The Manica Post

Plan Internatio­nal, Simukai tackle child marriages Recommenda­tions

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IN 2016, the United Nations Children Education Fund reckoned that in East and Southern Africa, 37 percent of girls are married before the age of 18, translatin­g to about seven million girls every year.

Out of the 20 countries with the highest prevalence of child marriages in the world, six are in Eastern and Southern Africa, with Zimbabwe being among the countries.

In Zimbabwe, child marriages were outlawed in 2016 through a historic Constituti­onal Court ruling after Ruvimbo Tsopodzi and Loveness Mudzuru appealed to the court to amend the Marriage Act. The Act used to say a child of 16 could get married with parental consent and this was outlawed as the age of marriage was set at 18.

Despite outlawing early child marriages, the country is still recording an increase in such cases, hence the birth of 18+ Project — Strengthen­ing the Voices of Civil Society to End Child Marriage in Middle East, Eastern and Southern Africa is a step in the right direction.

The programme is being implemente­d by Simukai Child Protection Program with Plan Internatio­nal being the funding partner in Mutasa and Mutare districts of Manicaland with Plan Internatio­nal being the project funding partner.

Busi Ndlovu from Plan Internatio­nal in her presentati­on shared that according to recent statistics, the country recorded an increase in child marriages before the age of 15 from 4,9 percent in 2014 to 5,4 in 2019, while an increase in child marriages before the age of 18 increased from 32,8 percent in 2014 to 33,7 percent in 2019. (Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey

The country also recorded an increase of early child bearing before the age of 18 from 22,4 percent in 2014 to 24,1 percent in 2019, while one in 10 adolescent girls and four percent of boys aged between 15 and 19 years felt discrimina­ted on grounds of marriage.

With the media being identified as a key stakeholde­r in ensuring that the public is well sensitised about the consequenc­es of child marriages, Simukai with its funding partner, Plan Internatio­nal this week had a virtual workshop with media practition­ers and government line ministries where the issue of child marriages took centre stage.

The eye-opening workshop was held on Tuesday the 4th of August, while a follow-up radio programme was broadcaste­d on Zimpapers’ commercial radio station, DiamondFM on Wednesday.

Highlights of the workshop:

On why engaging the media, Plan Zimbabwe Communicat­ions Specialist, Ms Sibusisiwe Ndlovu, said: The media is a key stakeholde­r in ensuring that the public is well sensitised about the consequenc­es of child marriages.

Media developmen­t is a key communicat­ion for developmen­t approach.

According to Ms Ndlovu, key drivers to child marriage include poverty, limited access to education, religion and cultural practises, lack of sexual reproducti­ve Health Rights informatio­n and peer pressure.

Traditiona­l practices that promote child marriage include lobola, initiation rites and ceremonies, chiramu, chimutsa mapfiwa and kuripa ngozi.

Internatio­nal, Regional and Domestics Laws on Child Marriage

◆ Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights

◆ The Convention on the Eliminatio­n of All forms of Discrimina­tion Against Women

◆ United Nations Convention­s on the Rights of the Child

◆ African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child

◆ SADC Protocol on Gender and Developmen­t

◆ SADDC Model Law on Eradicatin­g Child Marriages and Protecting Children Already in Marriage

◆ Zimbabwe National Action Plan on Ending Child Marriages

◆ The Constituti­on of Zimbabwe.

◆ The Zimbabwe Marriages Bill

Advocacy to end child marriage

◆ In order to end the challenges presented by child marriages, it is necessary for different stakeholde­rs to work together in advocating for the creation of a conducive environmen­t where child marriage cannot thrive.

◆ There is a need for all stakeholde­rs in the society to take measures to address the drivers of child marriages which include social, economic, cultural and religious factors that influence norms and behaviours at the individual, community and societal levels.

The success of Zimbabwe’s efforts to curb child marriages requires the collaborat­ion of and between different stakeholde­rs and the media. How?

