By Steven Ariong
Amudat.
Police in Amudat district in Karamoja sub region
in the north eastern Uganda has arrested a 78-year-old man for marrying a
13-year-old girl.
Mr Lowuse Angatemong who is married to three other
women was arrested on Sunday after paying 40 heads of cattle to the
father of the teenage girl.
They are all residents of Nagulet village in Loro Sub County in Amudat district.
Detective Saidi Kasim attached to Amudat police
station told Daily Monitor that the father of the girl was also arrested
and will be charged for procuring defilement and forced marriage.
According
to Kasim the girl escaped from the old man’s home to the nearby army
detach where she was kept for one day before police were called by the
detach commander.
“It’s very sad news. The girl ran away from this old man’s home to the hands of the army who informed the police,” he said.
Mr Kasim said the suspects will be arraigned in court and charged.
The Mt Moroto regional police commander Mr
Richard Aruk Maruk warned parents against marrying off young girls so as
to get wealth.
He confirmed there was an increase of forced marriage
and defilement cases especially in Moroto and Amudat warning that he
will deal with perpetrators.
Mr Francis Kiyong, the district LCV
chairperson of Amudat condemned the practice of marrying off young girls
saying it was outdated.
He also asked the police to embark on
sensitizing the community about the laws saying many people in the
district don’t know what the law says.
Child marriage remains one of the silent evils in Uganda today according to the Uganda Demographic and Health Survey (UDHS).
A
2016 United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) report on the state of
world's children titled A fair chance for every child, some 750 million
women will have been married as children – three quarters of a billion
child brides by 2030 if no action is taken.
"These vast inequities
and dangers do more than violate the rights and imperil the futures of
individual children. They perpetuate intergenerational cycles of
disadvantage and inequality that undermine the stability of societies
and even the security of nations everywhere," read part of the report
released Tuesday.
In-spite of the legal provision, the traditional practice of child marriage persists among many ethnic groups in Uganda.
A 2007 study by Jain and Kurz ranked Uganda 9 among the top 20 ‘hotspot’ countries for child marriage.
In
2013 World Vision ranked Uganda 16th among 25 countries with the
highest rates of early marriages; with 46 percent of girls marrying
before 18 years, and 12 percent before they are 15 years).
A recent
Population Council and UNICEF supported study posits Uganda in the
middle of the range with over 20 percent of girls aged 15 -19 years
categorized as ever married.
CREDIT: DAILY MONITOR
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