The Head of Delegation of the
European Union to Tanzania Ambassador Roeland van de Geer underlined the
EU’s commitment to acting in genuine partnership with Tanzania,
international and regional organizations, and civil society to combat
violence and harmful practices against women and girls. “Child marriage
and FGM are a violation of girls’ human rights. These harmful practices
have a devastating impact on a girl’s health, her well-being and
personal development but they also have a detrimental ripple effect on
the society as a whole. Ending child marriage means a positive effect on
the health and education of girls and their children, it contributes to
a lower fertility rate and increases women’s expected earnings and
household welfare.”
Plan International Tanzania Deputy
Country Director, Ms. Gwynneth Wong, said that Child Marriage in
Tanzania prevails at the rate of 37%, where three out of ten girls enter
into marriage before the age of 18 with Mara having the highest rate of
55% and Geita 37%. The Deputy Country Director also revealed that while
the national prevalence rate of Female Genital Mutilation is at 10%,
Mara is at the rate of 32%, three times the national rate. All these
practices deprive the girl child of their potential to contribute to
both national and personal developments.
“The girls are deprived of their
right to enjoy their childhood and reaching their goals. Subjecting them
to early marriages and mutilating their genitals puts them at risk of
maternal health complications and even deaths. This fuels the poverty
cycle and is against the UN Sustainable Development Goals”, said
Gwynneth Wong.
The project targets over 1,500
in-school and out-of-school girls aged between the age of 10 – 24, and
aims to prevent the incidences of harmful traditional practices of Child
Marriage and FGM through empowering girls and strengthening of
community, civil society and government support systems to respond to
girls’ rights violation and challenges.
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