Home Featured READ: How Young Women Are Regaining Their Virginity In Tunisia
Featured

READ: How Young Women Are Regaining Their Virginity In Tunisia

Share
Share

Young Tunisian women are now having hymen reconstruction surgery to avoid being sent back to their parents after the wedding.

According to BBC, young Tunisian women are turning to  hymenoplasty, a short procedure that promises to reconstruct her virginity surgically. The young women save and spend as much as $400 (£310) for the procedure to prevent future shame.

One woman who has decided to turn to science to regain her lost virginity is 28-year-old woman Yasmine. Yasmine lost her virginity while living abroad to one man but now is afraid her husband will find out she is not a virgin after they get married.

Though she has agreed to the surgery, she considers this procedure a lie and one day the husband might suspect or find out about the sham.

    “I consider this to be deception and I’m really worried,” says Jasmine whose wedding is in two months.

BBC reporter Sihem Hassaini who accompanied Jasmine to the clinic for the procedure was shocked to discover a bunch of other women waiting for the 30-minute procedure to reconstruct their hymen.

Jasmine took months to save for the procedure while keeping every detail secret from her family.

According to Rashid, the doctor to carry out the surgery on Jasmine, most of his young patients are driven by the fear of bringing shame to their family and relatives when discovered they are not virgins.

The doctor said though many doctors refuse to do the surgery, he does it because he disagrees with those who make virginity a sort of sacred thing.

The annoyed doctor said he blamed the male-dominated society that hides in some religious principles.

    “I mean it when I say its male dominance and I’ll continue to wage an all-out war against it,” he says.

Tunisia is regarded as a leader in women’s rights in North Africa but religion and tradition here dictate that young women have to remain virgins until they are married.

There is also a provision in Tunisian law for divorce in cases where women are discovered not to be virgins.

Share
Related News
Featured

Voting Opens for 8th .ng Awards as 88 Nominees Emerge Across 19 Categories

The Nigeria Internet Registration Association (NiRA) has officially opened public voting for...

Featured

FII, Accenture Report Predicts $10 Trillion AI Boom Across Global South by 2038

A groundbreaking report released by the Future Investment Initiative (FII) Institute and...

Featured

FII’s Global Future of Work Report Maps Africa’s Four Economic Realities

RIYADH — The Future Investment Initiative (FII) Institute has unveiled a sweeping...

Dr. Owen D. Omogiafo OON, President & Group CEO, Transnational Corporation Plc at FII9
FeaturedInternationalTop stories

Africa Needs to Scale Up Its Energy Supply Quickly – Owen Omogiafo

Owen Omogiafo, President and Chief Executive Officer of Transcorp Group, has called...