ADVERTISEMENT

Court bans child marriage after challenge by former child brides

"Raising a child when you are a child yourself is hard," she said from Harare. "I should be going to school."

Zimbabwe court bans child marriage after challenge by former child brides

Zimbabwe's Constitutional Court outlawed child marriage on Wednesday after two former child brides took the government to court in a ground-breaking case to challenge the practice that is rife in the southern African nation.

Loveness Mudzuru and Ruvimbo Tsopodzi asked for child marriage to be declared illegal and unconstitutional, saying it was a form of child abuse which trapped girls in lives of poverty and suffering.

The court ruled that as of January 20 no one in Zimbabwe may enter into any marriage, including customary law unions, before the age of 18, and struck down a section of the Marriage Act which allows girls to marry at 16 but boys at 18.

Nearly a third of girls in Zimbabwe marry before they are 18 and 4 percent before they turn 15, depriving them of an education, increasing the likelihood of sexual violence, and putting them at risk of death or serious injury in childbirth.

ADVERTISEMENT

"I really am happy that we have played an instrumental part in making Zimbabwe a safe place for girls," said Mudzuru, who was married at 16 and had two children before she was 18.

The ruling outlined the "horrific consequences" of child marriage and said there had long been a "lack of common social consciousness" on the problems faced by girls who marry early.

Beatrice Savadye, who heads rights group ROOTS which backed the legal challenge, said: "I'm delighted. This is a milestone in the campaign to end this scourge in society".

But she said more needed to be done to educate communities on the dangers of child marriage in places where it had become entrenched, including remote mining and farming areas.

She also called for tougher penalties for anyone convicted of marrying a minor.

ADVERTISEMENT

In statements to the Constitutional Court last year, Tsopodzi and Mudzuru said Zimbabwe's Marriage Act was discriminatory because it set the minimum age at 16 for girls and 18 for boys. The Customary Marriage Act sets no minimum age.

They called for the law to be brought into line with Zimbabwe's 2013 constitution as well as regional and international treaties banning child marriage.

Poverty is the driving force behind child marriage in Zimbabwe. Parents often marry girls off young so they have less mouths to feed. Dowry payments may be a further incentive.

In her affidavit, Mudzuru described how child marriage and poverty create a vicious circle.

"Young girls who marry early and often in poor families are then forced to produce young children in a sea of poverty and the cycle begins again," she stated.

ADVERTISEMENT

Mudzuru told the Thomson Reuters Foundation last year that her life was "hell".

Globally, some 15 million girls are married every year. Across sub-Saharan Africa, two in five girls wed as children.

Enhance Your Pulse News Experience!

Get rewards worth up to $20 when selected to participate in our exclusive focus group. Your input will help us to make informed decisions that align with your needs and preferences.

I've got feedback!

JOIN OUR PULSE COMMUNITY!

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Eyewitness? Submit your stories now via social or:

Email: eyewitness@pulse.ng

Recommended articles

Otu allocates ₦100m to improve school children's nutrition, learning, health

Otu allocates ₦100m to improve school children's nutrition, learning, health

JAMB warns UTME candidates against sharing details with fraudsters

JAMB warns UTME candidates against sharing details with fraudsters

Ex-attorney general Adoke cleared of money laundering charges

Ex-attorney general Adoke cleared of money laundering charges

Court permits Nigerian to amend $150m case against Google, GoDaddy

Court permits Nigerian to amend $150m case against Google, GoDaddy

Delta monarch declared wanted over Okuama killings regains freedom

Delta monarch declared wanted over Okuama killings regains freedom

Tinubu endorses 3 frameworks to educate Nigeria's out-of-school children

Tinubu endorses 3 frameworks to educate Nigeria's out-of-school children

Anxiety as APC confirms Ganduje's chairmanship status

Anxiety as APC confirms Ganduje's chairmanship status

Mysterious illness kills 8 people in Sokoto - no one can explain why

Mysterious illness kills 8 people in Sokoto - no one can explain why

Child labour problem in Nigeria worst in Southeast, Northwest

Child labour problem in Nigeria worst in Southeast, Northwest

Pulse Sports

Lionel Messi's son breaks the internet after scoring five goals for Inter Miami

Lionel Messi's son breaks the internet after scoring five goals for Inter Miami

Naija Stars Abroad: Onyedika, Boniface, and Osimhen shine across Europe

Naija Stars Abroad: Onyedika, Boniface, and Osimhen shine across Europe

Victor Osimhen and Tobi Amusan make list of Forbes’ 30 under 30 Class of 2024

Victor Osimhen and Tobi Amusan make list of Forbes’ 30 under 30 Class of 2024

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT