Cape Argus

Malawian chiefs ordered to dissolve child marriages

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A senior traditiona­l leader in Malawi has ordered village chiefs to dissolve all the child marriages that took place during the country’s coronaviru­s lockdown so girls can return to classes when schools start reopening next month.

Senior Chief Theresa Kachindamo­to, a well-known campaigner against early marriage, said an increase in the illegal practice as well as teen pregnancie­s during the pandemic had spurred her renewed push to save child brides.

Kachindamo­to joined forces with women’s rights groups for the campaign, spreading their message among parents and village leaders across the southern African nation, where high rates of early marriage persist despite a 2015 ban.

“We’ve been going in the villages advising people... to take care of the children so they can return to school when they reopen because that’s where the children’s future is,” Kachindamo­to told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“I removed some chiefs before for the same reason, so chiefs know the consequenc­es of not adhering to my directive,” she added.

In the case of girls who got pregnant during the Covid-19 lockdown, Kachindamo­to said she had told local chiefs to encourage them to go back to school after they give birth.

Malawi passed a law banning child marriage in 2015 and raising the minimum age to 18, but it remains widespread. Almost 47% of girls in Malawi are married before they turn 18 and 9% become child brides before their 15th birthday, according to the UN children’s agency Unicef.

Education activist Limbani Sapato cited the example of the southern town of Mangochi, where cases of teen pregnancie­s and child marriages rose to 7 340 in July 2020 from 6 359 during the same month last year.

Maggie Kathewera Banda, executive director for Women’s Legal Resource Centre, a charity, said girls’ educationa­l rights were being jeopardise­d.

“Obviously, it’s a concern to us because it means that rights to education of the girl-childen are being infringed upon,” she said, adding her organizati­on has commission­ed a detailed study into the reasons for the increase.

Government officials backed Kachindamo­to’s campaign and urged parents to prioritise their children’s education. “Some of the parents are having a tough time making sure they get school fees for the children,” said Patricia Kaliati, minister of gender, community developmen­t and social welfare.

“The communitie­s are committed and have convinced us they would like to educate their children. Let all the children who were married go back to school after the marriages are dissolved,” she said.

The process of dissolving the marriages should, however, involve church and other influentia­l community leaders, the minister added.

School closures in 185 countries during the Covid-19 outbreak will “disproport­ionately affect adolescent girls, further entrench gender gaps in education and lead to increased risk of sexual exploitati­on, early pregnancy and early and forced marriage,” according to Plan Internatio­nal and Unesco. |

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