KM
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Open full research fileThe law
Legal status of non-therapeutic circumcision of minors.
No Comoros statute, decree, or regulation specifically governs non-therapeutic male circumcision. Comoros applies a mixed legal system (French civil law, Islamic sharia, and customary law from the three islands). Male circumcision is near-universal as a Shafi'i religious obligation (wajib). No prohibition or mandatory-procedure law was identified. Female genital cutting has historically existed in Comoros and is a separate and legally distinct matter; it must not be conflated with male circumcision.
Research about KM
Peer-reviewed findings specific to this country, from our reference library.
Morris 2016 PMC4772313 (DHS 2012-2013): Comoros 99.4% — near-universal male circumcision. ~98% Shafi'i Sunni Muslim.
Shafi'i school: khitan (male circumcision) is WAJIB (obligatory) — strictest Sunni position; also Hanbali. Maliki: sunnah mu'akkadah. Hanafi: sunnah. Comoros Shafi'i predominance drives near-universal circumcision.
Comoros HIV extremely low (~0.01% or below detection; UNAIDS). Not VMMC priority.
DHS 2012-2013 is primary source for 99.4% figure. No more recent national survey identified. Ceremony-specific data (local name, age, island variation) not confirmed by any verified source.
Benchmarks & context
International evidence for reading the figures above — not measured KM rates.
~1,400,920 circumcisions, all ages (US insurance claims data)
Total adverse events under 0.5%; serious AEs ~0.0008%–0.07%. Crucially, AE rates 10–20× higher when done AFTER infancy (ages 1–9) than neonatally — directly relevant where boys are cut older (e.g. PH tuli at ~8–12).
[104]Voluntary medical male circumcision, ages 10–14, trained providers
Severe adverse events on the order of 1–3 per 100,000 — but ONLY with trained providers, quality assurance and informed consent. The benchmark for what safe, supervised provision looks like; the opposite end from informal provision.
[105]Cases reported to WHO, 2014–2018
WHO logged 32 urethral-fistula cases (2014–2018) and, in one tetanus consultation, 8 deaths among 12 associated cases. Illustrative of rare-but-severe harms in unhygienic settings — not a national rate.
[66]Traditional vs physician providers
One Turkish series found 85% complications with traditional providers vs 2.6% with physicians; a Kenyan one 35% vs 17%. Provider setting dominates outcomes — the pattern behind warnings about informal practitioners everywhere.
[66]American Academy of Pediatrics task force
Benefits said to outweigh risks but “not great enough” to recommend routine circumcision — leaving the decision to families. The reference point invoked on both sides of the consent/necessity debate.
[93]Inpatient neonatal circumcisions, 2001–2010
200 early deaths over ten years among 9.83 million inpatient neonatal circumcisions — explicitly correlational, NOT causal. A measured counterpoint to higher litigation-cited estimates.
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