequently
the procedure carries an unnecessary danger of complications,
certainly where this takes place under unhygienic conditions, it
can be argued that the procedure forms a threat to the health of
the child. Because of the procedure, without any necessity the
natural anatomy and physiology of the child is changed, and this
can lead to life-threatening health problems.66
From a legal perspective, parents carry the primary
responsibility for the health of their child, and must take
decisions in these matters on the basis of the fact that the
child is not yet capable of doing so because of his
"diminished capacity."67 Parental consent is required
for all forms of medical treatment. However, there is also the
parental right to refuse medical treatment, on religious grounds,
for example. Just as in the case of male circumcision, the
parents are, in refusing medical treatment of the child on
religious grounds, convinced that their decision is in the
interest of the child. In this latter case, it is argued that the
decision to adhere to a religion and to accept the consequences
thereof suggests a degree of intellectual adulthood. Children are
not in a position to take this decision, so parents take this
decision for them. When the health consequences of refusing
medical treatment are, for instance, threatening the life of a
child, in practice it can happen that parents are divested of
their parental authority during the period of the medical
procedure.68 One of the arguments for this action is that the
child has no choice in a matter which concerns his health,
welfare and physical existence. The child has no say in the
matter. This argumentation is also employed by various authors in
respect of male circumcision and female genital mutilation.69
According to them, the decision to undergo the operation can
better be postponed until the individual is able to make its own
choice, that is, when it has reached adulthood. The situation
changes when an adult, after having been informed of the
consequences, decides to follow tradition and undergo the
operation.70 It is also advocated that parents should be fully
informed about the functions of the foreskin,71 the pain,
complications and possible disadvantages of the procedure, in
order to be able to make a more carefully considered decision on
whether or not to circumcise their child.72 When the necessary
information is given, it is ultimately the responsibility of
parents to knowingly put their children at risk.
The Right to Physical Integrity
The right to physical integrity has two components: protection
against violation of and offenses against the body by others,
thus from outside, and the right to determine over one's own
body, the right to self-determination. The right to physical
integrity is one of the fundamental civil rights. It is a right
to "freedom." The government should therefore refrain
from interference. However, the government also has a relevant
duty of care, namely the stimulation of a climate in which civil
rights can achieve a substantive form.
In activist literature in particular, male circumcision is seen
as a violation of the right of self-determination of the child
over its own body.
The Right of Parents to Bring Up their Children According to
their Own Traditions and Culture
Parents have the right to bring up their children according to
their own traditions and culture. Parents have the desire to give
their children the best possible upbringing, an upbringing in
"the best interests" of their child, independent of
governmental interference. These interests can be in bringing the
child up according to their own culture and traditions, or can be
influenced by economic, social and cultural advantages, as well
as by strong social and cultural pressures.73 One problem with
genital mutilation is that the parents do not carry out the
practice in order to hurt or abuse their child. Consequently, the
parents do not see it as a form of child abuse. The procedure is
carried out because it is judged to be in the "best
interests of the child," socially or physically. The rights
of the child can conflict with the right of parents to bring up
their children according to their own traditions and culture.
Most cultures are in agreement that it is not good to endanger
the health or welfare of people who cannot make their own
decisions. It is generally accepted that a harmful and
disfiguring practice may not be carried out upon someone who has
no capacity to consent. Children do not judge independently or
expertly, there is no question of "permission."74 There
is no question of free will. This last argument can be a
reinforcement in respect of the contention that the operation can
better be postponed until the individual is able to make his or
her own choice, that is, when he or she has reached adulthood.
The Right to Cultural Self-Determination Versus Universally
Accepted Human Rights
It would be going too far within the framework of this article to
make an indepth examination of the possible controversy between
the right to cultural self-determination and universally-accepted
human rights. However, it is important to make a number of
remarks about this subject, since this can clarify the dilemma
facing some cultures.
The practice of male circumcision and female genital mutilation
is part of an intricate and complex cultural system. The
elimination of the practice could mean the disturbance of the
cultural balance, and the attempts of outsiders to alter or
eliminate the practice are often seen as an irresponsible
interference in a people's culture and as moral imperialism. The
question is, however, whether a community has the right to
maintain a tradition, simply because it is a tradition.
When is the "tradition" a violation of human rights
which justifies the pressures of others to end it? When is a
practice sufficiently harmful or dangerous to warrant being
called a violation of human rights? Does male circumcision fall
within this description? All these questions are concerned with
the controversy between cultural self-determination and human
rights. One of the most important aspects in determining whether
a cultural practice can be deemed to be a violation of human
rights is the extent to which innocent people are wounded or
killed as a result of that practice.75 At the same time, an
important consideration is the extent to which the
"victim" participates at his or her own free will.
The controversy can be brought back to that between tradition and
children's rights: the right to maintain a tradition versus the
right to physical integrity and the right of children to be
protected from unnecessary pain, complications to their health,
permanent disfigurement of their bodies, and even death. What
should prevail and how would this be determined, and by whom?
This last question raises the issue as to whether the concept of
human rights is a Western concept, and whether there are
universal human rights, which could be applied without cultural
value judgment? Here one can, in general terms, again distinguish
two trends. Firstly, that of cultural relativism, in which it is
said that there are many different cultures in the world and that
it is impossible to apply one and the same set of values to
them.76 The other conception demonstrates that a universal
standard is not only possible, but indeed necessary, basing this
on the idea that the concept of human rights is not just a
western ideology, but that human rights are "inalienable,
entitled to all human beings, and cannot be denied by a state or
government."77 Countries cannot withhold these rights from
their subjects or deprive them of these rights, and it is the
duty of governments to implement and uphold these rights.
4. Legal Measures
The demand for a legal
prohibition of all forms of male circumcision as well as of
female genital mutilation is a very tricky point of discussion.
