Mozambique's
child marriage and teen pregnancy rates are among the highest in the world
|
In the tiny maternity
ward in Murrupelane, two 16-year-old mothers breast-feed their babies, both
born that morning.
To
try to curb the population explosion, Mozambique's government is in the process
of changing the law to allow marriage only at 18, rather than at 16 with
parental consent
|
Mozambique's
child marriage and teen pregnancy rates are among the highest in the world, a
driving factor in the population explosion in this poverty-plagued southern
African nation.
After
emerging from a brutal war in 1992, the former Portuguese colony saw its
population swell 40 percent in the two decades to 2017, reaching 29 million
today.
"My
parents really wanted me to get married," says Julia Afonso, one of the
girls who has just given birth in Murrupelane, a village in the north.
In
a tiny voice, she says her family received 1,500 meticals (US$21, €22) as a
dowry.
Around
half of Mozambique's women -- 48.2% -- marry before they turn 18, according to
UN children's agency UNICEF.
Of
girls aged between 15 and 19, 46.4% are either pregnant or have already become
mothers.
These
early marriages and pregnancies "are impoverishing the community,"
says Murrupelane village chief Wazir Abacar.
Young
parents "cannot feed their children, and the mums leave school," he
said. As a result, 58%of Mozambican women are illiterate.
- Pregnant at 12 -
Ema
Nelmane, now 13, gave into the advances of a man she met in the market who
offered her 200 meticals (€3) for her virginity.
"She
saw a chance to get the same shoes her friends were wearing," her
grandmother said, by way of explanation.
When
she fell pregnant, Ema was flabbergasted.
"I
didn't know you could get pregnant by making love," she said,
breast-feeding seven-month-old Ismail in the clay yard outside her
grandmother's home.
Ema
was plunged prematurely into the world of adults.
"I
can't go out and play with my friends anymore," she said.
As
in other developing countries, teenagers in Mozambique often fall pregnant
"through lack of education", said demographer Carlos Arnaldo.
"Parents
see in these births a guarantee that they'll be looked after when they get
old."
Until
recently, Mozambique's government did little to tackle demographic problems.
But
the mounting costs of the population boom have forced a change of thinking.
- Contraception drive -
"The
economic consequences for the government are that it has to build hospitals and
schools," said Pascoa Wate, head of maternal and child health at the
health ministry.
"In
spite of government spending, people don't have access to them."
In
a bid to curb the population explosion, Mozambique's government is in the
process of changing the law to allow marriage only at 18, rather than at 16
with parental consent.
"We
know that the practice of early marriage is rooted in deeply-seated cultural
values and social norms that prioritize fertility," said Youth Minister
Nyeleti Mondlane.
With
UN support, Mozambique has also been waging a contraception awareness campaign
since 2016.
Only
a quarter of women currently have access to contraception, according to a
national health survey.
In
the shadow of a mango tree in the northern village of Namissica, a dozen women
crowd around a table to watch a nurse demonstrate how to use different
contraception, with the help of a wooden model penis and a plastic vagina.
If
their husbands are "not cooperative", nurse Fatima da Silva Cobre
advises women to opt for a birth control implant.
"He
won't know you're using it," she says.
The
women ask anxious questions: could the implant fall out? Won't it make them
infertile?
One
by one, the nurse debunks the myths.
- Rites of passage -
Reining
in the population boom also depends heavily on male education in a country
where "it's they who dictate sexuality to girls", said Gilberto
Macuacua Harilal.
A
crusader against underage pregnancies, Macuacua uses his weekly television show
"Man To Man" to denounce churches that defend marriage under 18, as
well as traditional initiation rites, common in Mozambique.
During
such ceremonies, "boys aged eight to 12 learn to punish girls by forcing
them into sex," he said.
Slowly,
the message is starting to get through.
Jaoa
Carlos Singano, a village chief in the northern Rapale district, said that for
a year "we've been trying to convince officials who carry out the
initiation rites to be careful in the instructions they give boys".
But
the need for change is urgent.
At
current rates, the population is set to double in the next 25 years.
"It is a race against
time," says Mondlane.
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