A regional commissioner in Tanzania, John Mongella has
announced that pregnant teenagers will be arrested and charged to court,
The Citizen reports.
Mongella, speaking on Monday, said pregnant teenagers have a tendency
to not divulge who it was that got them pregnant. They should be taken
to court, he said, and should be forced to testify and name the persons
who impregnated them.
He said:
“There have been a tendency of pregnant schoolgirls not to mention
the name of a person who impregnated them. This is a challenge when one
is required to testify in court.
Directors and district commissioners in the Mwanza region have been
ordered to locate all pregnant schoolgirls and take them to court.”
In June 2017, President John Magufuli upheld a 2002 law that banned
pregnant schoolgirls from returning to school after giving birth.
He also added that men who impregnated schoolgirls should be
imprisoned for 30 years. Tanzania’s ban on pregnant girls attending
state primary and secondary schools dates back to 1961, when the country
secured its independence from Britain, though it does not extend to
private schools.
More than 55,000 Tanzanian schoolgirls have been
expelled from school over the last decade for being pregnant, the Center
for Reproductive Rights (CRR) said in a report in 2013.
Some wealthier families are able to send their daughters to private schools but the majority end up looking for casual work.
The president was under criticism for granting pardon to prisoners on
Saturday to two child rapists who were sentenced to life in prison.
Congolese musician, Nguza Viking alias Babu Seya and his son Johnson
Nguza alias Papii Kocha were sentenced to life imprisonment in 2010
after they were found guilty of raping and defiling ten primary school
pupils between the ages of six and eight in 2003.
There were cheers after the announcement of their release while child
rights advocates questioned the decision which did not take the victims
into consideration.
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