A female genital mutilation survivor who was forced to flee to safety in the UK after being operated on against her parent's will is now desperate to help other victims - by training as a police officer.
Shamsa Sharawe, 29 - who grew up living with extended family in a small Somalian town called Muuqokore - was left in agony after being circumcised with a dirty razor at just six years of age.
Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) - or Female Genital Cutting as it is now referred to thanks to Shamsa’s campaign to have the name changed - involves the partial or total removal of external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons.
The brutal procedure was arranged by someone known to Shamsa.
When her devastated mother, Gani, who was living in Saudi Arabia, found out what had happened, she hatched a plan for her daughter to escape to the UK.
In November 2001, Shamsa and her mother were able to secure visas and move to Wembley, north west London.
Shamsa joined a local school, and it was during sex education lessons that she realised the extent of the brutality she had faced.
Shama said: “The trauma hit me all at once. I felt like half a woman.
“I felt so insecure as a teenager and didn’t feel desirable at all.
“I thought it would be better if no one knew so I carried that secret for years, and it really affected my mental health.
“I was confused and struggling with my personal and cultural identity.
''I felt like I didn’t belong anywhere.
“I started making videos for YouTube about everything I had been through, and I realised that so many other women shared my burden.
''I wanted to join the police because of the experiences I had within the Somalian community. Crimes committed in our community are kept silent. It is very rare for young girls to report a crime due to fear of shame. The silencing culture within my culture is something I want to end.
“I want to show my community, and other communities that suffer from honour-based violence, that they have someone within the police that they can trust. Someone that looks like them and hears their concerns.
''It feels amazing to know that I can do something to help young people who haven’t had a voice for so long. I cannot wait to represent them and fight for them.”