This is because a number of opponents of legal measures are of
the opinion that such measures would only force the custom to go
"underground," increasing the health risks. The problem
with laws and regulations, particularly in the case of a
deeply-rooted practice is that, without clear enforcement
mechanisms and without the support of education, information and
consciousness-raising, no clear effects can be expected from the
law. Laws forbidding behaviour which is deeply rooted in a
culture will neither receive extensive support nor bring about
much change.78 If effective legislative action is to be achieved,
the following prerequisites must be fulfilled. On one side there
must be active, consistent support for the legislation, followed
by governmental enforcement of the laws. On the other side, the
laws must be concurrent with other activities, such as education
and information.
In this context, it is interesting to note, that two countries in
which non-religious routine neonatal male circumcision frequently
takes place have adopted strict laws against female genital
mutilation. Both laws explicitly, in almost the same wording,
state that in order to determine whether an operation is
necessary for the health of the person "no account shall be
taken of the effect on the person on whom the operation is to be
performed of any belief on the part of that or any other person
that the operation is required as a matter of custom or
ritual."79
Conclusion
At what point should a
practice be deemed dangerous enough to be a violation of human
rights, in this case the rights of the child, worthy of freedom
from external interference? How is this determined and by whom?
Comparing male circumcision and female genital mutilation, in my
opinion, the severity of the operation should not be an issue.80
Fact is that in all cases healthy tissue from a person without
the consent of that person is removed. The focus must be placed
on the children who are forced to suffer without consent. Male
circumcision is, like female genital mutilation, a "harmful
traditional practice" and as such in violation with the
rights of the child. It is necessary to advocate full respect for
these human rights for all children, boys and girls alike. By
condemning one practice and not the other, another basic human
right, namely the right to freedom from discrimination, is at
stake. Regardless whether a child is a boy or a girl, neither
should be subject to a harmful traditional practice.
The attitude of Western societies to oppose to female genital
mutilation, but not to condemn male circumcision (perhaps because
they are afraid that they will be considered as anti-semitic81),
suggests a double standard of the acceptance82 and implies
(racial) discrimination of circumcised boys (Jewish and Moslem)
by not trying to protect them against useless pain as is the case
with girls and non-circumcised boys.
As was stated in the study on female genital mutilation, moral
condemnation is not the best solution to the problem.
International and domestic legislation are not enough to stop all
forms of harmful traditional practice. The problem with laws and
regulations, particularly in the case of a deeply-rooted
practice, is that, without clear enforcement mechanisms and
without the support of education and information, no clear
effects can be expected. Laws forbidding behaviour which is
deeply rooted in a culture will neither receive extensive support
nor bring about much change. Laws can, however, play a supportive
role, alongside information and education. These measures must be
combined with efforts to raise the level of awareness.
It is questionable whether, in the majority of cases of routine
neonatal circumcision, the parents are fully informed as to the
function of the foreskin, and the pain, possible complications
and risks and consequences of the operation. It is the
responsibility of doctors and health care professionals involved
as well as religious leaders and practitioners to inform the
parents.
In my view, the best way to do justice to the rights of the child
is to do no harm, to let it enjoy life in every aspect and to
protect it against influences not asked for. Regardless of
whether a child is a boy or a girl, neither should be subject to
a tradition which is harmful. When the child is of consenting
age, fully informed about all possibilities which lay ahead of
him or her, it can make up his or her own mind and choose the way
he or she thinks is best.
* Researcher at the Netherlands Institute of Human Rights (SIM),
Utrecht.
H. LaFollette, " Freedom of Religion and Children
<http://www.etsu.edu/philos/faculty/hugh/free-chi.htm>,"
Public Affairs Quarterly, No. 3, 1989, pp. 75-87 (84), as cited
by Piet van der Ploeg, "Moet besnijdenis mogen?"
[Should circumcision be allowed?], Comenius, Vol. 17, No. 3,
1997, pp. 117-129 (122).
See on the policy of the Dutch Government relating to male
circumcision, for instance, Trudy Veerman, Aart Hendriks,
Jacqueline Smith, "Recht doen aan gezondheid(sbelangen) van
kinderen" [To do Justice to the Health (Interests) of
Children], in: Recht en kritiek, Vol. 21, No. 2, 1995, pp.
136-165 (154-158).
The immediate cause for the discussion was the publication of a
report by K. Bartels and I. Haaijer, 's Lands wijs, 's lands
eer?: Vrouwenbesnijdenis en Somalische vrouwen in Nederland [When
in Rome, do as the Romans do?; Circumcision of women and Somali
women in the Netherlands], Centrum Gezondheidszorg Vluchtelingen,
The Hague, 1992.
Jacqueline Smith, Visions and Discussions on Genital Mutilation
of Girls: An International Survey, Defence for Children
International, Section The Netherlands, Amsterdam, 1995. This
study was carried out on behalf of Defence for Children
International, Section The Netherlands, at the request of the
Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Directorate General for
International Cooperation.
Ibidem, p. 2 and p. 10. See also the Inter-African Committee on
Traditional Practises Affecting the Health of Women and Children,
Report on the Regional Conference on Traditional Practises
Affecting the Health of Women and Children, 19-24 November 1990,
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Berhane Ras-Work, Activities Concerning
Traditional Practises Affecting the Health of Women and Children
and Profile of Non-Governmental Organisations Involved in this
Issue, WHO, Geneva, 1989.
See for an extensive description of this discussion, Smith,
op.cit. (note 4), pp. 161-165.
