Nairobi — Tanzania has one of the world's highest teen pregnancy rates amid widespread sexual violence and poverty
Thousands of
pregnant girls will attend school in Tanzania as part of a $500-million
World Bank loan which had been delayed for...
years due to the country's
ban on expectant students.
Tanzania's
education minister Joyce Ndalichako said the loan aimed to improve
access to and the quality of secondary education for all Tanzanian
students - without bias.
"The target is to
reach more than 6.5 million secondary school students across the
country, without discrimination and shall include girls who drop out of
school for various reasons, including pregnancy," said the statement.
"The government is committed to ensure that they continue with their education as prescribed in the project."
Government
officials were not immediately available to confirm whether the policy
would extend to students who were not part of the World Bank initiative,
but women's rights groups said they were cautiously optimistic.
Tanzania has one of
the world's highest teen pregnancy rates. About 27% of girls aged 15 to
19 are pregnant, the United Nations says, amid widespread sexual
violence and poverty, which forces girls to exchange sex for school
fees, food and shelter.
About 5,500
pregnant girls drop out of school each year in Tanzania, the World Bank
said on its website. The project will enable them to attend alternative
education centres to sit their exams and later return to state schools,
it said.
President John
Magufuli drew criticism from activists and donors in 2017 when he voiced
support for a ban on pregnant girls and teenage mothers in state
schools, which dates back to 1961, describing their behaviour as
"immoral".
The World Bank
froze $1.7 billion in loans to Tanzania in 2018 after both the pregnant
student ban and a law making it illegal to question official statistics.
It started releasing funds again to the country last September.
Women's rights
groups called on authorities to officially revoke the ban, which had
locked thousands of girls out of education for life, and ensure all
schools gave access to pregnant teens and young mothers.
"It is the first
time the government of Tanzania has publicly announced in an official
state document that it will include pregnant girls in secondary school
education," said Judy Gitau, regional coordinator for Equality Now
Africa.
"We are cautiously
optimistic and will continue to hold the government of Tanzania to
account to put in place a clear re-entry policy for the pregnant school
girls already out of school and those to come."
(Reporting by
Nita Bhalla @nitabhalla, Editing by Katy Migiro. The Thomson Reuters
Foundation is the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, and covers the
lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly.
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Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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