How comes its not men asking for the web to be shut down?
By AFP, PORT ELIZABETH,
Chilling
images of deformed penises on a website slamming botched traditional
circumcisions in South Africa have raised the ire of cultural
commentators who called Monday for the site to be shut down.
Dutch
doctor Dingeman Rijken set up the webpage ulwaluko.co.za after scores
of boys and young men died last year when the initiation ceremony into
manhood went wrong. But critics say it betrays their culture and should
have been handled differently.
"That website must be
shut down with immediate effect," said Nkululeko Nxesi from the local
Community Development Foundation of South Africa (Codefsa).
"He (Rijken) should respect the cultural principles and processes of this nation," Nxesi told AFP.
Traditional chief Patekile Holomisa echoed his sentiments.
WOMEN SHOULDN'T SEE
"We
condemn the exposure of this ritual to people who do not practise it.
Women should not see what happens at initiations," Holomisa, a former
leader of the Congress of Traditional Leaders of South Africa told AFP.
By
mid-last year over 50 boys and young men had died from infection,
exhaustion and dehydration during the weeks-long initiation ceremony in
the bush, while over 300 were hospitalised, according to official
figures.
Graphic images show severely disfigured,
infected or amputated genitals on the website, named for the local Xhosa
language word for initiation into manhood, which Rijken encountered
while working in the rural Eastern Cape province.
"If
you see so many boys dying, at some point you have to talk about it. Why
do we sustain a ritual that slaughters boys in their prime, or physical
and mental scars many others for life?" Rijken told the local Daily
Dispatch newspaper.
He is believed to have left the country to work in Malawi.
South
Africa's Film and Publications Board (FPB) restricted the website for
people under 13 years following a complaint by Codefsa because of
"material which may be very disturbing and harmful to children".
It
however found that despite the shocking photos "it is a bona fine
scientific publication with great educative value," the FPB told AFP in
an email.
"The website highlights the malice that
bedevils this rich cultural practice. It does not condemn this rich
cultural practice but makes a clear plea for it to be regulated so that
the deaths do not occur."
A warning notice now appears when the reader logs onto the website.
But the cultural groups reject the board's finding, and have vowed to appeal its decision.
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