See also the Report of the UN Seminar related to Traditional
Practices affecting the Health of Women and Children,
Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, 29 April-3 May 1991, "As regards
the strategy for combatting female circumcision, it was
recommended that efforts should be made to separate, in people's
minds, male circumcision, which has a hygienic function, and
female circumcision, which is a grave attack on the physical
integrity of women." (UN Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/1991/48, p. 6,
para. 27)
Adopted on 20 November 1989 by the General Assembly of the United
Nations and entered into force on 2 September 1990, UN Resolution
44/25 (1989), UN Doc. A/44/736. 191 countries are at present (May
1998) party to this Convention.
Like, for instance, Hanny Lightfoot-Klein, Prisoners of Ritual:
An Odyssey into Female Genital Circumcision in Africa, Harrington
Park Press, New York, 1989; Fran P. Hosken, The Hosken Report;
Genital and Sexual Mutilation of Females, 4th Rev. WIN News,
Lexington, 1993; Nadia Toubia, "Women and health in
Sudan," in: Women of the Arab World, London, Zed Press,
1988, pp. 98-109; and Nadia Toubia, International Journal of
Gynecology and Obstetrics, 46, 1994, pp. 127-135.
Especially because the American Academy of Family Physicians and
the American Academy of Pediatrics are currently reviewing their
position statement on circumcision. The fact that in the SIM
study on female genital mutilation, it was stated that the two
customs - female genital mutilation and male circumcision - are
technically incomparable and of a different background and nature
provoked several reactions, especially from activist groups from
the USA, who are advocating the right to physical integrity and
the right to individual self-determination of all children,
including boys.
For an extensive description, see, inter alia, E. Wallerstein,
Circumcision, an American Health Fallacy, Spinger Publishing
Company, New York, 1980 and F. Bryk, Die Beschneidigung bei Man
und Weib: Ihre Geschichte, Psychologie und Ethologie,
Neubrandenburg, 1931.
Hosken, op.cit. (note 9), p. 71.
N. Williams and L. Kapila, "Complications of Circumcision
</library/complications/williams-kapila/>", British
Journal of Surgery, Vol. 80, October 1993, pp. 1231-1236 (p.
1231).
For an extensive overview of the prevalence of genital
mutilations, see, for instance, James DeMeo, "The Geography
of Genital Mutilations
<http://www.nocirc.org/symposia/first/demeo1.html>",
paper presented at the First International Symposium on
Circumcision, 1-3 March 1989, Anaheim, California, published in
The Truth Seeker, July/August 1989, pp. 9-13.
Hosken, op.cit. (note 9), p. 71.
Among others, Williams and Kapila
</library/complications/williams-kapila/>, loc.cit. (note
13) and Wallerstein, op.cit. (note 11).
World Health Organization, Information Kit, WHO, Geneva, July
1994. See also the numbers compiled by NOHARMM from various
sources, which indicate that worldwide about 500 million males
are circumcised.
For other forms mentioned in the literature, see, inter alia,
Wallerstein, op.cit. (note 11); William E. Brigman, Circumcision
as Child Abuse: The Legal and Constitutional Issues
</library/legal/brigman/>, Journal of Family Law, Vol. 23,
No. 3, 1984, pp. 337-357; Abbie J. Chessler, "Justifying the
Unjustifiable: Rite v. Wrong
</library/legal/chessler/>," Buffalo Law Review, Vol.
45, 1997, pp. 555-613 (564-566).
Consequently, it is likely to be delegated to a junior surgeon.
Kapila and Williams
</library/complications/williams-kapila/>, loc.cit. (note
13), p. 1231, relate the complication rate directly to the
operator's inexperience.
A reliable account is given by ibidem, p. 1231.
Ibidem, p. 1234.
As reason for the requirement that the operation be done at the
eighth day, it is given that before that day the baby is too
tender and later the father might not be able to bring himself to
do it. Some doctors have said that afterwards, the baby develops
too much and circumcision would actually be a more serious
matter. After the eighth day the nervous system becomes more
developed (especially after puberty).
The text is, inter alia, available on
http://www.landfield.com/faqs/judaism/faq/12-kids, containing
frequently asked questions on Jewish Childrearing: Why are Jewish
boys circumcised?
Judaism does not practice female circumcision.
Moshe Rothenberg, " Ending Circumcision in the Jewish
Community?
<http://www.nocirc.org/symposia/second/rothenberg.html>,"
paper presented at the Second International Symposium on
Circumcision, 30 April-3 May 1991, San Francisco, California.
See, for instance, Lisa Braver Moss, "The Jewish Roots of
Anti-Circumcision Arguments
<http://www.nocirc.org/symposia/second/moss.html>,"
paper presented at the Second International Symposium on
Circumcision, 30 April-3 May 1991, San Francisco, California; and
Rothenberg, loc.cit. (note 25).
Sami A. Aldeeb Abu-Sahlieh, "Islamic Law and the Issue of
Male and Female Circumcision," in Third World Legal Studies,
1994-1995, pp. 73-101 (77). Hosken states, however, that for
Moslems the removal of the foreskin is an absolute religious
requirement demanded by the Koran, Hosken, op.cit. (note 9), p.
33. In this context, curious enough no mention is made by the
author of the Jewish tradition.
Abdel Rahman Al Nagger, Islam and Female Circumcision,
translation of a communication presented at the Inter-African
Committee Workshop on Traditional Practices, at the Nairobi
Forum, 12 July 1985 (on file with the author), p. 7. Within the
Islam, no obligation is mandatory unless it is supported by a
provision or a verse in the Koran or a valid reliable saying of
the Prophet, or an unanimous agreement of scholars. With regard
to the latter, the Ijtihad (opinions and deductions of religious
leaders) "which we may follow if they do not harm us or
disagree if they do," there is disagreement between scholars
of four Moslem sects regarding circumcision of males (ibidem, p.
8). See also Aldeeb Abu-Sahlieh, loc.cit. (note 27), pp. 78-80.
