The girl wanted a bullet away from her clit after being accidentally shot.
A 24-year-old girl from Somalia was rushed to hospital in critical pain after a 2cm bullet came through the ceiling here while she was sitting in her lounge.
The girl, whose name has not been disclosed, suffered the damage an hour ago.
A CT scan showed the bullet lodged in her clitoris when she was shot in the vulva, meaning she required surgery to safely remove it.
Publishing gruesome photos of her damage in the International Journal of Surgery Case Reports, doctors said they believed the case was the first of its kind.

An unidentified 24-year-old man was taken to the hospital in extreme pain after the 2-cm bullet entered the ceiling, and he was put down.
“To our knowledge, this case is unique as a result of a bullet lodged in the clitoris,” they added.
The date of the incident was not disclosed by the doctors of Erdogan Hospital in Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia.
Upon arrival at the hospital, the lady informed the obstetrics and gynecology team that she was sitting in her lounge when a stray bullet fell through the ceiling.
Various details about the incident were not received.
Pelvic scans confirmed where the bullet entered my clitoris, while CT scans confirmed the location of the bullet.
Doctors removed the clitoral bullet under local anesthesia.
No problems were observed after surgical removal.
The doctors noted that the girl was discharged the next day in “good condition”.
Follow-up appointments a month later revealed no additional problems.
According to doctors, non-obstetric vulvar injury, where the vulva is physically injured while not pregnant, is a particularly rare occurrence.
Commonly, non-obstetric vulva injury is caused by sports-related accidents and accidents, such as falling while running over a fence or crossing a bicycle.
Gunshot injuries to the vulva are extraordinarily rare.
Doctors noted that extra care should be taken during surgery to remove an object from the vulva in order not to damage the urethra and pelvic area.
Stray bullet accidents, which occur when a bullet is fired into the sky and loses its momentum and falls, are commonly seen in “residential areas in war-torn international locations reminiscent of Somalia.”