Number of child brides to soar in Africa, say rights groups

JOHANNESBURG — The 14-year-old girl had just arrived home from school when her family told her to swap her school uniform for traditional wedding robes. While she had been sitting in her seventh grade classroom in South Africa, her male relatives had received a $570 bride price for her from a man she’d never met who was twice her age.

As is the case with many child brides, beatings and rape were common in her new marital home. After a number of failed escape attempts, she finally made it over a fence and ran to the nearest police station. She then filed charges for the case that would become the first criminal prosecution of child marriage in South Africa.

An estimated 125 million African girls are child brides, with that number expected to rise to 310 million by 2050, creating a legacy of “lost childhoods and shattered futures,” according to a report released by UNICEF on Thursday that demanded more aggressive government actions to end the practice on the continent.

Across Africa girls are being married off to pay off family debts, to keep them free of sin or simply because it’s tradition, but the lives of these child brides are ones of violence, poverty and increased risk of HIV, said UNICEF.

In last year’s case in South Africa, the girl’s husband was convicted of rape, assault and human trafficking and sentenced to 22 years in prison, but he maintained that he was just following traditional practices. The Associated Press has not named the girls in this report because they are minors.

Even in South Africa, with its liberal constitution and a litany of laws to protect child brides, the traditional practice of “ukuthwala” often supersedes modern laws, according to the Commission for Gender Equality, a constitutional agency.

Where once a young man would take a consenting girl home to his village to convince her family to agree to marriage, now some aging men are twisting the practice and abducting young girls, raping them, and then forcing them into a union that often resembles slavery, according to the commission.

Similarly in Ethiopia, abductions and forced marriages of girls were widely practiced in the countryside until outlawed, at least officially, in 2004.

In Mozambique, there are no laws preventing child marriages and existing child protection laws offer loopholes, said Carla Mendonca, a child protection specialist for UNICEF Mozambique. If a community decides that a girl is to be married in a traditional ceremony, with or without her consent, lawmakers are powerless to intervene, explains Mendonca.

In Mozambique, child marriage is a way out of poverty for the family — one less mouth to feed and a windfall from the dowry. Nearly half of women aged 20 to 24 were married before the age of 18, according to UNICEF.

“My parents are poor, they cannot afford to look after me,” said a 16-year-old, who has a 1-year-old child. “I helped my family when I got married, they no longer need to support me.”

In another village in Mozambique’s Inhambane province, another 16-year-old girl gave up on school after her husband told her it was too dangerous to study in the evening.

“I was in the ninth grade,” said the girl, who lives with her in-laws while her husband works as a miner in neighboring South Africa. “Now I get up at 6 a.m., I clean the house, then I clean my mother-in-law’s house and I also work on the farm.”

Daughters are often used to pay off a family debt, said Pascoa Claudino Sumbana Ferrao, Government Director in Inhambane City. “Mostly it’s a situation where the mother herself was given away as a little girl, so they think it’s normal. It becomes something generational.”

In Zimbabwe, an early marriage is seen as path to avoid sin. Child marriage is often encouraged among the 1.2 million followers of churches that combine evangelical Christianity and traditional African beliefs, according to Human Rights Watch. Church leaders also enforce virginity testing rituals on girls as young as 12.

“The problem is that girls and women are not allowed to speak,” a church elder told Human Rights Watch. “If a man stands up in church and says God showed him in a dream that he should marry a certain girl, then that is God’s commandment which must be obeyed.”

A coalition of churches in the country is now trying to stop the practice but like many campaigners across the continent, they face a great deal of resistance to change.

“We are trying to change, and stop child marriage in our churches, but we face a lot of resistance from some churches who hold on to many beliefs that justify exploitation of girls,” said Archbishop Johannes Ndanga, who admits to once supervising virginity tests himself.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

Five Snohomish County men named in drug and gun trafficking indictments

On Tuesday, federal and local law enforcement arrested 10 individuals in connection with three interrelated drug and gun trafficking conspiracies.

Snohomish County Sheriff Susanna Johnson speaks at a press conference outside of the new Snohomish County 911 building on Wednesday, April 30, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
County sheriff working to fix $15M in overspending

In a presentation to the County Council, Sheriff Johnson said she’s reducing overtime hours and working to boost revenue with a new 0.1% sales tax.

A Sound Transit bus at it's new stop in the shadow of the newly opened Northgate Lightrail Station in Seattle. (Kevin Clark / The Herald)
Sound Transit may add overnight bus service between Everett, Seattle

The regional transit agency is seeking feedback on the proposed service changes, set to go into effect in fall 2026.

The Edmonds School District building on Friday, Feb. 14, 2025 in Lynnwood, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Mother sues Edmonds School District after her son’s fingertip was allegedly severed

The complaint alleges the boy’s special education teacher at Cedar Way Elementary closed the door on his finger in 2023.

Pedal-free electric bikes are considered motorcycles under Washington State law (Black Press Media file photo)
Stanwood Police: Pedal-free e-bikes are motorcycles

Unlike electric-assisted bikes, they need to be registered and operated by a properly endorsed driver.

The aftermath of a vandalism incident to the Irwin family's "skeleton army" display outside their Everett, Washington home. (Paul Irwin)
Despite vandalism spree, Everett light display owners vow to press on

Four attacks since September have taken a toll on Everett family’s Halloween and Christmas cheer.

Students, teachers, parents and first responders mill about during a pancake breakfast at Lowell Elementary School in 2023 in Everett. If approved, a proposed bond would pay for a complete replacement of Lowell Elementary as well as several other projects across the district. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Everett school board sends bond, levy measures to Feb. ballot

The $400 million bond would pay for a new school and building upgrades, while the levy would pay for locally funded expenses like extra-curriculars and athletics.

Edgewater Bridge construction workers talk as demolition continues on the bridge on Friday, May 9, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Edgewater Bridge construction may impact parking on Everett street

As construction crews bring in large concrete beams necessary for construction, trucks could impact parking and slow traffic along Glenwood Avenue.

Customers walk in and out of Fred Meyer along Evergreen Way on Monday, Oct. 31, 2022 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Closure of Fred Meyer leads Everett to consider solutions for vacant retail properties

One proposal would penalize landlords who don’t rent to new tenants after a store closes.

People leave notes on farmers market concept photos during an informational open house held at the Northwest Stream Center on Oct. 9, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Snohomish County presents plans for Food and Farming Center

The future center will reside in McCollum Park and provide instrumental resources for local farmers to process, package and sell products.

People walk through Explorer Middle School’s new gymnasium during an open house on Oct. 7, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Everett middle school celebrates opening of new gym

The celebration came as the Mukilteo School District seeks the approval of another bond measure to finish rebuilding Explorer Middle School.

Daily Herald moves to new office near downtown Everett

The move came after the publication spent 12 years located in an office complex on 41st Street.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.