Rahman Al Nagger, loc.cit. (note 28).
Ibidem, p. 4. Rahman Al Nagger mentions as a reason that Moslems
are circumcised that their bodies may be recognized if they are
killed in battle, so that prayers may be said for them and their
bodies buried in Moslem cemeteries.
See, for instance, the references made by Aldeeb Abu-Sahlieh,
loc.cit. (note 27), pp. 80-81 and Nawal El Saadawi, The Hidden
Face of Eve; Women in the Arab World, Zed Press, London, 1980, p.
42.
See, for instance, Maurice Assad, Christianity and Circumcision
(on file with the author), who refers to the New Testament, First
letter to the Corinthians (7:17-20) dealing with male
circumcision of the non-Jews who became Christians. There it is
stated; "Let him not seek circumcision. For neither
circumcision counts for anything nor uncircumcision, but keeping
the commandments of God. Every one should remain in the state in
which he was called." See also Chessler, loc.cit. (note 18),
p. 586.
For instance throughout tribal Africa, see DeMeo, loc.cit. (note
14); and Hosken, op.cit. (note 9), p. 33.
A recent study challenged this notion again, stating that not
only do circumcised boys need more care than children with an
intact penis during the first 3 years of life, they also are far
more likely to develop (minor) penis problems, such as swellings
and skin adhesions, than their intact counterparts. See R. S. Van
Howe, "Variability in penile appearance and penile findings:
a prospective study
<http://www.cirp.org/library/complications/vanhowe/>,"
British Journal of Urology, Vol. 80, No. 5, November 1997, pp.
776-782.
For an overview of the debate on health benefits, see, amongst
others, Marilyn Fayre Milos and Donna Macris
</library/ethics/milos-macris/>, "Circumcision; A
Medical or a Human Rights Issue?," Journal of
Nurse-Midwifery, Vol. 37, No. 2 (Supplement), March/April 1992,
pp. 87S-96S. See also Dr. Benjamin Spock, writer of "Baby
and Child Care," who recommended in earlier editions of his
book that boys should be circumcised. He changed his mind,
stating that "We now know that it is not the only choice,
nor is it agreed that it is the most sensible choice. My own
preference, if I had the good fortune to have another son, would
be to leave his little penis alone," Circumcision - It's Not
Necessary
<http://faculty.washington.edu/gcd/DOC/spock.html>,
Redbook, April 1989.
See, for instance, the statement by J. Fred Leditschke
</library/statements/aaps/>, President of the Australasian
Association of Paediatric Surgeons, A.A.P.S., which does not
support the routine circumcision of male neonates, infants or
children in Australia: "It is considered to be inappropriate
and unnecessary as a routine to remove the prepuce, based on the
current evidence available." The Australian College of
Paediatrics </library/statements/acp1996/> states that
routine male circumcision should not be performed prior to 6
months of age. In addition, it considers that, "neonatal
male circumcision has no medical indication. It is a traumatic
procedure, performed without anaesthesia to remove a normal
functional and protective prepuce." The British Medical
Association (BMA) Guidelines </library/statements/bma/>
advise: "The BMA opposes unnecessarily invasive procedures
being used where alternative, less invasive techniques, are
equally efficient and available."
Compare the 1975 statement </library/statements/aap/> that
"There is no absolute medical indication for routine
circumcision of the newborn" (AAP Ad Hoc Task Force
Committee on Circumcision, American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists concurred, Guidelines for perinatal care,
Washington DC, 1983), p. 87 and the 1984 pamphlet stating that
the foreskin shields the glans; with circumcision, this
protection is lost (AAP pamphlet "Care of the Uncircumcised
Penis </library/normal/aap/>," AAP, Elk Grove Village,
1984). In 1986, the AAP revised its publication, excluding this
paragraph. In 1989, a new position of the AAP
</library/statements/aap/> was issued, stating that newborn
circumcision has potential medical benefits and advantages as
well as disadvantages and risks (Report of the Ad Hoc Task Force
on Circumcision, AAP, Elk Grove Village, 1989, p. 3) Recently,
the AAP has appointed a new ad hoc Task Force Committee on
Circumcision to revise the AAP position.
A. Gordon and J. Collin, "Save the Normal Foreskin
</library/general/gordon/>," BMJ 1993, 306, pp. 1-2
and Williams and Kapila
</library/complications/williams-kapila/>, loc.cit. (note
13), p. 1231. Already in 1949, Douglas Gairdner declared in 1949
that the foreskin is normal, healthy tissue, and its adherence to
the glans serves the important function of protecting the glans
from urine and faeces in infancy and early childhood.
Subsequently, the British National Health Service discontinued
payment for the surgery and the practice ceased. See D. Gairdner
</library/general/gairdner/>, "The Fate of the
Foreskin," British Medical Journal, Vol. 2, 1949, p. 1433,
cited in Milos and Macris, loc.cit. (note 35), p. 88S.
Also in Canada, the debate over routine male circumcision is
intensifying. See, for instance, the recent statement of Dr.
Margaret Somerville, director of the McGill Centre for Medicine,
Ethics and Law, that non-medical infant male circumcision is
technically criminal assault, cited in: Sharon Kirkey,
"Circumcising baby boys 'criminal assault,'" Ottawa
Citizen Online, 17 October 1997. The Canadian Pediatric Society
issued recently a statement
<http://www.nocirc.org/position/cps.html> saying there is
no valid medical reason to justify routine infant male
circumcision and recommending that: "Circumcision of
newborns should not be routinely performed."
