Thursday, 8 September 2016

Early marriage ruining girls’ future

Biira Samanya with her baby.Photo by Scovi Atuhaire
“…girls should be strong during hardships,” Biira says, suggesting that it is only strength and the will of God that can make one survive through.
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 8 2016
In Summary
Many young girls continue to suffer at the hands of people who ought to have protected them. Research indicates that many are forced to drop out of school and married off at an early age.

By FELIX BASIIME & SCOVIA ATUHAIRE
It is a bright Monday morning in Kasese District but Samanya Biira is not anywhere around school or intending to get there any soon. 
In 2015 the 15-year-old girl was asked to leave school because she could no longer be sustained without paying dues or buying scholastic materials.

However, within that period, she says, a man convinced her that he would pay her school fees but instead turned against his promise defiling her and impregnating her in the process.

The case was reported to police but the man, whose name has been omitted because he is still a suspect, is still at large.

Fortunately, Biira was allowed to sit her Primary Leaving Exams and she had to do some of her papers on the hospital bed in 2015 after she went into labour in the middle of exams. She obtained 26 aggregates.
Joining secondary school 
She hopes to attain secondary education at her preferred school choice, Mugunu Secondary School because it is nearer to her home. This will afford her the luxury of looking after the baby as well as attending school. 

For Biira it was a hard lesson but it has made her grow and see things in a more mature way at her age. 

“…girls should be strong during hardships,” Biira says, suggesting that it is only strength and the will of God that can make one survive through.
Biira is a mirror image of the plight of the girl-child that continues to be abused in much of the Rwenzori sub-region. 

Jostas Mwebembezi, an IT personnel at Ride Africa, says there is a gap in providing sex education, according to a research study that was conducted about sex education in western Uganda in 2015.
Ride Africa, a non-governmental organisation, integrates technology that amplifies the reporting of different forms of child abuses in the Rwenzori sub-region including early child marriage.
“Our children might be at risk of having sex early. We have a lot of trouble trying to educate our children about sex education,” the research findings released in February read in part. 

The research was carried out in the districts of Bundibugyo, Hoima, Kabarole, Ntoroko, Kyegegwa, Kamwenge, Kasese, Kibaale, Kyenjojo, Masindi, and Buliisa.
According to Mwebembezi, one in every four adolescent girls in western Uganda has had a teenage pregnancy. Girls with primary level education, Mwebembezi says, are twice more likely to have had sex compared to those in secondary schools.
The research findings also shows that girls who have never attended school are 50 per cent more likely to be sexually active with 53 per cent more likely to be married at a very early age. 

About 14 per cent of young women in the age group of 15 and 24 had their first sexual intercourse early in life, the research findings indicates.
More than 31,000 children are estimated to be heading households in Uganda, according to data compiled by Uganda Bureau of Statistics during the 2014 National Housing and Population census. 
Research findings show that only four out of 10 young males and females aged between 15 and 24 have comprehensive knowledge about HIV prevention while one in every four girls aged between 15 and 19 has begun child-bearing or is pregnant with their first child.
Vulnerable children 
Nearly all Ugandan children (96 per cent) are vulnerable with 43 per cent (7.3 million) suffering moderate from vulnerability while 8 per cent (1.3 million) suffer from critical vulnerability.
Up to two million children aged between five and 17 years in Uganda are engaged in some form of work with up to 507,000 involved in hazardous work while between eight and 10 children in primary and secondary school experience sexual violence.
In Kasese District, nearly 74 children are abused every month in five sub-counties while two in every five women aged between 20 and 24 were married or in a union before 18 years, according to Mwebembezi.
A survey conducted by Joy for Children Uganda in 2013 in the mountainous sub-counties of Kabarole District in Karangura, Kabonero, and Kateebwa mainly inhabited by the Bakonjo, found that child marriage is the leading cause of school dropouts among girls. At Nyarukamba Primary School in Karangura Sub-county, the rate of school dropout of girls was at 15 per cent in 2009 and 10 per cent in 2012. The girls are married off in exchange for property including cows, goats and other household items.
The same survey indicates that 14 of those dropping out did not sit their Primary Leaving Examination, especially at Nyarukamba Primary School in Karangura Sub-county. 
Many of them, research findings shows, are negotiated into marriage by their parents. 
Cases have been reported to police but many are never investigated to their logical conclusion.
Why early marriages are high
According to Mwebembezi, teenagers from poor backgrounds are more likely to start child-bearing early compared to those in relatively well-off households.
This also applies to teenagers with no formal education that are thrice more likely to start child-bearing early as opposed to those with secondary education.
Research conducted by Unicef indicates that girls who marry before 18 years are more likely to suffer domestic violence such as sexual violence at the hands of their partners.
Young married girls also tend to be more isolated, exacerbating their vulnerability and are more likely to extend the vulnerability to their children, thus perpetuating intergenerational cycles of poverty and gender discrimination.
About Samanya Biira 
Diversification
Biira is the fifth born in a family of eight children. She was born in Nyamatunga 1, Bukangala parish, Mugunyu Sub-county in Kasese District.

Her father died while still young surviving with her peasant mother, Kyakimwa Nakyanzi. 
Biira plans to start farming with the view of planting eggplants and other crops for sell. 
She believes through farming she will get a source of income that she can use to look after her baby.

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