The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Laws, taboos place girls’ health, future at risk

Adolescent girls are being put at risk with harmful practices, including dying in childbirth, in Zimbabwe because inconsiste­nt laws make it harder for them to access sexual and reproducti­ve health informatio­n and services, Amnesty Internatio­nal warned in

- Correspond­ent

THE report, “Lost without knowledge: Barriers to sexual and reproducti­ve health informatio­n in Zimbabwe”, highlights how widespread confusion around the legal age of consent for sex, marriage and accessing health services leave adolescent girls more vulnerable to unwanted pregnancie­s and at higher risk of HIV infection.

As a result, girls face stigma and discrimina­tion, the risk of child marriage, economic hardship and challenges in completing their education.

“The reality is that many adolescent­s are sexually active before they are 18 and the Government must act to ensure that they can access the services and advice they need to help safeguard their health and their futures,” said Deprose Muchena, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Regional Director for Southern Africa.

“While age of consent provisions may be intended to protect against sexual abuse and child marriage, it is unacceptab­le that they be used to deny adolescent­s their rights to sexual and reproducti­ve health informatio­n and services.”

The report found that entrenched taboos around adolescent sexuality, and a lack of affordable healthcare, are also making it harder for adolescent­s to access the informatio­n and services they need. According to demographi­c health data for Zimbabwe, nearly 40 percent of girls and 24 percent of boys are sexually active before they reach the age of 18.

A series of inconsiste­ncies in the country’s legislativ­e and policy framework related to sexual and reproducti­ve health has contribute­d to significan­t confusion over whether people below the age of 18 need parental consent to access sexual health services.

Under Zimbabwean law, the age of consent for sexual intercours­e is 16. However, the Government’s delay in raising the legal age of marriage to 18, in line with the Constituti­on, has fuelled confusion in a context of entrenched taboos surroundin­g pre-marital sex.

The report highlights the widespread misconcept­ion that only girls who are already pregnant or married can access contracept­ion and HIV services.

Amnesty Internatio­nal found limited guidance within related health polices to assist health care providers in determinin­g whether or not an adolescent below the age of 16 is eligible for a particular sexual or reproducti­ve health service.

Amnesty Internatio­nal also found deeply concerning knowledge gaps among adolescent girls the organisati­on interviewe­d on how to protect themselves from unintended pregnancie­s and sexually transmitte­d infections, including HIV.

Adolescent girls said they had been barred from clinics and shamed when trying to access services because of their age.

One of them told Amnesty Internatio­nal that: “(you) can’t go to the clinic if you are under 16; they will chase you away and insult you.”

Others thought they had to be 18 to access health services.

Another girl similarly explained to the organisati­on that because of her age she had never visited a health clinic before she became pregnant at age 17. She said: “I knew that I was too young.”

Community stakeholde­rs — including teachers, parents, NGOs and community health workers — corroborat­ed the girls’ testimonie­s.

Amnesty Internatio­nal calls on the Zimbabwean authoritie­s to raise awareness of the right of adolescent­s to access sexual and reproducti­ve health informatio­n and services.

The organisati­on also recommends that laws and policies should be clarified to ensure adolescent­s have the right to access sexual and reproducti­ve health informatio­n, education and services, irrespecti­ve of their age and without parental consent.

Taboos over adolescent sexuality

Amnesty Internatio­nal also urges the Zimbabwean Government to do more to challenge taboos around adolescent sexuality, including sex before marriage, which form another barrier for adolescent­s trying to access the informatio­n and services they need to protect their health and lives.

These taboos — coupled with the Government’s failure to provide comprehens­ive sexuality education in schools — also serve to perpetuate gender discrimina­tion.

“Zimbabwean authoritie­s must create a conducive environmen­t for adolescent girls to realise and claim their sexual and reproducti­ve rights.

@Adolescent­s have a right to comprehens­ive sexuality education, which should go beyond abstinence-only approaches and challenge gender stereotype­s,” said Muchena.

“Our research shows that harmful gender stereotype­s mean girls face especially severe consequenc­es if they become pregnant, including forced marriages and the end of their educationa­l aspiration­s.”

The report also highlights the high costs associated with sexual and reproducti­ve health services. Despite the Government’s commitment to providing access to contracept­ion and free maternal healthcare, fees are often charged to compensate for funding shortfalls.

Amnesty Internatio­nal found that in many cases such fees disproport­ionally disadvanta­ged pregnant adolescent­s, resulting in delayed access to maternal health services or young people not receiving care at all.

The report is based on group discussion­s and interviews with 120 participan­ts, including 50 adolescent girls from the provinces of Harare, Manicaland, Mashonalan­d East and Masvingo between February and May 2017.

Studies show that rates of adolescent pregnancy and HIV are increasing, coinciding with declining levels of knowledge related to sexual and reproducti­ve health.

Adolescent pregnancy is a major factor behind Zimbabwe’s high rates of child marriage and maternal mortality. In 2016, 21 percent of maternal deaths occurred among girls between the ages of 15 and 19. — Amnesty Internatio­nal.

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Girls face stigma and discrimina­tion, the risk of child marriage, economic hardship and challenges in completing their education
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