Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Africa works to eradicate child marriages

-

AFRICAN countries are working towards eradicatin­g child marriages as part of concerted efforts to improve the girl child’s rights and gender equality, a Cabinet Minister has said.

In a telephone interview on Friday, Women Affairs, Community, Small and Medium Enterprise­s Developmen­t Minister Dr Sithembiso Nyoni who was attending a women and traditiona­l leaders’ conference on child marriages in Zambia said cases of child marriages were prevalent in most African countries.

The conference, which drew Ministers of Gender from eight African countries was held under the auspices of the Spotlight Initiative, a global United Nations joint programme supported by the European Union to tackle gender-based violence and vulnerabil­ities of women and girls.

“We met here in Zambia to look into the problem of child marriages upon realising that in most African countries the girl child is being forced into early marriage and to find out what traditiona­l leaders say about this phenomenon.

“We need to mobilise communitie­s against this ill practice and as such we had an engagement with traditiona­l leaders to find out what they are doing to curb this as the custodians of communitie­s and as African countries there is a need for us to work together,” she said.

Child marriage is a marriage or similar union, formal or informal, entered into by a child or youth under a certain age, typically 18.

Child marriages violate the rights of children and have widespread and long-term consequenc­es for child brides and grooms.

Dr Nyoni said delegates were made aware of a Zambian custom, which entails men to claim marriage to an unborn girl child.

“In Zambia there are certain tribes whereby men have the audacity to claim marriage to an unborn girl child and even start grooming her to be his wife from a tender age and by the time she grows she will already know the person to marry.

Imagine a girl child growing up knowing that she’s going to get married to an elderly person, it violates her rights and dignity.

Thus Zambian chiefs have undertaken to get rid of this cultural practice as it is retrogress­ive to the developmen­t of the country,” she said.

Dr Nyoni said cases of child marriages were also prevalent in some parts of the country.

“There are provinces or areas where child marriages are most prevalent in the country and the reasons are largely due to the fact that the area is densely populated like in Mashonalan­d Central or the area is situated at the country’s border like Matabelela­nd South in places like Beitbridge and Plumtree as well as Manicaland.

“Matabelela­nd North and Bulawayo (provinces) have the lowest child marriage prevalence rates. It is, however, worth noting that child marriages are mainly caused by high rate of school drop-outs, poverty and culture,” she said.

@thobekilek­ae

 ??  ?? Dr Sithembiso Nyoni
Dr Sithembiso Nyoni

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe