Canada invests $80m to fight VVF

By Ibrahim Ramalan
Abuja

Irked by the menace of child marriage and the concomitant devastation of the Virginal Vesicular Fistula (VVF) on woman and girls in Nigeria and sub-Saharan Africa, the Canadian High Commissioner to Nigeria, Perry John Calderwood and popular Nollywood actress, Stephanie Okeke-Linus, have intensified campaigns to end the menace.

Speaking during a news conference in Abuja yesterday, the Canadian envoy noted that his country has invested about $80 million and is using its diplomatic missions across the continent to emphasize the need to actively bring an end to child, early and forced marriage (CEFM) globally.
According to him, education remains the instrument through which women and girls can be liberated from the clutches of child marriage and poverty.

Calderwood pointed out that gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls are also key priorities shared by both Canada and African States, stressing that the $80 million is targeted funding for the prevention of child, early and forced marriage, protecting those at risk and supporting already married girls and women. He said that this will help governments across Africa to develop strategies to deliver the Sustainable Development Goal target on child marriage.
He disclosed further that an estimated 15 million girls are forced into child marriage around the world each year adding that several countries in Africa have the highest rates of child marriage globally.

“Two in every five African girls are married before the age of 18.This practice is a violation of girl’s human rights and it undermines the development of their families, communities and countries,” he said.
In her remarks, Okereke –Linus, who lamented the harrowing experience the girl child goes through under the harmful practice of child marriage, said that when a young girl whose body is not mature enough for child birth is placed under such strenuous condition without proper medical care, the consequences are often devastating.