By Osoro Nyawangah,
DODOMA Tanzania
The Tanzanian government has said it will allow teenage mothers to continue with their studies after giving birth, reversing a heavily criticised policy implemented by late former President John Magufuli.
The country’s decision to allow pregnant teenaged
mothers back to school, reversing a heavily-criticised policy by its late ham-fisted
leader John Magufuli.
Human rights campaigners and activists accused
Tanzania of discrimination after Magufuli in 2017 endorsed the expulsion of
pregnant girls from state schools and their prevention from returning to class
after giving birth – a policy dating back to 1961.
Following Magufuli’s death earlier this year,
his successor Samia Suluhu Hassan has sought to break away from some of his
policies. On Wednesday, Education Minister Joyce Ndalichako said that “pregnant
school girls will be allowed to continue with formal education after delivery”.
“I will issue a circular later today. No time
to wait,” she said at a ceremony in the capital, Dodoma.
Magufuli, who took office in 2015 had pledged
that no student who became pregnant would finish their studies under his watch,
saying it was immoral for young girls to be sexually active.
He
left little doubt about his stance on this policy after he was lobbied by civil
society groups to overturn it.
“In
my administration, as long as I am president ... no pregnant student will be
allowed to return to school. We cannot allow this immoral behaviour to permeate
our primary and secondary schools,” Magufuli said in June 2018.
The decision was widely criticised by human
rights groups and international donors, who cut their funding to the country in
response to Magufuli’s policies.
At the time, Human Rights Watch (HRW) published
a report saying school officials in Tanzania were conducting pregnancy tests in
order to expel pregnant students, depriving them of their right to education.
World Bank froze a $300m loan for girls’
education in protest against the ban. According to the institution, more than
120,000 girls drop out of school annually in Tanzania, 6,500 of whom were due
to pregnancy or having children.
“This important decision underscores the
country’s commitment to support girls and young women and improve their chances
at receiving a better education,” the World Bank said in a statement later on
Wednesday.
Sweden, which also cut its funding to Tanzania
last year citing shrinking freedoms, hailed the move.
“This is a welcome step for many girls,
allowing them to unlock their full potential,” the Swedish embassy in Dar es
Salaam said on Twitter.
Opposition party Alliance for Change and
Transparency (ACT Wazalendo) said their push to reverse the policy had paid
off.
“We did it! A clear example of one struggle,
many fronts. Everyone who was involved did something towards this achievement,”
said ACT Wazalendo leader Zitto Kabwe.
Magufuli, a COVID-sceptic, died of a heart
condition on March 17 after a mysterious three-week absence. His political
opponents insisted he had coronavirus.
In the weeks after her swearing-in, his
successor Hassan reached out to Tanzania’s political opposition, promising to
defend democracy and basic freedoms, and reopening banned media outlets.
But hopes that Hassan would usher in a new era
were dented by the arrest of a high-profile opposition leader on terror charges
and a crackdown on independent newspapers.
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