Kuwait Times

Malawi child brides pushed into sex work

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When Memory Chitsulo was still in school in Malawi she married a man a decade older. But her husband soon left for South Africa, abandoning her with a baby. Desperate for money, the teenager turned to sex work. Charities in the southern African country say child brides are increasing­ly being pushed into prostituti­on as growing numbers of early marriages break down. “My parents died in a bus accident when I was 14. I got married since no one could take care of me. But he immediatel­y left for South Africa as he couldn’t find work here,” said Chitsulo. “He stopped calling after two years. It’s been 10 years now,” added the mother-of-two, now 25, who works from a brothel in Luchenza in southern Malawi.

Although child marriage is illegal, nearly half of girls in Malawi are wed before their eighteenth birthday and 9 percent before they turn 15, according to the UN children’s agency UNICEF. But charities say many child marriages have collapsed as poverty and unemployme­nt drive tens of thousands of young Malawian men to seek work in South Africa.

“Many girls don’t survive early marriages, either because they face abuse and violence by their older partners, or because they are abandoned by men who go to South Africa,” said Forbes Msiska, executive director of Badilika, a charity supporting vulnerable girls with vocational training. “I’ve talked to some young women who

were left by their husbands who went to South Africa, but they don’t receive any financial support from their men. They said they ended up prostituti­ng in order to survive and support their children.”

Maxwell Matewele, executive director of the charity Eye of the Child, said there had been a visible increase in the number of children forced into prostituti­on. He said most girls were aged 14 to 18 years, but that he had come across some as young as nine. Matewele called for the government to do more to address the root causes of child prostituti­on and for tougher legislatio­n. The government said it was aware of an increase in the number of young sex workers in the country, but could not say whether the breakdown in child marriages was a factor.

Rural brothel

A few years ago it was highly unusual to see sex workers outside Malawi’s cities, but they are increasing­ly pitching up in rural settlement­s as competitio­n in urban areas drives them to find new clients. Many work from drinking joints which have proliferat­ed across Malawi. In Namisasi, a quiet and unremarkab­le trading settlement in southern Malawi, villagers were astonished last year when eight sex workers arrived with their babies and set up business.

Joyce Masamba, a 27-year-old motherof-three, works out of a pub seeing up to three clients a day - mostly local businessme­n. She earns about 1,000 Malawi kwachas ($1.40) a client. “I was forced out of school to marry when I was 15,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation outside the noisy bar where she works. “I gave birth the same year but the man, who was 10 years older, started going out with other women. When I confronted him, he left me and the baby. Sex work was the only option I had to care for the baby and myself.”

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