Gambia may have upheld its ban on female cutting, but the fight goes on away from parliament

Habibou Tamba, a 32-year old local activist on female genital mutilation, who said that he attended the rally outside the parliament, and a prominent community member — whom he did not identify — sent him a message afterward, accusing him of serving the interests of the West, weeds his farm in Sintet, Gambia, Friday, July. 26, 2024. (AP Photo/Annika Hammerschlag)

SOMA, Gambia (AP) — When Metta, a mother of six from rural Gambia, heard that lawmakers were considering reversing the country's ban on female genital cutting, a centuries-old practice she underwent as a child and now fiercely opposes, she was determined that her voice be heard.

She packed her bag and boarded a bus to Gambia's capital, Banjul, to join scores of women protesting outside the parliament in the largely Muslim nation of less than 3 million people in West Africa.

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