/ 29 October 2011

Baby mamas in crisis

Baby Mamas In Crisis

‘When you educate a woman, you educate a nation,” says Kalunde*, whose foster child was thrown out of her rural school and her home after becoming pregnant. “A woman is a mirror and spends much of her time with her children.”

Every day, across Tanzania, hundreds of schoolgirls become pregnant, bringing their learning to a halt. The taboo on young mothers returning to lessons is especially strong in the profoundly poor, drought-prone region of Shinyanga, where Kalunde lives, and the rate of school pregnancies is rising.

“Education is an absolute priority in these regions,” says Julitta Onabanjo, the United Nations Population Fund’s representative in Tanzania. “It is really stark. In regions like Arusha and Kilimanjaro where education is valued, for example, women have an average of two to three births, but in places like Shinyanga there are seven births on average. It is still a widespread mentality in Africa that your family is your wealth.”

Anita Masaki, project officer for the Forum for African Women Educationalists, the leading group among those demanding an end to the exclusion of young mothers from schools, says: “If a woman is educated she plans her life, she plans her family, she educates her children and lifts her descendants out of poverty.”

Tanzania will mark 50 years of independence in December. The population has rocketed from six million in 1961 to 45million today. With 71% of the nation under the age of 30 — Tanzania is one of the youngest countries on earth — the momentum for further growth is strong, with the UN predicting it will be the 13th most populous nation in the world in 2050, with 138-million people.

The Tanzanian government attributes the high fertility rate to “near-universal early marriage”, low prevalence of contraception and the “low educational and cultural status of women”.

National statistics show that education is fundamental to reducing the birth rate. A third of Tanzanians over 10 years old cannot read or write. Women with no education have an average of 6.9 babies. Women with a primary school education have 5.6 babies on average and those with secondary and higher education just 3.2. Furthermore, half of all women have given birth by 19 and 70% are married by 20.

Driven by education
“A lot of [the factors determining population change] are driven by education and what is invested in girls’ education in particular,” says Onabanjo. “And it translates directly into higher incomes.” That will be critical in a country where population growth has raced ahead of economic growth, leaving Tanzania the 172nd-poorest nation in the world out of 190, according to the World Bank, with half the population living on less than $1.50 a day.

“The government really needs to slow this population growth down, or increase economic growth, which is very hard,” says Onabanjo. “If Tanzania keeps going at 2.9% population growth a year, it is scary.” She says those who argue that a big population is good for a developing country have to explain how the extra schools, hospitals and jobs will be provided.

In the vast dusty fields and ramshackle towns of Shinyanga sex education is minimal. Getting pregnant while at school is common and expulsion as a result is universal, the result of deep cultural disapproval and a pervasive prejudice that returning teenage mothers will be a bad influence. “It is the end of their educational life,” says Masaki. “Poverty is a key factor,” says Mary Soko, Oxfam International’s education programme officer for Tanzania. “Parents force early marriages so they can escape the role of taking care of their daughter and her child.”

Many young mothers have been seduced by older men with food or money, says Soko. Furthermore, education is often seen as a waste of time for girls. More than 60% of boys attend ­secondary school from age 15, 10% more than girls. Twice as many men continue education after ­second level.

John Shija, at the Oxfam-supported paralegal aid centre in Shinyanga, Tanzania’s second most populous but third-poorest region, says: “A great proportion of the poverty I see here is being caused by illiteracy. The parents are already intimidated by the schools, who say pregnant girls have expelled themselves, and there is self-stigmatisation by the girls.”

Raising someone’s learning by one educational level can raise family income by 30%, research suggests. Other nations in sub-Saharan Africa facing booming populations have had varying success in tackling the taboo on young mothers returning to school.

Zambia has a national policy to help girls re-enter education, and school pregnancy rates have tumbled. The Democratic Republic of Congo, on track to have 149-million people in 2050 and be the world’s 10th-largest nation, is not tackling the issue, unlike Nigeria (349-million by 2050, fourth in the world) and Ethiopia (145-million and 11th). All three have lower levels of literacy than Tanzania, says Masaki.

In Shinyanga, Teresa*, who became a mother in primary school, has a simple message: “You must find ways so girls don’t get caught up with boys, but learn to read instead.” —