You are here: HomeAfrica2020 02 27Article 345550

Africa News of Thursday, 27 February 2020

Source: www.mynigeria.com

Woman discovers her womb is missing 11 years after it was removed

Bongekile Msibi Bongekile Msibi

A South African woman has discovered that her womb was missing 11 years after it was removed by doctors without her consent.

Bongekile Msibi had just gotten engaged to her fiance and they both wanted a baby so badly that she had to consult a doctor because she had been on contraceptive pills for about a decade.

She was left dumbstruck when the doctor sat her down to tell her that she had no womb; "he examined me, sat me down, gave me a glass of water and told me I had no uterus," she said.

Questions like how, when and why, immediately filled her mind as she circled back to where it could only have happened; the hospital where she gave birth to her first child, 11 years ago.

Msibi narrated her ordeal to the BBC, who reported that she was among 48 women sterilised without consent at state hospitals, the Commission for Gender Equality found.

The BBC added that despite being a statutory body, the commission said its inquiry was hampered by the "disappearance" of patients' files, and its investigators had received a "hostile reception" from hospital staff.

How women are sterilised in SA: Hysterectomy: Removal of womb or part of it

Tubal ligation: Fallopian tubes blocked or sealed

Source: South Africa's Commission for Gender Equality


According to the commission, its investigators visited 15 hospitals after civil rights groups brought the cases, some dating back to 2001, to its attention.

There has been no comment from South Africa's health department at the time of this report.

Here are the full details of Msibi's narration to the BBC; how she found out and what she wants after the discovery:

"I woke up after giving birth, looked down and asked: "Why do I have a huge bandage on my stomach?"

"I did not mind. I had just given birth to my baby daughter. She was a big baby and I had been anaesthetised and gone through a Caesarean section.

"I left hospital five days after giving birth, with a healthy baby daughter and a huge scar across my stomach.

"I did not find out what had really happened for another 11 years.

"Things unravelled when I was trying to conceive again.

"I had been taking the contraceptive pill for that whole time since I had given birth and so it was not strange that I had not had my period.

"But I got engaged and wanted to have another baby so went to the doctor.

"He examined me, sat me down, gave me a glass of water and told me I had no uterus.

'It is very cruel'.



"I was devastated and confused. It did not make sense because I was already a mother.

"I worked out my uterus must have been removed and the only time it could have happened was after I had given birth.



"I want a baby so badly. When I saw a pregnant colleague this week I could not stand it"

"It is very cruel what they did to me

"I went to the press, then the health ministry and eventually ended up back at the hospital where I gave birth with the doctor who said he was there that day.

"He did not say sorry. He told me that he had sterilised me in order to save my life.

"I still do not know what he was trying to save me from. There are no records at the hospital.

"I am not the only one. An inquiry has found there are 47 others. Some were told it was because they had HIV, but I do not. I just don't know why they did it.

"The doctor told me that I had signed a consent form. I had not. I was a minor at the time so would not have been able to.

"He then said my mother, who was with me at the birth, had signed the consent form. She said she did not.

"The news changed my life."

BBC