Mention can be made of: the National Organization of Circumcision
Information Resource Centres (NOCIRC
<http://www.nocirc.org/>); Doctors Opposing Circumcision
(D.O.C. <http://faculty.washington.edu/gcd/DOC/>); Brothers
United for Future Foreskins (BUFF); National Organization of
Restoring Men (NORM <http://www.norm.org/>); National
Organization to Halt the Abuse and Routine Mutilation of Males
(NOHARMM <http://www.noharmm.org/home.htm>); Nurses for the
Rights of the Child (NRC <http://nurses.cirp.org/>);
Parents of Intact Sons; Uncircumcising Information and Resources
Center (UNCIRC)
See Smith, op.cit. (note 4), pp. 103-141.
See, for instance, the Declaration of the First International
Symposium on Circumcision
<http://www.nocirc.org/declare.html>, which condemned all
forms of circumcision on the grounds of the violation of physical
integrity and the consequences for physical and mental health.
For the text of the Declaration, see The Truth Seeker, Vol. 1,
No. 3, 1989, p. 52. See also NOCIRC Newsletter, Vol. 8, No. 1,
1994.
Hosken, op.cit. (note 9), p. 31.
Ibidem, p. 32: "But what is done to girls has a different
purpose and results: a healthy and most sensitive organ is
removed. From a biological viewpoint the genital mutilations
performed on females are the equivalent of the amputation of part
or all of the penis - with very similar physical and sexual
results and quite different from what is done to boys. With boys
the foreskin is cut, though both operations may result in deadly
infection." "The equivalent of removing the tip of the
clitoris (sunna circumcision) is the same as the removal of the
glans of the penis - both are most sensitive and full of nerve
endings," ibidem, p. 47. Hosken in her fight against female
genital mutilation even goes further in proposing to have the
excision of the penis introduced as a means to sexual control of
males, instead of female genital mutilation (ibidem, p. 47). On
the differences between male circumcision and female genital
mutilation, see also Assaad, op.cit. (note 32), p. 14, who states
that there is a "principle difference between male
circumcision and female circumcision. In male circumcision no
parts of the male sex organs are being mutilated, only the
foreskin - the outer cover of the male sex organs - is being
removed, without touching the male sex organ itself."
Lightfoot-Klein, op.cit. (note 9), p. 193. See also by the same
author, "Erroneous Belief Systems Underlying Female Genital
Mutilation in Sub-Saharan Africa and Male Neonatal Circumcision
in the United States; A Brief Report Updated
<http://www.nocirc.org/symposia/third/hanny3.html>,"
paper presented at the Third International Symposium on
Circumcision, 22-25 May 1994, Maryland. See also Chessler,
loc.cit. (note 18), pp. 573-586.
Toubia, loc.cit. (note 9), pp. 127-135.
Hosken, op.cit. (note 9), p. 18.
As a frame of reference the same categories are used as in the
study on female genital mutilation. See Smith, op.cit. (note 4),
pp. 20-24.
For views as to whether human rights are also children's rights,
see, inter alia: E. Verhellen, Convention on the Rights of the
Child; Background, Motivation, Strategies, Main Themes, Garant,
Leuven, 1994, pp. 35-56. More general see, for instance, Målfrid
Grude Flekkøy, "Children as Holders of Rights and
Obligations," in: Donna Gomien (ed.), Broadening the
Frontiers of Human Rights, Essays in Honour of Asbjørn Eide,
Scandinavian Press, Oslo, 1993, pp. 97-120 and Philip Alston
(ed.), The Best Interests of the Child; Reconciling Culture and
Human Rights, UNICEF, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1994.
Adopted and promulgated by the General Assembly of the United
Nations on 10 December 1948.
See for an overview of the discussion, Smith, op.cit. (note 4),
pp. 42-43.
Representative of the United States, UN Doc. E/CN.4/1987/25,
para. 35.
UN Doc. E/CN.4/1987/25, para. 29.
UN Doc. E/CN.4/1986/42.
UN Doc. E/CN.4/1987/25, para. 38.
Philip E. Veerman, The Rights of the Child and the Changing Image
of Childhood, Martinus Nijhoff, Dordrecht, 1992, pp. 184-185.
Ibidem, pp. 199-200.
Kirsten Lee, "Female Genital Mutilation - Medical aspects
and the rights of children," International Journal of
Children's Rights, Vol. 2, No. 1, 1994, pp. 35-44 (35). However,
she also admits that "[c]ontrary to popular belief in
various parts of the world, as for example in the United States,
male circumcision has no health or sexual advantages
either." See also Geraldine van Bueren, The International
Law on the Rights of the Child, Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague,
1995, p. 307.
Two other regional documents, which status is until now
uncertain, could be of relevance. The Charter of the Rights of
the Arab Child, promulgated by the Arab League of which the exact
date of its acceptance by the Council of Ministers of the Arab
League is not clear. See Veerman, op.cit. (note 56), pp. 260-263.
Text of the Charter in idem, pp. 517-526. The Charter does not
contain an explicit reference to harmful traditional practices.
However, it is included in the fundamental rights that the States
"confirm and guarantee the right of the child to have State
protection from abuse and exploitation both physically and
psychologically even if it were from members of his family."
In June 1992, the European Parliament discussed and approved the
Draft European Charter on the Rights of the Child. See minutes of
the Assembly of 8 July 1992, European Parliament, p. 13 and pp.
29-38. Article 19 of this Draft contains the right of every child
to physical and moral integrity: "No child shall be
subjected to torture, inhuman, cruel or degrading treatment by
any public or private person." Article 25 stipulates the
right of every child to have his own culture, to practise his own
religion or belief and to use his own language."
Adopted by the 18th Meeting of the Heads of State and Government
Leaders of the Organisation of African Unity on 27 June 1981 in
Nairobi. The Charter entered into force on 21 October 1986.