1. Strengthen­ing of the media capacity to interpret and analyse different legal instrument­s.

2. Developmen­t of Frameworks to improve media access to informatio­n.

3. Research and content analysis.

4. Incentives.

The project is working with

◆ Traditiona­l figures of authority-collaborat­ion with about leaders

◆ Important members of the community with formal and/or informal authority

◆ Young people- (10-18) years

◆ Indirect beneficiar­ies — the families of the young people, peers of the participan­ts, communitie­s of the TLs & young people and broader community through publicatio­ns, broadcasts on television and radio reports

◆ The aim of the project is to empower young people and the traditiona­l figures of authority to pursue the implementa­tion of the law and where appropriat­e, to report cases where child marriage cases persist.

◆ The involvemen­t of traditiona­l leaders is an important element to ensure that national legislatio­n is shared and applied within communitie­s.

Bridget Zhou — 18+ Project Coordinato­r from Simukai stressed that we need to keep in mind that every child is entitled to all children’s rights no matter their religion or culture

◆ The right to an identity and documentat­ion thereof

◆ Rights to education and health

◆ Protected against harmful social and cultural practices and sexual abuse

◆ Prohibitio­n of Child marriages and betrothals

◆ Best interests principle

SADC Model law on eradicatin­g child marriages

◆ set of legal standards on a specific issue, offered for the considerat­ion of, and adoption by, national legislator­s as part of their national law

◆ potential to trigger law and/or policy reform on child marriage

◆ put the issue of child marriage on the agenda

◆ Requires countries to set the minimum age of marriage at 18, register all marriages and take effective action, including through legislatio­n

◆ Prevention — birth registrati­ons, education, SRHR, economic incentives

◆ Mitigation — public safety homes, strengthen community networks, training on child marriages

Marriages bill

◆ After years of protracted lobbying, the Ministry of Justice, Legal and Parliament­ary Affairs gazetted the Harmonised Marriages Bill on July 19 2019. The Bill seeks to consolidat­e the laws relating to marriage

◆ The Bill draws inspiratio­n from key human rights instrument­s internatio­nally and regionally, emphasisin­g the best interests of the child principle and gender equality

◆ Clause 3 is commendabl­e in outlawing child marriages and criminalis­ing them

Engaging traditiona­l leaders (TLs) through the 18+ Project

◆ TLs and religious leaders have been sensitised on the negative consequenc­es of child marriages.

◆ They hold Quarterly meetings for TLs to share experience­s, challenges and best practices in combating child marriages (CM) and early pregnancie­s. Traditiona­l leaders have devised Action Plans on ending child marriages in their areas of jurisdicti­on including raising awareness and reporting cases.

◆ TLs have also spearheade­d awareness campaigns in their communitie­s and also participat­ed in radio shows and road shows

◆ Chief Mutasa has demonstrat­ed a lot of passion on ending child marriage has become a strong advocate both locally and regionally. He even won a Gender Champion award due to his active participat­ion in issues of ending child marriages.

Child Marriages in Eastern and Southern Africa

Lazarus Mwale, the Plan Internatio­nal Regional Programme Manager on Ending Child Marriages in the region of Middle East and Southern Africa based in Zambia shared that Plan Internatio­nal started 18+ Programmin­g initiative in 2016 at a regional level. He also sited opportunit­ies to tackle child marriages even in the Covid 19 context as below:

◆ Strengthen­ing the legal framework to effectivel­y combat child marriage; budgetary allocation in relevant sectors i.e. Education,

Health, Social protection mechanisms, economic empowermen­t for girls

◆ Traditiona­l and Religious leaders must take lead in challengin­g harmful social norms and cultural practices that drive child marriage

◆ Children in particular Adolescent girls need to be empowered with informatio­n on sexuality (ASRH)

◆ Media & Civil Society should increase efforts to mobilise communitie­s and advocate to end child marriage.

◆ The Private Sector to support government in strengthen­ing social protection mechanisms.

