The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Project helps fight child marriages

- Sifelani Tsiko in Guruve

THE “Catch Them Young” programme being implemente­d under the Spotlight Initiative by various partners in Hurungwe, Guruve, Mbire and Muzarabani districts is helping to train and support young children to pursue education and desist from early childhood marriages.

Child marriages have reached worrying levels in various parts of the country and the raging Covid-19 has compounded the crisis.

“Here in Guruve the problem of young girls who leave school to get married is worrying us a lot. At our school, here at Muzika Primary School we are running the ‘Catch Them Young’ programme to educate children on the importance of education and how they avoid child abuse and getting married,” said Portia Moffat, a gender champion and activist in Guruve.

“We give them lessons at school through drama, poetry and music. I’m glad that cases of school drop outs are going down as young children become aware of the dangers of early child marriages.

“Parents here are embracing the messages and helping to report cases in villages dotted around the school.”

To address problems related to early child marriages and child sexual abuses in Hurungwe, Guruve, Mbire and Muzarabani a consortia comprising Caritas, the Lower Guruve Developmen­t Associatio­n (LGDA) and other community- based organisati­ons (CBOs) are spearheadi­ng programmes to raise awareness on the impact of GBV on women and girls.

The programmes running under the Spotlight Initiative supported through a partnershi­p between the European Union and the United Nations are aimed at ending violence against women and girls and harmful practices.

Zimbabwe is among the 20 countries in Africa, Latin America, Asia- Pacific and the Caribbean which are participat­ing in the four-year programme which started in 2019 and ends in June 2021 for the first phase.

The country was supported by the EU to the tune US$30 million for the first phase to help Zimbabwe meet some of its Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDG 3 and 5) on empowering women and girls to realise their full potential in a violent free, gender-responsive and inclusive environmen­t.

At Kondo Secondary School in Guruve, 52 girls were impregnate­d in 2019 alone and the Covid-19 environmen­t has complicate­d the plight of young girls.

“The young girls do not receive adequate support and many young girls are dying during childbirth. Through this Spotlight Initiative we are working closely with villagers to fight against child marriages,” said Tavirai Marega, a programmes officer for the Lower Guruve Developmen­t Associatio­n.

“We are hopeful if education can reach all communitie­s, we will see a positive change in our communitie­s. We still need to scale up the programme to end this culture of marrying young girls,” he said.

“As it is, children are getting pregnant while still very young and the men usually do not take them to a clinic when they give birth for fear of being arrested. As a result young girls die while giving birth.”

LGDA trained a number of villagers to become gender champions in Guruve, Mbire and Muzarabani.

The champions have assisted greatly in raising awareness and supporting local communitie­s to report child abuse cases and to follow- up cases with the police.

However, due to Covid-19, there was a backlog at the courts leaving perpetrato­rs on bail and still posing threats to young girls.

Local communitie­s in the four districts, north of Zimbabwe have sensitised about the dangers of selling off young girls into early marriage or abusing young girls.

Zimbabwe is not the only country grappling with child marriages.

It is a global problem facing various nations across the world.

According to the UN’s children’s agency, UNICEF, every year 12 million girls are married before they turn 18 years old.

There are 650 million girls and women alive today who were married before they were 18 years, the organisati­on says.

 ??  ?? Manicaland Minister of State for Provincial Affairs and Devolution Nokuthula Matsikenye­re(far right) speaks to Green Fuel Corporate social responsibi­lity project beneficiar­y MrVictor Matini (far left)banje while Chipinge South legislator Enock Porusingaz­i looks on in Chisumbanj­e last week.— Picture: Tinai Nyadzayo
Manicaland Minister of State for Provincial Affairs and Devolution Nokuthula Matsikenye­re(far right) speaks to Green Fuel Corporate social responsibi­lity project beneficiar­y MrVictor Matini (far left)banje while Chipinge South legislator Enock Porusingaz­i looks on in Chisumbanj­e last week.— Picture: Tinai Nyadzayo

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