Conflict, poverty and hunger driving child marriage in South Sudan – Oxfam

According to Oxfam, 70 per cent of girls in Nyal, north of the country, are married before the age of 18, significantly higher than the pre-conflict national average of 45 per cent. COURTESY PHOTO

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  • Oxfam called on international donors and humanitarian agencies to direct more funding to community-led initiatives that help tackle gender-based violence and child marriage, including through education and awareness-raising activities that challenge existing norms and expectations.

Another generation of girls in South Sudan will miss out on an education, face huge health risks in childbirth and are more likely to face sexual and domestic violence, if efforts to end child marriage are not stepped up, Oxfam warned in a new report published on their website on Monday.

According to Oxfam, 70 per cent of girls in Nyal, north of the country, are married before the age of 18, significantly higher than the pre-conflict national average of 45 per cent. The research also found out that one in 10 girls in Nyal are married before the age of 15.

“While child marriage is still influenced by traditions, the main drivers are now poverty and hunger fueled by five years of conflict. A breakdown in the rule of law and increased risk of sexual violence are also factors. Despite a marked reduction in fighting following the peace deal in September 2018, the factors that have exacerbated girls’ risk of child marriage remain,” part of the report reads.

Ms Elysia Buchanan, Oxfam’s policy adviser in South Sudan said: “Rising poverty and hunger following five years of vicious civil war are driving families to desperation, with many parents marrying off their young daughters for a dowry in order to survive. Denied their rights to choose how they want to live their lives, the girls face increased risk of losing out on their education, death in childbirth, sexual and physical violence in their marriage”.

South Sudan is one of the most difficult places in the world for girls to get an education – with three quarters of girls out of school – and child marriage is one of the primary reasons why girls are held back. Child marriage also increases girls’ risk of death or complications during pregnancy and childbirth in a country where the maternal mortality rate is one of the highest in the world. The practice also puts girls at greater risk of sexual, physical and emotional violence. Of the married women and girls interviewed by Oxfam in Nyal, 84 per cent said that they had experienced or witnessed sexual violence between husband and wife.

Child marriage has long been a concern in South Sudan and the government has developed a long-term plan to end the practice while activists across the country are also challenging leaders to push for change. Oxfam is calling on the government to take urgent action by prioritising its plan and investing significantly to end child marriage.

“Tackling child marriage is first and foremost about protecting young girls. But improving the status of women and girls is also essential for the recovery of South Sudan. Another important step that the country’s leaders can make to show they take South Sudanese women seriously, is to honour commitments made in the peace agreement to ensure 35 per cent executive positions are filled by women, and to nominate women in key positions of influence,” Ms Buchanan said.

Oxfam called on international donors and humanitarian agencies to direct more funding to community-led initiatives that help tackle gender-based violence and child marriage, including through education and awareness-raising activities that challenge existing norms and expectations.

“The girls in Nyal want to go to school, play, learn a skill, and make a difference in their community. They need the support of South Sudan’s leaders, international donors and humanitarian agencies to help them achieve the future they deserve – most importantly, they need sustained and long term peace across their country,” Ms Buchanan.