YOUNG and innocent, Amani Abby thought she was the luckiest girl in the world when, aged six, friends and family began handing her money and sweets.
She had no idea she was about to be dragged into a bush, held down, and forced to lie with her legs open as part of a horrifying ordeal which would change her life forever.
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“I don't remember anything from that point until the time I woke up in bed and my legs were tied up with ropes,” she recalls.
The trauma was so severe, Amani, 24, a student from Sheffield, South Yorks, blacked out. She didn’t even realise until she was a teenager that she had been subjected to female genital mutilation (FGM).
The horrific procedure, which involves partial or total removal of the external female anatomy for non-medical reasons, has been illegal in the UK since 1985. Classified as child abuse, it can cause long-term problems with sex, childbirth, and mental health.
In Sudan, where Amani grew up, however, the practice remains common for ‘religious purposes’, despite finally being made illegal there in 2020. According to the UN, 87% of Sudanese women aged between 14 and 49 have undergone some form of FGM.
Amani grew up with her parents, brother and sister in a small village in Sudan, before moving to the UK aged nine. Now, 16 years after her ordeal, she exclusively recounts her story to Fabulous as she campaigns to prevent it happening to other young girls.
“I wasn't really told anything beforehand,” she says. “I was just a child, and can you imagine telling a child what was going to happen to them?” she says.
The kids were often left to their own devices and never got much attention from the adults, who were too busy trying to make ends meet - but, as Amani explains, this day was different.
“On that day, they gave me loads of attention. I remember the older men and older women who I'd never spoken to before put money in my shirt and handed me sweets.”
Then a large group of people led her to a nearby field where they planted crops to eat, before she was left with her grandmother, aunt, mum and a couple of other women.
“I remember them holding me firmly, gripping me at one point, telling me to lay down,” she explains. “And then all of a sudden, they held me really strongly. I don't remember anything after that.”
Amani was given no anaesthesia or painkillers, and after she came to, she recalls her mum picking her up and placing her on a bright pink potty.