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Nigeria Joins AU Campaign to End Child Marriage

An unidentified school girl walk past a bus park, on the first International Day of the Girl Child, in Lagos, Nigeria, Thursday, Oct. 11, 2012. The UN has declared October 11th as the International Day of the Girl Child. Girls face double discrimination due to their gender and age, and are the most marginalized and discriminated group across the globe.(AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)

Women’s rights activists on Wednesday urged Nigeria to accelerate efforts to end child marriage after it joined an African Union campaign to eliminate the practice.

Nigeria launched this week a nationwide drive to end child marriage by pushing for policies that protect girls’ rights and help the justice system to punish perpetrators. It became the 16th country to join the AU’s campaign.

The government made child marriage illegal in 2003, but only two-thirds of the country’s 36 states have implemented the law.

At least four in 10 girls in Nigeria are married off before they turn 18, while almost a fifth are wed before they reach 15, according to UNICEF, the U.N. children’s agency.

Early marriage deprives girls of an education, increases the likelihood of sexual violence and HIV, and puts them at risk of serious injury or death during childbirth, experts say.

“These [childbirth] complications are a leading cause of death among adolescent girls in countries like Nigeria … this is unnecessary and unacceptable,” said Mohamed Fall, UNICEF’s representative in Nigeria.

Rates of child marriage vary widely across Nigeria, with figures as high as 76 percent in the northwest and as low as 10 percent in the southeast, said campaign group Girls not Brides.

Women’s rights group Donor Direct Action said the campaign to end child marriage was another positive step after a law banning female genital mutilation was passed last year.

The prevalence of child marriage in Nigeria has dropped by 9 percent since 2003, according to data from UNICEF.

“However, its decline needs to be dramatically accelerated, particularly in the north of Nigeria,” Anber Raz of Donor Direct Action told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by email from London. “A lot of social and cultural change needs to happen, which may fall on the hands of local groups, who are under-resourced.”

A Nigerian organization, the Women’s Rights Advancement and Protection Alternative, said the state also needed to address discrimination in access to education to prevent child marriage.

More than 5 million girls are out of school in Nigeria because of gender discrimination, said campaign group Girl Rising.

VOA

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