Muslim doctor charged with female genital mutilation of nine minor girls, lied to FBI: Read what the US Federal authorities said

Dr Fakhruddin Attar(L), Dr Jumana Nagarwala(R)

Dr Jumana Nagarwala, a Muslim doctor in the United States is facing trial on charges of performing female genital mutilation on minor girls, all seven-year-olds. But the federal authorities have now revealed that Ms Nagarwala was not the only doctor cutting the children. 

Nagarwala is reportedly a part of a secret nexus of doctors who travelled across the country carrying out the brutal procedure under the guise of performing religious rituals. 

In November 2018, a federal judge acquitted Ms Nagarwala of female genital mutilation charges on the grounds that a law banning the practice was unconstitutional. 

However, the Muslim doctor is still facing an obstruction charge for allegedly concealing information during the trial. As per a report published in Detroit Free Press, prosecutors on Thursday revealed that there were other doctors in California and Illinois who were also cutting young girls as a part of religious rites followed by the Indian Muslim sect, Dawoodi Bohras. 

The prosecution also asserted that Ms Nagarwala travelled to the Washington DC area to perform female genital mutilation (FGM) on as many as five minor girls there. 

Besides Nagarwala, one Dr Fakhruddin Attar was also charged with mutilation, conspiracy and obstruction, for allowing her to perform the surgeries at his clinic in Livonia, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit. 

Additionally, the same charges were also levelled against Attar’s wife, Farida, a woman named Tahera Shafir who reportedly helped in the procedure, along with four other women who suckered their daughters into undertaking the procedure for religious purposes. 

During the trial in November 2018, the US district court dismissed all the cases except one obstruction charge against Nagarwala, Attar, his wife Farida and Shafiq. The judge cited a 1996 federal law to declare the ban on the practice as unconstitutional and concluded that it’s up to the states to regulate female genital mutilation.

The trial was brought to a halt as the coronavirus pandemic swept across the globe, including in the United States. Later in March 2021, the prosecutors issued a superseding indictment with five new charges, including conspiracy to make false statements and witness tampering. 

As per prosecutors, Nagarwala and her three cohorts lied to the FBI about the female genital mutilations they were performing and threatened others in their community to lie should the FBI decides to interview them about it.

After being arrested, Nagarwala claimed FGM was a religious ritual followed by Dawoodi Bohra Muslims

Nagarwala was arrested in April 2017 after two young girls accused her of performing mutilation procedures on them earlier that year. She had then fiercely contested the allegations and asserted that she was only performing a religious practice as ordained in Islam and in accordance with the customs followed by the Muslim sect of Dawoodi Bohras. Nagarwala had said that the procedure only involved scraping the membrane of the girls’ genitalia as part of the religious custom.

However, the doctor’s reports procured by the Detroit Free Press reveal the FGM procedure often rendered severe injuries, including scarring, a small tear, lacerations and other complications.

As per federal authorities, Nagarwala and her cohorts are performing female genital mutilation procedures since 2015, and charged her with mutilation of seven other girls from Michigan, Illinois and Minnesota.

Court records cited by reports revealed victims who were subjected to FGM whailed, screeched and bled during the procedure, with one of them drugged with Valium ground in liquid Tylenol to calm her down during the procedure,.

OpIndia Staff: Staff reporter at OpIndia