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NAROK - Maasai women erupted with mocking heckles as a community elder, wrapped in a traditional red blanket, claimed that female genital mutilation had all but stopped in their community in southern Kenya.
The women know that mutilating young girls by removing their clitoris and inner labia, framed as a rite of passage, is still an entrenched practice in some remote villages of Narok county, around three hours from the nearest tarmac road.
One local nurse told AFP some 80 percent of girls in the area are still affected, despite the practice being made illegal in 2011.
"Why are you telling people that you have stopped, when we have teenage girls coming to the hospital who have been cut?" asked a woman in the crowd, gathered in Entasekera village to discuss the issue.
The women nodded emphatically, while the men sat stone-faced.
Female genital mutilation (FGM) has survived decades of pressure to end it, from British colonialists and later Kenyan and global NGOs.
It still exists not only among the rural southern Maasai, but also in Kenya's northeast, with parts of the Somali diaspora community in the region reporting rates over 90 percent, as well as in some urban areas and among educated groups, where campaigners have highlighted the rise of so-called medicalised FGM.
A 2022 government survey said the number of affected teenage girls had fallen from 29 percent to nine percent since 1998 nationally. But that does not reflect reality in some areas.
"We don't circumcise girls because the culture has changed," Maasai elder Moses Letuati, 50, told AFP -- before admitting one of his four daughters was cut.
Many of the Maasai men at the meeting said it should end, although one said only because an "uncut woman is better" in bed.
Members of the Maasai community, including reformed FGM practitioners, anti-FGM activists, and community leaders, take part in a dialogue against FGM and child marriage in Loita Ward, Narok County. (AFP)

A Maasai man walks past a mural advocating for the cessation of FGM and child marriage on a corridor of the Narok County Referral Hospital in Narok, Kenya. (AFP)
Nurse Loise Nashipa, 32, at the Entasekera Health Centre, described FGM as "a monster".
"There's bleeding, and there's pain, and infection," she said, saying most cutting was still done by elderly women in unsanitary conditions.
Officially, FGM rates have fallen, said Rhoda Orido, head nurse at Narok County Hospital, "but I think it's because some deliver at home".
'He'll forgive me'
As night fell at Ngigi's shelter, the girls celebrated the graduation of Cecilia Nairuko, 24, who ran away from FGM and forced marriage at the age of 15 and has qualified as a psychologist.
Girls at the House of Hope celebrate the graduation of 24-year-old Cecilia Nairuko, at the centre that shelters and educates girls rescued from FGM and child marriage, in Narok County. (AFP)