This Charter was prepared within the Organisation of African
Unity. The draft was approved by the 26th Meeting of the Heads of
State and Government of the Member States of the OAU. It will
become effective when the 15 Member States have ratified the
Charter or have acceded to the Charter. A large number of
articles are the same as the provisions in the UN Conven-tion on
the Rights of the Child; however, the African Charter contains a
number of provisions which are specifically directed toward the
African continent.
Alison T. Slack, "Female Circumcision: A Critical
Appraisal," Human Rights Quarterly, No. 4, 1988, pp. 437-486
(451-452).
Adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on 21
December 1965 and entered into force on 4 January 1969,
Resolution 2106 (XX) (1965).
Italics by the author. See also Hosken, op.cit. (note 9), p. 9:
"Human rights are indivisible, they apply to every society
and culture and continent. We cannot differentiate between black
and white, rich and poor, male and female, or between North and
South, the industrialized or developing countries, if the concept
of human rights is to mean anything at all."."
Adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on 10
December 1984 and entered into force on 26 June 1987, Resolution
39/46 (1984).
See supra for the applicability of Article 24(3) of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Ibidem, p. 469.
Blood transfusions in the case of children whose parents are
Jehovah's witnesses.
With special reference to parental consent in the case of routine
neonatal male circumcision, see, inter alia, Charles A. Bonner
and Michael J. Kinane, "Circumcision; The Legal and
Constitutional Issues
<http://www.nocirc.org/symposia/second/bonner2.html>,"
paper presented at the Second Symposium on Circumcision, 30
April-3 May 1991, San Francisco; J.P. Warren, "Circumcision
and the abuse of medical power' (copy on file of author). See
also Les Haberfield, "Responding to 'Male Circumcision:
Medical or Ritual?'," Journal of Law and Medicine, Vol. 4,
No. 4, May 1997, pp. 379-385. The author states that parents and
doctors are not acting unreasonably while some medical
justification can be shown for the procedure. With regard to
female genital mutilation, see El Saadawi, op.cit. (note 31);
Inter-African Committee, op.cit. (note 5); United Nations, Review
of Further Developments In Fields Which the Subcommission has
been concerned. Study on Traditional Practises Affecting the
Health of Women and Children, Final Report by the Special
Rapporteur, Mrs. Halima Embarek Warzazi, E/CN.4/Sub.2/1991/6, 5
July 1991.
For different views on "informed consent" and whether
one can speak of freedom of will in the case of adult female
circumcision, see, inter alia, Slack, loc.cit. (note 62), pp.
470-472; Asma El Dareer, Woman, why do you weep: Circumcision and
its Consequences, Zed Press, London, 1982.
See, amongst others, Gairdner </library/general/gairdner/>,
loc.cit. (note 35), Gordon and Collin
</library/general/gordon/>, loc.cit. (note 38) and Warren,
loc.cit. (note 69).
"Parents should be fully informed of the possible benefits
and the potential risks...", Report of the Ad Hoc Task Force
on Circumcision </library/statements/aap/>, AAP, Elk Grove
Village, 1989, p. 3. See also Kapila and Williams, loc.cit. (note
13), p. 1235; and Les Haberfield, "Informed consent and
infant male circumcision
</library/legal/haberfield/>," paper presented at the
Australasian Law Teachers Association Conference in Sydney,
Australia, 3 October 1997, stating that doctors may be at risk of
litigation, where they perform a circumcision procedure without
giving appropriate information (including the risks of the
procedure) to parents to enable them to give an informed consent.
K. Boulware-Miller, "Female Circumcision: Challenges to the
Practice as a Human Rights Violation," Harvard Women's Law
Journal, Vol. 8, 1985, pp. 155-177 (166-167); Slack, loc.cit.
(note 62), p. 467.
Or "consent"; see, concerning this, inter alia,
Boulware-Miller, loc.cit. (note 73); Slack, loc.cit. (note 62);
Lightfoot-Klein, op.cit. (note 9).
Extreme examples are: the burning of widows in India, burying
live babies of the female sex in the Arabian lands, prior to the
time of Mohammed.
See, inter alia, Jack Donnelly, "Cultural Relativism and
Universal Human Rights," Human Rights Quarterly, Vol. 6,
1984, pp. 400-419; Rhoda Howard, "Women's Rights in
English-Speaking Sub-Saharan Africa," in: Claude E. Welch
(ed.), Human Rights and Development in Africa, Albany, 1984, pp.
66-68; Alison Dundes Renteln, "The Unanswered Challenge of
Relativism and the Consequences for Human Rights," Human
Rights Quarterly, Vol. 7, 1985, pp. 514-540; and idem,
International Human Rights; Universalism Versus Relativism, Sage
Publications, London, 1990, pp. 56-58.
Slack, loc. cit. (note 62), p. 474. See also the Vienna
Declaration of 1993
<http://www.coe.fr/eng/std/viennad.htm>, inter alia,
paragraph 1, UN Doc. A/Conf.157/23, 12 July 1993. See also Peter
R. Baehr, "Human Rights: A Common Standard of
Achievement?," Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights, Vol.
9, No. 1, 1991, pp. 5-18; and Peter R. Baehr,
"Universaliteit van Mensenrechten: Is het, kan het, moet
het?" [Universality of Human Rights: are they, can they, do
they have to?], in: N.J.H. Huls (ed.), Grenzen aan Mensenrechten
[Limits to Human Rights], Stichting NJCM-Boekerij, Leiden, 1995,
pp. 45-56.
According to Lightfoot-Klein, op.cit. (note 9), pp. 43-45 a law
can have some potential in the strife for change where the desire
to abandon the practice already exists. Ogiamen advocates an
approach which supports a gradual abolition, by means of a
process of official recognition of the practice. According to
him, the legal considerations should shift from the negative
approach (prohibition) to the positive approach (regulation).
