First Lady Rebecca Akufo-Addo receiving a gift at the event
First Lady Rebecca Akufo-Addo has challenged her colleague first ladies on the African continent to work extra hard to reduce the incidence of child marriage, warning that the endemic practice is a destructive tool against the girl-child.
According to her, despite the many social, political and religious platforms created to advocate against the practice, child-marriage with its attendant problems is still ravaging the lives of families.
Mrs. Akufo-Addo made these observations in Sierra Leone at the invitation of the country’s First Lady Fatima Maada Bio, when she joined other African first ladies to launch the ‘Hands of Our Girls’ campaign.
The campaign, a Mrs. Maada Bio initiative, is aimed at pushing to the top of the social agenda, the negative effects of child marriage and how best society, especially the influential class, can work to bring a lasting end to the social menace.
Child marriage and teenage pregnancy are human rights violations driven by poverty and traditional practices that prevent girls from acquiring education and put them at great health risk.
Victims of child marriage suffer all forms of gender-based violence and are at an increased risk of acquiring sexually transmitted infections, including HIV and AIDS, cervical cancer, and obstetric fistula.
Explaining the need for more efforts to combat child-marriage, Mrs. Akufo-Addo recalled harrowing stories heard from young girls who had been married off at an early age, some of them struggling to bring up children, some of them sick, others who had lost children and the saddest of all being those who did not live to tell their story.
She said what was worrying was that the African Union Girls Summit on Ending Child Marriage chronicled same challenges discussed during the first summit and indicated that “after the talk, real work has not started”.
She expressed her elation at Mrs. Maada Bio for taking the bold initiative to improve the lives of women and children of Sierra Leone, saying, “It is encouraging to know that soon after the 2nd African Union Girls Summit on Ending Child Marriage, the First Lady of Sierra Leone already has her foot on the pedal.”
Mrs. Akufo-Addo called for the need for more hard work to put to an end what she described as a pandemic evil phenomenon in Africa.
“We must educate communities, raise awareness, engage traditional and religious leaders, involve parents and the media and empower girls through education and income generating activities. We must provide confidential access to sexual health services for our young girls. Again, any discourse or intervention must include men for greater impact,” she stated.
She expressed optimism that if all first ladies put their shoulders to the wheel and work beyond the summit talks to realise decisions taken, then a different story would be told at the next 3rd AU Girls Summit on Ending Child Marriage on how this inhumane practice has been reduced to its barest minimum, if not eradicated.
By Jamila Akweley Okertchiri