75% of girls in Nigeria get married before age 18 -- Action Aid (Girlsnotbrides)
Mrs Ifeoma Charles-Monwuba, Deputy Country Director of the organisation, made the remark in Abuja at a two-day conference on the 'Social Protection of the Girl-child.'
She said 100 million girls in the country stand the risk of early marriage within the next decade, if the trend continues.
Charles-Monwuba,
who spoke on 'International Perspective on Child Marriage' said
education remained the key to stopping early marriage.
She
said girls married off early often failed to maximise their potentials
in life, as they ended up confined to carrying out domestic chores and
at risk of life threatening diseases.
The deputy director stressed that children especially the girl-child deserved the right to education and all other human rights.
"To
ensure that girls are kept in school there are international
instruments required for children which includes; universal declaration
of human rights.
"Right to education, ensuring an inclusive, equitable quality education and promoting lifelong learning opportunities for all.
"According to UN Population Council of 2013, 75 per cent of girls in Nigeria get married before they attain the age of 18.
"100 million girls under the age of 18 will marry in the next decade if the current trend continues,” she said.
The Deputy Director added that there were societal misconceptions that had contributed to teenage girls dropping out of school.
She
stated that there was false impression on the ability of the girl child
and religious practices that perceived marriage as the ultimate for the
girl child.
According to her, some of the odds faced by the girl child faced when married off early in life include "the higher risk of physical and emotional violence.
"The
girl-child will be faced with Vesico-vaginal Fistula (VVF) disease and
she is confined to domestic chores because she is not allowed to make
decisions in the family.''
She recommended
that equal rights among girls and boys should be promoted as well as
quality free inclusive public education for both sexes in the country.
"We
need to improve education budget, promote gender responsive schools,
and encourage re-entry policy for the re-integration of young mothers
without stigma.
"We also need to have sanctions on people that marry under-aged girls,” Charles-Monwuba said.
Also speaking on 'The Role of the Media in Eliminating Child Marriage in Nigeria,' Mr Gbemiga Ogunleye, Provost, Nigerian Institute of Journalism, said religion and culture encourage child marriage.
Ogunleye
urged the media to report and engage the populace with programmes
targeted at enlightening them on the dangers of early marriage and the
rights of the girl-child to education.
"The
media should lead the campaign on the domestication and implementation
of the Child Rights Act and engage in getting statistics on girl-child
marriage to drive home the campaign.
"Children’s
day should not be the only day we report on children issues but we need
to make it a regular affair to bring to forth the hazards of early
marriage on the society,” he said.
The
Provost said the media was at the centre of showcasing credible women
who had achieved their potentials to serve as role models to the
girl-child.
He said that if the girl-child was in
school for at least 12 years, she would have had the basic knowledge and
ideas that would advance her in life.
The News
Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the International Day of the Girl
Child was marked on Oct. 11 to address issues challenging the girl
child.