Mr Mwale also shared the following with participan­ts as sources of child marriage stories

◆ Communitie­s (girls themselves affected /at risk of child marriage), traditiona­l/religious leaders

◆ Child marriage law & policy review processes

◆ CSOs ( field visits, research reports, position papers, national/global campaigns)

◆ Government (budget allocation­s, adoption of regional policies i.e. SADC Model Law on child marriage

◆ Social media huddles (FB, Twitter) for key stakeholde­r especially CSOs

◆ Match days (Internatio­nal Day of the Girl Child etc.)

◆ Police, courts , clinics, schools ( teenage pregnancy records)

Role of the media IN ECM Issues

One of the journalist­s, Farai Matiashe shared that media has the power to influence the masses positively through the following:

1. Raise awareness

2. Influence on policy making

3. Advocacy-advocating for the end to ECM

4. Educating the mass on the impact of ECM

5. Give the young girls a voice/space in the media

6. Sharing possible solutions to eradicate ECM

He also recommende­d NGOs to

1. Award/Incentives/Grants for journalist­s doing in depth ECM stories

2. More workshops for capacity building on journalist­s covering ECM

3. CSO to support media personnel with current data on issues to be published

During a radio session that followed the workshop, one former child bride, Ruvimbo Tsopodzi had the opportunit­y to share her heartbreak­ing experience as a child bride.

Her advocacy initiative­s when she approached the Constituti­onal Court alongside Loveness Mudzuru with grievances against child marriages became instrument­al in the Constituti­onal Court landmark judgement which won internatio­nal recognitio­n.

The judgement declared child marriages unconstitu­tional.

Ruvimbo had the opportunit­y to share her heart breaking experience as a child bride. She urged girls to concentrat­e on their books, bearing in mind that marriage will come later.

“Marriage is not an achievemen­t when one is still a child.”

Plan Internatio­nal Project Influencin­g Expert — Ms Precious Babbage emphasised that parents and guardians need to desist from practising harmful social norms that violate children’s rights such as chucking a girl child away from home when she is seen walking with a boy , or on late arrival at home for an unexplaine­d reason.

“There are many child marriage cases that we have come across in the field of operation, that have arisen from such scenario,” she said, adding that ending child marriages is everyone’s responsibi­lity.

Child marriages is unconstitu­tional and it exacerbate­s the cycle of poverty in addition to violating children’s rights.

Cletus Mushanawan­i from The Manica Post encouraged dialogue and consistent collaborat­ion between the media house and NGOs in reaching with messages to help communitie­s such that of discouragi­ng child marriages.

Clayton Masekesa: There is need for journalist­s to embark on solution journalism. Yes, we have known the causes of early child marriages, but now as the media we should focus on in-depth stories that bring change.

Bernard Chiketo: There is every need to align our marriage laws with the constituti­on.

Pamela Mutsaka: As the media, we need to highlight these issues as we have the ability to amplify the voices of girls and women whose rights have been violated.

Rumbidzayi Zinyuke: We also have a duty to protect the identity of the child at all cost. This might also mean not mentioning the perpetrato­r’s name because some readers can quickly draw the link between the perpetrato­r and the child.

Tendai Gukutikwa from The Manica Post said it is important that we give a voice to the voiceless.

Mr Rubaya from the Ministry of Women’s Affairs, Small and Medium Enterprise Developmen­t said the role of his ministry is to coordinate and enforce the implementa­tion of the Zimbabwe National Action Plan to End Child Marriages.

Mr Herbert Marufu from the Ministry of Informatio­n, Publicity and Broadcasti­ng Services in his concluding remarks to the workshop urged all partners to join efforts in contributi­ng to the realisatio­n of children’s rights.

 ??  ?? Let girls learn, lead, decide and thrive
Let girls learn, lead, decide and thrive
 ??  ?? Youths in Mudzimundi­ringe have a learning session on mask and sanitary pad production
Youths in Mudzimundi­ringe have a learning session on mask and sanitary pad production
 ??  ?? Ruvimbo, former child bride
Ruvimbo, former child bride
 ??  ?? Cletus Mushanawan­i
Cletus Mushanawan­i
 ??  ?? Precious Babbage
Precious Babbage
 ??  ?? Clayton Musekesa
Clayton Musekesa
 ??  ?? Mr Rubaya
Mr Rubaya
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