Why the U.S. ban on female genital mutilation was ruled unconstitutional.
The first federal charges of female genital mutilation have  been dismissed by a federal judge, whose ruling also declared the U.S. law  banning the practice unconstitutional.
        In his 28-page decision, U.S. District Judge Bernard  Friedman said Congress "overstepped its bounds" in prohibiting the practice in  1996, adding that FGM is a "'local criminal activity' which, in keeping with  long-standing tradition and our federal system of government, is for the states  to regulate, not Congress."
        The judge's decision voided the charges of FGM and  conspiracy against two Michigan doctors accused of cutting at least nine minor  girls in a Detroit clinic: Dr. Jumana Nagarwala, the Michigan physician accused  of performing FGM on the girls, and Dr. Fakhruddin Attar, who was accused of  allowing Nagarwala use his clinic for the procedures.
        Friedman also dismissed charges against two mothers accused  of assisting in the procedures, as well as four mothers accused of bringing  their daughters to the clinic for the practice, some across state lines.
        The defendants of the case are all members of the Indian  Muslim Dawoodi Bohra community, which practices a minor form of FGM as a  religious rite of passage.
        Here's what the judge's ruling means for a practice that has  been outlawed by more than 50 countries.
        A serious blow to a historic case
        FGM, the partial or complete removal of the clitoris for  nonmedical reasons, is a criminal offense in 27 U.S. states. Michigan passed a  ban last year against the practice, soon after the first federal case was  opened in that state.
        Michigan's law made the practice punishable for up to 15  years in prison, while the federal law dictates a sentence of up to five years  in prison. Since the federal case began in April 2017, the defendants can't be  retroactively charged under the new state law.
        The judge's ruling came after a request from Nagarwala and  her co-defendants to dismiss the charges, claiming that the federal law was  unconstitutional because Congress did not have the authority to pass the law.  Friedman agreed.
        The judge said the government did not show FGM as a  commercial activity or interstate market that would be subjected to federal  law, like other illegal markets. "This is not a market, but a small number of  alleged victims. If there is an interstate market for FGM, why is this the  first time the government has ever brought charges under this 1996 statute?"
        The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have  estimated at least 513,000 U.S. women and girls are at risk of FGM or have  already been subjected to the procedure. Of those, more than 118,000 who are at  risk live in the 23 U.S. states without legislation against FGM, according to  the CDC. Over 10,000 at-risk girls live in Michigan alone.
        What are anti-FGM advocates saying?
  
  
        Mariya Taher, a FGM survivor who also spoke to the PBS  NewsHour at the opening of the federal case in 2017, said the ruling caught her  off guard, "but the tactic of the defense was not surprising."
        "I knew they were trying to find the federal law  unconstitutional," said Taher, the founder of Sahiyo, a group opposed to FGM  that began to collect global reaction in the wake of Friedman's ruling.
        Taher said she didn't see the judge's ruling as being about  whether FGM should be legal, but that nevertheless the message will be seen as  a win to those who continue to practice FGM.
        "Opponents are going to use this ruling as a way to allow  [FGM] to continue, and that gives me concern that they will continue to  perpetuate the cutting of our daughters," Taher told the NewsHour. "There are  many survivors that feel disheartened to hear [the ruling] and felt  traumatized" by it.
        "The message it sent was a punch in the gut to survivors  around the country and around the world," said Shelby Quast, the Americas  Director of Equality Now, an organization that submitted an amicus brief in the  case. "This decision doesn't only have an impact on those nine girls, but the  tens of thousands of girls that live across the U.S. and are at risk of FGM."
        What's next?
  
  
        Gina Balaya, a spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's Office,  said the federal government is reviewing Friedman's opinion and deciding  whether to appeal the case.
        Quast said the narrow ruling was not meant to condone FGM,  but to question Congress' authority to pass the law. "We need to not make this  more than it is, but certainly push for an appeal."
        Nagarwala's attorney Shannon Smith celebrated with the  judge's decision, but anticipates an appeal from the government.
        "Oh my God, we won," Smith reportedly said after the  decision was announced. "But we are confident we will win even if appealed."
        Nagarwala will be tried in April on the other charges,  including conspiracy to travel to engage in illicit sexual conduc
  
https:www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/why-the-u-s-ban-on-female-genital-mutilation-was-ruled-unconstitutional
  
https:www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/why-the-u-s-ban-on-female-genital-mutilation-was-ruled-unconstitutional
 
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