Tony B.E. Ogiamen, "Legal Aspects of Female
Circumcision," in: Female Circumcision. Strategies to bring
about change. Proceedings of the International Seminar on Female
Circumcision, AIDoS/SWDO, 13-16 June 1988, Mogadisho, 1988, pp.
57-69 (57).
Emphasis added. In Great Britain a law, proscribing genital
mutilation, entitled the " Prohibition of Female
Circumcision Act
<http://www.butterworths.co.uk/academic/fortin/statutes/pfca85.htm>"
became effective on 16 July 1985. For the United States, see the
Federal Prohibition of Female Genital Mutilation Act
<http://www.fgmnetwork.org/legisl/US/federal.html>, passed
in June 1995 by the United States House of Representatives and
signed by President Clinton on 30 September 1996, Bill H.R. 3247,
which was included in the Minority Health Initiatives Act, H.R.
3864, 18 U.S.C. 116, 1996, amending the United States Code,
Chapter 7 of Title 18 by adding a new section on "female
genital mutilation." See also WIN News, Vol. 23, No. 2,
Spring 1997, pp. 46-47 and Vol. 23, No. 4, Autumn 1997, p. 23.
Especially, the idea in the 1992 Dutch report, op.cit. (note 3)
of making a small incision in or perforation of the clitoris,
suggesting that such a procedure is "symbolic" and
would not be mutilation, provoked criticism.
See also Aldeeb Abu-Salieh, loc.cit. (note 27), p. 101.
Not only in the USA, but also, for instance, in the Netherlands.
In March 1993, the Dutch Government issued an official statement
condemning all forms of female genital mutilation. At the outset,
it was again stressed in this statement that female circumcision
is a practice contrary to the prevailing attitudes in the
Netherlands on the equality of women and their place in society:
"It is viewed here as a form of repression, and as Dutch
policy aims to combat the repression of women, it opposes all
forms of female circumcision. (...) With regard to the
recommendation that policy should draw a distinction between
mutilating and non-mutilating forms of female circumcision, we
have ascertained that this leads to confusion, as the concepts
are vague, and that to distinguish between the two forms is no
simple matter." See letter from the Ministry of Welfare,
Health and Culture, No. GGb/HIZ/931029, 16 March 1993; see also
WIN News, Vol. 19, No. 2, Spring 1993, p. 45.
[CIRP Note: This report was prepared under the auspices of the
Netherlands Institute of Human Rights
<http://www.law.uu.nl/english/sim/>, University of Utrecht,
Utrecht, The Netherlands.]
Legal Information about non-therapeutic male circumcision in Canada
Equality of Rights Guaranteed ?
(courtesy of www.med-fraud.org)
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms states: 15 (1) "Every individual is equal before and under the law and has to right to equal protection and equal benefits of the law without discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability."
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled that only a female had the sole right to decide what was in the best interests of her body.
The Supreme Court of Canada has removed a major barrier for childhood incest victims who want to sue their abusers. In a 7-0 ruling they said that incest victims often don't discover the harm they have suffered until well into adulthood. The time period should start only when the victims are reasonably capable of discovering the injury from the attacks. The damages wrought often surface "slowly and imperceptibly," so that the victim may only come to realize the harms she has suffered and their cause long after the statute of limitations has expired.
Victims of circumcision have stated that they were often not aware that they were circumcised or had suffered physical damage as a result of their circumcisions until well into adulthood. We are wondering if the justices are just as willing to give males victims of unwanted circumcision or male victims of physical damage sustained during their circumcision the same type of consideration?
The Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons asked the Federal Government to outlaw non-doctors from performing female circumcisions and other forms of genital mutilations. Recently the College of Physicians and Surgeons in Saskatchewan issued directives to doctors warning them against routine circumcision. Doctors were instructed that as medical professionals they were not obliged to perform circumcisions because parents requested them.
As concerned males who view male circumcision as a total violation of our individual rights as guaranteed by the Charter, we are asking government legislators and judges if in fact the provisions provided by the Canadian Charter of Rights is a legal document, and applies equally to all individuals, regardless of age or sex, or if provisions stated only protect females as appears to be the indication?
If the Charter of Rights and Freedoms provides equal protection, we are requesting that the equal application of the rights to equal protection and equal benefit of the law, as stated in the Charter be applied to males as well as females.
If the Charter does not provide males with equal protection, do males have an obligation to respect the charter as a meaningful document?
Either the Rights in the Charter apply to both sexes equally regardless of age, or these rights are clearly discriminatory in nature. If rights are meaningful then they must be applied equally. You can't have it both ways.
We believe in equality or rights. Politicians , Do you? If you do, then why is this type of discrimination permitted? And if not, of what value is the Charter? America males have similar rights guaranteed by their Constitution.
This index page provides links to online documents relevant to the study of the legal position of neonatal non-therapeutic male circumcision in Canada. Documents are indexed in approximate chronological order.
Note: As of October 1999, an organization named Intact has been formed in Canada with the announced purpose of promoting the genital integrity of Canadian males by ending non-therapeutic neonatal male circumcision by legal means. For more information about this organization, go to the Intact Home Page.
In February 2001, an organization called Association for Genital Integrity announced plans to seek a court challenge to the status of the practice of male neonatal non-therapeutic circumcision under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. For more information see the newspaper article Circumcision is Against the Charter.
Online documents (OFFSITE):
- Criminal Code, Chapter C-46, Consolidated Statutes.
- Civil Code of Québec
- U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, G.A. res. 217A (III), U.N. Doc A/810 at 71 (1948).
- Patel H. The problem of routine infant circumcision. Can Med Assoc J 1966;95:576-581.
- Fisher TL. Outmoded treatment. Can Med Assoc J 1966;95:630.
- U.N. International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2200A [XX1]. 16 December 1966.
