Gambian President Yahya Jammeh has
announced a ban on child marriage in the predominantly Muslim west
African nation, threatening heavy jail terms for those who break the new
rules.
Speaking to a group of Muslim elders in
Banjul on Wednesday, Jammeh said: “As from today, July 6, child marriage
is illegal and is banned in The Gambia”.
“Anyone who marries a girl under 18
years will spend 20 years in jail. The girls’ parents would spend 21
years in jail and anyone who knows about it and fails to report the
matter to the authorities would spend 10 years in jail,” he added.
“The Imam and those that preside over
the marriage ceremony would also be sent to jail. If you want to know
whether what I am saying is true or not, try it tomorrow and see.”
Jammeh instructed lawmakers to pass legislation reflecting the new ban before July 21.
In December, legislators passed a bill
criminalising female circumcision and introducing prison terms of up to
three years for anyone flouting the ban, a month after Jammeh branded
the practice outdated and ordered its immediate cessation.
Jammeh declared in November that the
practice was not required by Islam — the religion of around 95 percent
of the country’s 1.8 million population — and that it should be
consigned to history, according to a government spokesman.
No comments:
Post a Comment