Well done Sierra Leone
Last week, Sierra Leone’s parliament enacted landmark legislation to ban child marriage. The Prohibition of Child Marriage Bill 2024, which makes marriage for anyone under 18 a criminal offense, seeks to protect girls from a harmful practice that has long violated their rights and hindered their development.
Child marriage is a serious problem in Sierra Leone, where 30 percent of girls and 4 percent of boys are married before age 18, with even higher rates in rural areas. Around 800,000 girls are currently married in Sierra Leone, half before turning 15.
Jeezus. 400 thousand girls married before turning 15.
Child marriages fuel the high adolescent pregnancy rate in Sierra Leone where, tragically, pregnancy complications are the leading cause of death for girls aged 15-19.
The new law prohibits all forms of child marriage and cohabitation with a child, including aiding and abetting, protects the best interests of children, and ensures affected girls have access to counseling and safeguarding. The law amends existing legislation, including the Child Rights and Registration of Customary Marriage Acts, to harmonize the legal framework on marriage and break the cycle of early marriage and its devastating consequences.
The law also builds on Sierra Leone’s efforts to protect young girls from marriage and tackle barriers to girls’ education. A new education law, adopted in 2023, guarantees children 13 years of free education, including one year of preprimary education as well as secondary education.
Is there anything else Sierra Leone should do?
Now, Sierra Leone’s government should raise awareness, particularly in rural areas, about the new law and the harmful effects of child marriage. The government should also address other prevalent harmful practices linked to child marriage, such as female genital mutilation. It should collaborate with local communities, nongovernmental groups, and international organizations to publicly campaign about the harms associated with child marriage, while also providing support services for married children and children at risk of child marriage.
The government will also need to continue focusing on keeping girls in school, while it develops sustainable economic opportunities and social programs that empower girls and their families.
That’s Human Rights Watch when it’s not obsessing over pale prosperous men who pretend to be women.
That’s very good news indeed. It’s heartbreaking that so many girls have no childhood and no future. A big step like this one is vitally important.
Now to prevent our part of the world regressing.
Not bad for a country where 80% of the population is Muslim. Not all Muslim majority countries embrace Wahhabism and Talibanisation. But there is still work to do.
https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/sierra-leone/#people-and-society
There is further good news from HRW with attempts to improve education for girls and the removal of the ban on pregnant girls attending schools. We know that better educated girls lead to better social outcomes and reduced teen pregnancies.
Abortion liberalisation is also on the agenda.
For a “third world” country, they seem more progressive than a certain “first world” country known to most of us.
I still remember, many years ago, now, when Paul Salopek wrote a story for the Chicago Tribune. The title was simply, “The Bride Was 7”. It was tragic and heartbreaking, and Ethiopia still has an outrageous child marriage culture, despite the law nominally limiting marriage to 18+. So, yeah, this is good news, but it’s still likely to be a long slog for Sierra Leone, too.