- Canadian Paediatric Society. Circumcision in the newborn period. CPS News Bull Supple 1975;8(2):1-4.
- Margaret A. Somerville. Medical Interventions and the Criminal Law. 26 McGill Law Journal 82 (1980).
- Hopp v. Lepp, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 192 (informed consent)
- Reibl v. Hughes, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 880 (informed consent)
- Somerville MA. Therapeutic and Non-Therapeutic Medical Procedures -- What are the Distinctions? Health Law in Canada 1981;2(4):85-90.
- Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Constitution Act (1982).
- E. (MRS.) v. EVE , 2 S.C.R 388 (1986).
- Bioethics Commitee, Canadian Paediatric Society. Treatment Decisions for Infants and Children. Reference B86-01 (1986).
- U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989). UN General Assembly Document A/RES/44/25.
- Kluge E. Female circumcision: When medical ethics confronts cultural values. Can Med Assoc J 1993:148(2);288-9.
- Margaret A. Somerville. Letter to A. Kim Campbell, Minster of Justice. June 10, 1992.
- A. Kim Campbell. Letter to Margaret A. Somerville, December 15, 1992.
- Margaret A. Somerville. Letter to Pierre Blais, Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada, January 28, 1993.
- --Catholic Children's Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto v. M. (C.), 2 S.C.R 165 (1994).
- LeBourdais E. Circumcision no longer a "routine" surgical procedure. Can Med Assoc J 1995;152(11):1873-1876.
- B. (R.) v. Children's Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto (Re Sheena B), 1 S.C.R. 315 (1995).
- Allan Rock. Letter to Geoffrey T. Falk. February 6, 1996.
- Fetus and Newborn Committee, Canadian Paediatric Society (CPS). Neonatal circumcision revisited. Can Med Assoc J 1996; 154(6): 769-780.
- Taylor JR, Lockwood AP, Taylor AJ. The prepuce: specialized mucosa of the penis and its loss to circumcision. Br J Urol 1996;77:291-295.
- Etchells E, Sharpe G, Walsh P, et al. Bioethics for Clinicians: 1. Consent. Canadian Medical Association Journal 1996; 155: 177-180.
- Etchells E, Sharpe G, Burgess MM, et al. Bioethics for Clinicians: 2. Disclosure. Canadian Medical Association Journal 1996; 155: 387-391.
- Etchells E, Sharpe G, Elliot C, Singer PA. Bioethics for Clinicians: 3. Capacity. Canadian Medical Association Journal 1996; 155: 657-661.
- Etchells E, Sharpe G, Dykeman ML, et al. Bioethics for clinicians: 4. Voluntariness. Canadian Medical Association Journal 1996; 155: 1083-1086.
- Lazar MN, Greiner GG, Robertson G, Singer PA. Bioethics for clinicians: 5. Substitute decision-making. Canadian Medical Association Journal 1996; 155: 1435-1437.
- Code of Ethics of the Canadian Medical Association, Approved by the CMA Board of Directors, October 15, 1996.
- Van Howe RS. Consent for circumcision. CMAJ 1996;156:17.
- Taddio A, Katz J, Ilersich AL, et al. Effect of neonatal circumcision on pain response during subsequent routine vaccination. Lancet 1997;349(9052):599-603.
- Eugene W. Outerbridge, MD. Letter to Thomas Anderson, Ph.D. July 27, 1997.
- Harrison C, Kenny NP, Sidarous M, Rowell M. Bioethics for clinicians: 9. Involving children in medical decisions. CMAJ 1997;156:825-8. (pdf file}
- R. v. Stillman 1 S.C.R 607 (1997).
- Somerville MA. Letter to C. Robin Walker, 10 November 1997.
- Somerville MA. Letter to C Robin Walker. 28 January 1998.
- Weijer C, Singer PA, Dickens BM, Workman S. Bioethics for clinicians: 16. Dealing with demands for inappropriate treatment. CMAJ 1998;159:817-21.
- Margaret A. Somerville. Ethics, law and circumcision: How do we balance respect for religion with a desire to reduce or end the practice of infant male circumcision? The Globe and Mail, August 6, 1998, page A21.
- Cold CJ, Taylor JR. The prepuce. BJU International 1999;83 Suppl. 1:34-44.
- Arif Bhimji, M.D. Infant Male Circumcision: A violation of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Heath Care Law 2000. (.pdf file, requires Acrobat Reader)
- Arif Bhimji, M.D. Infant Male Circumcision: A violation of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Heath Care Law 2000. (HTML file)
- Margaret A. Somerville. Altering baby boys' bodies: the ethics of infant male circumcision. In: Margaret A. Somerville. The Ethical Canary: Science, Society and the Human Spirit. Toronto: Viking, 2000. (ISBN 0-670-89302-1)
- Taylor JR. Letter. Pediatrics News 2000;34(10):50.
- Kendel, D. A. Caution Against Routine Circumcision of Newborn Male Infants (Memorandum to physicians and surgeons of Saskatchewan). Saskatoon: College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan, February 20, 2002. Photocopy.
- Hill G. The danger of circumcision litigation is real. CMAJ 2002; Rapid response, 6 September.
- College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia. Infant male circumcision. College Quarterly 2002;Fall:2.
- Caution Regarding Routine Circumcision of Newborn Male Infants. Winnipeg: College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba, Newsletter 38:4, December 2002.
- Hill G. Doctors should restrict the practice of circumcision. Can Med Assoc J 2003; Rapid response; 8 August.
Other information
- In Canada, medical practice is regulated by the provincial Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons. Addresses and links to the various Colleges are available on the College of Family Physicians of Canada Web site. Persons in Canada who have complaints against a medical doctor should lodge that complaint with the registrar of the appropriate provincial college.
- Canadian Legal Information Institute
