In Ethiopia, girls are abducted on their way to school, raped and then married to their captors.
In Ghana, they are married to traditional priests and become "slaves to the gods" to pay for their family's sins.
In Cameroon, girls are promised in marriage to settle debts while still in the womb.
"There are different forms of child marriage but all these different
forms have one common point, which is the girl doesn't have a voice,"
Francoise Kpeglo Moudouthe, Africa officer for the advocacy group Girls Not Brides, told Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"Her status in the community is so low that she doesn't even have a
right to speak about this issue: if she wants to marry, when she wants
to marry and who she wants to marry."
GIRLS AS COMMODITIES
On July 22, the Girl Summit
in London will bring together governments, charities, activists and
business to declare their intention to end child marriage in one
generation.
Fifteen of the 20 countries with the highest rates of child marriage
are in Africa, and 39 percent of the continent's girls are married
before the age of 18.
Niger has the highest rate, with 75 percent of girls married before they are 18.
Moudouthe believes that the summit's ambitious goal of ending child marriage in a generation can be achieved.
"The most important thing is to change the way that girls are viewed.
For me, that really is the underlying problem," she said. "Girls are
not commodities. We cannot sell them into marriage. We cannot decide
what to do with their bodies."
Child marriage is a tradition that is practised to preserve a girl's
chastity, to strengthen ties between families and to cope, as a response
to poverty. In many African countries, parents receive a bride price
from the groom's family when their daughter marries, and are relieved of
the burden of providing for her.
Engagement with the 70 million child brides around the world is critical to breaking the cycle.
"It's an inter-generational issue," Moudouthe
said. "Girls who are forced into marriage, and are not made aware of
the unfairness of the situation, are likely to have daughters who also
become child brides."
In Ethiopia, Moudouthe met a 13-year-old girl breastfeeding her second baby. She had been married at the age of six or seven.
The teenage mother was attending a discussion club for child brides called Meserete Hiwot,
meaning "base of life" in Amharic. The majority of mothers who attend
have not completed primary school and benefit from learning about
assertiveness, hygiene, financial literacy and reproductive health.
"It is so important because girls are confined in marriage. They are
usually not allowed out of the house," said Moudouthe. "Not only do they
learn about their rights but also how to handle the day to day
challenges. How do you know when your child is sick and what can you do
about it?"
STRATEGIES
Other strategies
that experts say can help to end child marriage are supporting girls to
remain in school, enforcing laws banning child marriage, teaching girls
skills so that they can earn money for their families and educating
communities about the negative impacts of the practice.
Girls Not Brides is campaigning for ending child marriage to be made
one of the Sustainable Development Goals being drawn up to succeed the
Millennium Development Goals (MDG), which expire in 2015.
"When you look at the obstacles [to achieving the MDGs], child
marriage is a common one in that it affects six of the eight MDGs,"
Moudouthe said.
The world cannot achieve universal primary education if girls drop
out of school to get married. Nor can extreme poverty be eradicated when
child marriage perpetuates poverty.
The third goal, gender equality, is directly challenged by child marriage.
Similarly, it is hard to reduce child mortality and improve maternal health when young girls get pregnant and give birth before their bodies are mature.
"The children of girls who had them below the age of 15 are 60
percent more likely to die within their first year," Moudouthe said.
"And girls who are pregnant before the age of 15 are five times more
likely to die or be injured during their pregnancy or childbirth [than
older women]."
The sixth goal linked to child marriage is combating HIV/AIDS, which
affects child brides more than unmarried sexually active teenagers.
"They are married to men who are very often much older and who have
sexual experience already, and with whom they have very little capacity
to negotiate for safe sexual practices," Moudouthe said.
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