A Project Officer of Northern Sector Action on Awareness Centre
(NORSAAC), a gender advocacy organisation based in Tamale, Ms Wasila
Abdul Rahman, has observed that some young girls seem to prefer early
marriage to schooling.
She said although majority of the girls lived with their families, a
recent study, “Let the Girls Smile: Say No to Child Marriage”, has
revealed that some of them opted for early marriage rather than pursuing
their education.
In an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in Tamale, Ms
Rahman said other girls also willingly migrated to big cities such as
Accra and Kumasi to engage in the ‘kayayei’ business instead of going to
school.
He said many of the girls felt that schooling was not a lucrative
venture as it took a long time to reap its benefits and contended that
it was difficult for those who schooled in the rural areas to excel.
“It emerged that these girls rather pressurised their parents to allow them to marry”, she said.
Ms Rahmann said in an effort to address some of these challenges,
the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), was working closely with
the Department of Social Welfare, the Ghana Education Service (GES) and
the Domestic Violence and Victims Support Unit of the Ghana Police
Service to reduce child marriage practices in 20 communities in the
Tolon and Mion districts in the Northern Region.
She said Children against Child Marriages clubs had been established
in 20 junior high schools in the two districts where they received
training on various child marriage issues and its dangers.
Madam Rahmann said traditional/religious leaders and some community
members were supporting the fight against child marriage by discouraging
the practice among themselves and the children.
Source: GNA
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