Noura Hussein Hammad was forced to experience the
misery of child marriage at the age of fifteen. Despite her refusal, she got
married on paper to one of her relatives at 15 years old, and three years later
the husband - along with her family insisted to complete the official wedding
ceremony.
Miss Hammad escaped to stay with her aunt in Sinnar city to avoid her
fate, but was deceived by her father who convinced her to return, claiming that
the family stopped the marriage ceremony. Upon her return, was surprised with
the preparations of her own wedding which ended up happening against her will.
She went to Khartoum with her husband and stayed in an apartment in Mohandiseen
as part of their honeymoon. Noura refused to consummate the marriage for five
days and on the sixth day, her husband brought his brother and cousins and they
held her while he raped her. The next day, on May 3rd 2017, the husband tried
to rape her again, but she stood up for herself and stabbed him in the back
with a knife that he brought into the bedroom to threaten her into sleeping
with him. After she stabbed him in different parts of his body, she ran to her
family's home where she admitted what she had done. Her father took her to the
police station. Subsequently, her family abandoned her, never visited her or
provided any support. On April 19th 2018, Noura was charged under article 130
of the criminal act and on the 10th of May 2018 sentenced to death and some
activist lawyers are appealing her case. This is the most recent scenario in The
Sudan a country in Northern Africa that is number 5 on International ranking of
Child marriage rates, statistics from UNICEF in 2017 shows that 9% were married
off by their 15 years while 52% were married by 18, this implies that
approximately 1 in 3 girls in the Sudan are married before their 18th birthday.
Well, In Nigeria the story is not so different as
43% of girls are married off before their 18th birthday. 17% are married before
they turn 15. According to UNICEF State of the World’s Children, 2017 report,
Nigeria currently sits at international ranking of 11 on Child marriage rates
though the prevalence of child marriage varies widely from one region to
another, with figures as high as 76% in the North West region and as low as 10%
in the South East. Available Data shows a 9% decline in the prevalence of child
marriage since 2003 however action is still needed to prevent thousands of
girls from being married in the coming years.
Child marriage directly hinders the achievement
of at least six of the Sustainable Development Goals. Child marriage violates
girls’ rights to health, education and opportunity. It exposes girls to
violence throughout their lives, and traps them in a cycle of poverty. The
indigenous African traditional system restricts the education of the girl child
to the well-known form of Informal domestic education in which she receives
training at home on hygiene, cooking, laundry and general home management. Some
parents would easily give their girl child’s hand in marriage to some older
wealthier man believing that the marriage will bring some economic gains their
way.
Nurah Mohammed 35 was arrested after he tried to
kill his 13 year-old wife Ai’sha. His young bride had angered him by fleeing
their home to stay with her mother after enduring years of abuse from her
husband and mother-in-law. Nurah came to the mother’s house to kill Ai’sha for
leaving their home, and ended up stabbing Ai’sha’s grandmother multiple times
as well when she tried to cover Ai’sha with her body to protect her. Ai’sha was
engaged to Nurah when she was only a 1-year-old and was married at 9. As a
premature bride, she lacked the skills to be a proper wife, which resulted in
the abuse she received. Ai’sha’s mother, Latifah, said, ‘I kept my daughter at
my house and hoped to explain to my son-in-law why he should not beat her, but
he barged into the house and tried to kill her.”
In the eastern part of Nigeria, there’s a saying
“ogo bu chi onye” literary meaning that someone’s in-law is his god. It is so
because they believe those in-laws bring succour and that can only be an act of
god. This is majorly economic succour that’s why at a tender age they restrict
the training at home.
Father of a bride, Obi Oko, 60, said he is unhappy
giving his daughter away at such a young age, but has no choice due to severe
poverty. ‘I am very poor and have many problems,’ Obi Oko said. ‘I need money
and I have three other daughters. Do you think I want to marry my daughter so
young?’ the daughter Nnenna is 9 and married off to 58 year old Dimgba.
Apart from obvious reasons of poverty, major
factors are responsible for child bride; these include traditional practices,
religious or customary laws and social/ family honour. According to the UN,
37,000 girls under the age of 18 are married each day. We now have the greatest
number of married girls and girls at-risk of child marriage than ever before,
therefore 1 in 3 girls in the developing world are married before 18 and 1 in 9
are married before the age of 15. If the present trend continues, more than 140
million girls would be married before the age of 18 in the next decade.
Though some believe that this idea is fast
becoming a thing of the past considering the ever-dynamic nature of people and
culture all over the world, these recent stories beg to differ. It is not
becoming a thing of the past rather it is becoming less pronounced but still in
effect. These are just few recorded stories around here, a lot of persons are
scared of speaking up, and they have been told that “ala” the god of the land
will strike them dead if they dare tell anyone, so they just keep enduring the
violence, the trauma, the agony and the evil it brings. Child marriage violates
the rights of children; it affects both boys and girls, but it is more common
among girls and child brides are also subject to extreme domestic and sexual
abuse, causing psychological, physical harm and dangerous pregnancies.
Recent research by UNICEF shows that worldwide,
more than 700 million women alive today were married as children. 17% of them,
or 125 million, live in Africa and for a place like The Sudan where Child bride
are sold for cows with the refusal resulting in a death sentence like in the
case of Noura one can only imagine what will be the possibility of achieving
the 17 SDGs with its 169 subsections.
With inadequate legislative framework and the
state of a country’s civil registration system in place the implementation of
African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child is only but a dream. In
2003, Nigeria signed the International Human Rights
convention agreement on the rights of child. It was officially passed into law
in 2003 by Former President Chief Olusegun Obasanjo as the Children’s Rights
Act 2003 (CRA). It was created to serve as a legal documentation and protection
of Children rights and responsibilities in Nigeria but the question is has the law
being implemented especially as it concerns child marriage?
Understanding that all these goals are interconnected and to achieve one
is to achieve all. It dawns on us all that we cannot cheery pick any one and tweaks
it to suit our narrative then ignore the rest. Child marriage
effectively ends a girl’s childhood, curtails her ability of acquiring education,
minimizes her economic opportunities, increases her risk of domestic violence,
and puts her at risk of early, frequent, and very high-risk pregnancies with deteriorating
health conditions. Girls under 15 are five times more likely to die in
childbirth than women in their 20s and face higher risk of pregnancy-related
injuries, such as obstetric fistula. Child brides are often unable to negotiate
safer sexual practices and are therefore at a higher risk of HIV and other
sexually transmitted infections. The negative consequences of child marriage
reach beyond the girls themselves: children of child brides are 60 percent more
likely to die in the first year of life than those born to mothers older than
19, and families of child brides are more likely to be poor and unhealthy
So in order to achieve sustainable development goals and meet the
aspirations of Agenda 2063 that envisions the “Africa We Want”, Africa must
accelerate and increase strategic investments in its young people no matter
their sex or gender and rebuild our women especially our girl children. Our
judicial institutions should do better, embrace what is coming and begin to
restructure to protect our children. Government and civil society organisations
should make plans of taking this message to the grassroots, invite all
stakeholders: from high influencers / low interest to low influencers/ high
interest groups to the table. Training and seminars should be organized for Religious
leaders, Town union Presidents’ general, Traditional rulers and the Media.
Empowerment programmes, hygiene education, family planning training need to be coordinated
for the girls already trapped in this cycle. They should be nurtured as
children that they are, allowed to be children and not brides.
Introduction
Child Bride: Issue facing Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) attainment in Africa By Ekene Odigwe
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Sunday, August 12, 2018
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