By Lisa Holland, Foreign Affairs Correspondent
Campaigners against the practice of female genital mutilation (FGM) will rally in Trafalgar Square later to highlight the issue of girls being taken abroad to be 'cut' during the summer holidays.
It is estimated that more than 20,000 girls as young as four are at risk of mutilation in Britain. But there is a lack of accurate recent figures.
As many as 66,000 women and girls are thought to be living with the consequences of being ritually cut in England and Wales.
That is a staggering amount considering the latest crime figures suggest only four FGM crimes were detected in the UK last year.
There has never been a prosecution even though FMG is illegal in Britain.
The issue is a taboo subject and has prompted the NSPCC to recently open a new helpline to encourage concerned children to contact them.
The problem appears to be predominantly with children being taken abroad to a parent's cultural homeland for FGM to be carried out.
We went to meet Sarian Kamara. She has four daughters and a son - but it has been a difficult journey to motherhood.
She now lives in London. But as a child in Sierra Leone at the age of 11 she was subjected to female genital mutilation - a cultural practice in which some or all of a girl's external genitals are cut away.
The NSPCC has launched a FGM helplineShe recalls how her family celebrated in her village as the practice was considered normal to mark a girl's transition from childhood to womanhood. But the grim reality was quite different. It is a way of controlling a woman's sexual desires and relationships by men.
She said: "I was lying flat on the floor. This huge woman was sitting on my chest - very big. I was so skinny. My legs were spread apart and I felt a sharp cut - I cannot even explain.
"I am still trying to find the words that would fit the kind of punishment I went through on that day as a child. Nobody should expose their children to this kind of thing.
"It is wrong - it is child abuse. As a parent we should protect our children from harm. You should not subject your child to this kind of harm."
But the desire to protect young girls is complex.
Efua Dorkenoo is a campaigner with Equality Now with over 30 years' experience in the field. It is a very difficult crime to detect.
She said: "Screening is a very controversial issue for the UK. It's done in France and I think it's been the quick way to detect whether it's happened but in the UK politically it doesn't seem to fly and therefore we should be focusing on soft monitoring in terms of education."
That education involves trying to get the message across, particularly during the school summer holidays.
Jane Ellison, the Conservative chairwoman of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Female Genital Mutilation, said: "There's still very widespread ignorance about the fact that the law covers you when you go abroad.
"So actually one of the things we most want to do, particularly at this time of the year, is simply get across to people what the law is - that you can go to jail for 14 years if you are found to commit this on a girl."
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