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New Report Says Child Brides In Africa Could More Than Double By 2050

In this November 2015 photo, A 17-year-old mother sits with her baby in the Inhassune village, in southern Mozambique. In Mozambique there are no laws preventing child marriages and existing child protection laws offer loopholes. If a community decides that a girl is to be married in a traditional ceremony, with or without her consent, lawmakers are powerless to intervene.
Shiraaz Mohamed
/
AP
In this November 2015 photo, A 17-year-old mother sits with her baby in the Inhassune village, in southern Mozambique. In Mozambique there are no laws preventing child marriages and existing child protection laws offer loopholes. If a community decides that a girl is to be married in a traditional ceremony, with or without her consent, lawmakers are powerless to intervene.

A new report by UNICEF warns that the number of child brides in Africa could more than double to 310 million in the next 35 years.

Though the rates of child marriage are on the decline in most parts of the world, the number of girls married as children in Africa is expected to increase by 250 percent by the year 2050.

At that point Africa would surpass South Asia as the region of the world with the largest number of young women who were married before their 18th birthday, the report says.

The rates of child marriage are technically declining in Africa, but the slow rate of decline combined with an expected population boom means the number of child brides will increase. The report explains that across Africa, the percentage of girls married as children dropped from 44 percent in 1990 to 34 percent today. But because Africa's total population of girls is expected to rise from 275 million today to 465 million by 2050, the sheer growth of the populations will mean higher rates of child marriage.

The report also noted that the progress made in combating child marriages has been unequal, with the poorest girls still facing the same chances of being married as children as they did 25 years ago.

"The data is also clear that ending child marriage requires a much sharper focus on reaching the poorest and most marginalized girls – those in greatest need and at greatest risk – with quality education and a host of other protective services," said UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake. "Their lives, and the futures of their communities, are at stake."

Child brides, according to UNICEF, are less likely to finish school and more likely to suffer complications in childbirth. They are also more likely to contract HIV and are often trapped in life-long poverty.

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