The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Apostolics tackle child marriages

- Shamiso Yikoniko

REGARDLESS of efforts and campaigns against child marriages in Zimbabwe, the issue remains a major cause of concern.

And under-age girls from apostolic sects have not been spared from the predicamen­t. It is against this background that a women rights group under the apostolic umbrella has decided to tackle the problem head on. Apostolic Women Empowermen­t Trust (Awet), an inter-apostolic church organisati­on, was created to advance adolescent­s and women’s issues in apostolic churches. Awet founder, Mrs Tendayi Gudo, said her efforts come against a backdrop of shocking child marriage statistics in apostolic churches.

“The Trust seeks to influence apostolic churches to give space to women and girls so that they can make decisions about their social and economic well-being,” said Mrs Gudo.

“Addressing issues of child mothers and teenage marriage requires a mix of measures as it is clear that apostolic girls are at greater risk of being in early child marriages. Hence as women in the apostolic sects, our voice will make a big difference in ending child marriages,” she said.

According to a 2012 United Nations study, one in three girls in the developing world will be married by her 18th birthday that’s 14 million per year or nearly 39 000 girls every day.

Despite its pervasiven­ess, forced early marriages have rarely been viewed as human rights violation. Nonetheles­s, it violates Article 16 of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights, as well as several other human rights treaties, notably the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the world’s most widely ratified human rights treaty.

In Zimbabwe, for example, child early and forced marriages are illegal — yet an estimated 34 percent of girls will be married by the time they are 18 years old. The Marriage Act [Chapter 5:11] governing civil marriage, states that the minimum age of marriage is 16 years for girls and 18 for boys. The consequenc­es are appalling. Along with an education and childhood cut short, girls suffer a traumatic initiation into sexual relationsh­ips, are put at risk of domestic violence and STIs, and have the chance of a career or better life taken away.

Plan Internatio­nal Zimbabwe’s Gender Advisor, Ms Nobesuthu Mgutshini, said child marriage is a huge trigger point for negative outcomes. “The greatest problem facing Zimbabwean women today is child marriages,” Ms Mguthsini said.

“These early marriages rob the girl of the right to a normal childhood and education. The girls are forced to have children before their bodies are fully grown. It forces girls out of education and provides them with extremely poor prospects and put them at a much greater risk of violence and abuse.”

Child marriage, defined as a formal marriage or informal union before age of 18, is a reality for both boys and girls, although girls are inexplicab­ly the most affected.

Mashonalan­d Central leads with 50 percent, followed by Mashonalan­d West at 42 percent. Masvingo has 39 percent, Mashonalan­d East (36), Midlands (31), Manicaland (30) and Matebelela­nd North (27), Harare (19), Matebelela­nd South (18) and Bulawayo (10).

The Customary Marriages Act [Chapter 5:07], which governs customary marriages at law, does not set a limit to the minimum age at which individual­s can marry. In Zimbabwe, one in every three girls is married before they reach 18.

According to World Health Organisati­on, 14,2 million girls under the age of 5 are forced into marriage each year. Most of these come from India, the Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa.

Research indicates that “marriage before the age of 18 is influenced by various factors ranging from poverty, orphan hood, family honour, legislated minimum sexual consent and marriageab­le age, religious and cultural values.”

Ms Mguthsini reaffirms that economical­ly empowering girls gives them have wider choices and options to do than just getting married. “A lot needs to be done. There’s no one solution to ending child marriages. As Zimbabwe we need a conducive policy environmen­t to ensure children and especially girls are protected from child marriages,” she said.

“Child protection laws need to be harmonised as a matter of urgency to close the gap on laws that many perpetrato­rs use to defend themselves for sexually violating girls.”

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