HomeLocal NewsVirginity test is humiliating, illegal — Doctor

Virginity test is humiliating, illegal — Doctor

Date:

Related stories

Drug baron Danwawu bribed Kano commissioner with $30,000 – SSS

The Kano State Commissioner for Transport, Ibrahim Namadi, has...

Gov Yusuf donates operational vehicles to Civil Defence Corps

The Governor of Kano State, Alhaji Abba Kabir Yusuf,...

Gov Yusuf nominates new anti-corruption commission chairman, appoints legal adviser

Kano State Governor, Alhaji Abba Kabir Yusuf, has nominated...

Kano education varsity to begin degree courses, scraps NCE

Yusuf Maitama Sule Federal University of Education in Kano...

We are not part of ADC alliance – Kano PDP chairman

The chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in...
spot_img

Virginity test is illegal, Dr Oluwajimi Sodipo, a Consultant Family Physician at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, declared in Ilorin on Wednesday.

He told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on the side-line of a workshop for primary healthcare providers that the WHO had declared the practice as illegal.

He added that apart from the WHO declaration, the practice was archaic.

Virginity test is conducted for various reasons, chief of which are requests from parents or suitors to establish marriage eligibility of the female or employment eligibility.

The WHO describes virginity test as a gynaecological examination conducted in the belief that it determines whether a woman or girl has had vaginal intercourse.

Sodipo said that there was a global call by WHO to eliminate violence against women and girls, adding that the practice was medically unnecessary.

He added that the practice was oftentimes painful, humiliating and traumatic.

He argued that the concept of virginity test was a myth, as the absence of a hymen did not mean that a female was promiscuous.

“The perception that there must be blood-stained sheet at first intercourse to indicate virginity is not always scientifically correct,’’ Dr Sodipo stressed.

Speaking on gender-based violence, he observed that there had been more attention on female victims because they were more susceptible to gender-based violence.

Emerging data showed that boys and men were increasingly becoming victims, he said.

He noted that boys who had fallen victim to the menace were less likely to talk about their condition because of stereotypes.

Dr Sodipo advised survivors not to be silent about their plight but to access help from healthcare providers and other relevant stakeholders.

The workshop with the theme: Clinical Management of Sexual Gender-Base Violence (GBV) was organised by Stand To End Rape Initiative, an NGO.

(NAN)

Subscribe

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here