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| [FILES] Recent marriage of Yakubu Chanji, a man in his 70s to a 15-year-old girl, has sparked a heated backlash on social media. |
The
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has expressed
commitment to eliminate child marriage in the region through the
validation and implementation of its reviewed Child Policy and Plan of
Action.
ECOWAS Commissioner for Social Affairs and Gender, Dr. Siga Jagne, at
an experts’ validation meeting on child policy in Abuja yesterday, said
the previous policy, which was based on international frameworks, was
approved by the Heads of State in 2008 and covered the period of 2009 to
2013.
The commissioner said the increasing rate of child marriage in West
Africa was unacceptable with the sub-region accounting for the highest
in Africa and the second highest in the world.
“Indeed, six of the 15 ECOWAS countries, Niger: 76 per cent, Mali: 55
per cent, Burkina Faso: 52 per cent, Guinea: 51 per cent, Nigeria: 43
per cent and Sierra Leone 39 per cent, are among the 20 countries with
the highest rates of child marriage in the world.
“Two ECOWAS countries, Nigeria and Niger, rank among the 20 countries
with the largest absolute number of child marriages in the world,” she
stated.
She said the review would include the multi-dimensional issues
affecting the rights of the child with a focus on the roadmap on
prevention and response to child marriage.
She added: “Thus, the ECOWAS Commission, will present to you for
validation, the Child Policy and Strategic Plan of Action and a Roadmap
on Prevention and Response to Child Marriage, aimed at charting a clear
course for the region in dealing with this issue in the coming years.”
Jagne, therefore, urged representatives of member-states to
scrutinise the texts and consider modalities for implementation at the
national and regional levels.
Representative of the United Nations Children Education Fund
(UNICEF), Mrs. Denise Ulwor, said the review of the ECOWAS child policy
would be an opportunity to scale-up action on the regional child rights
agenda.
Ulwor said the successful implementation in the plan of action would
contribute to efforts to respond effectively to the challenges children
are facing in different contexts.
Also, Specialist in Workers Activities, International Labour
Organisation (ILO), Mr. David Dorkenno, said effective implementation of
the policy would ensure every child in the region enjoy developmental
rights.








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