The controversy generated over the Senate’s resolution on
child marriage continued yesterday in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, as a
group of children actors and actresses gave a 10-day ultimatum to the lawmakers
to abolish the law and make public apologies to them.
The children are said to be producing a film
entitled: “Yerima, Diary of a Child.”
They demanded an immediate abolition of the section of the
Constitution backing the underage marriage and threatened to embark on an indefinite
hunger strike if this is not carried out ASAP.
The group, which was a volunteer team of children from
across the country, demanded an apology from the Senate for deliberating and
considering the stamping of early child marriage law in the country, stressing
that such had belittled the child rights.
In an interview with journalists, the 13 year-old leader of
the group, Pascaline Ogbuli, said her group decided to stage the play as a way
of lending their voices to the growing opposition to early child marriage in
Nigeria.
Ogbuli said the planned indefinite hunger strike was aimed
at attracting local, national and international attention to the plight of
voiceless Nigerian children who have continually falling victims to the
underage marriage in Nigeria.
She said: “We demand a public apology in all the national
dailies within the next 10 days, otherwise we shall embark on an indefinite
hunger strike to draw local, national and international attention to our plight
as voiceless Nigerian children.
“And if we die telling our leaders that our education and
our future count more than an early marriage, so be it. To all the leaders who
support this barbaric law and to everyone that ought to speak out loud against
it but are keeping quiet for fear or for whatever reason, if we die, our blood
shall be demanded of you and your generations”.
Expressing the fear of growing up in a country where
children would not be free to walk the streets for fear of being stolen by
lustful adults for early marriage, Ogbuli stressed that the Senate had
disappointed the children’s generation who looked up to the lawmakers as role
model.
She said: “We do not wish to grow up in a country where our
fathers, mothers and our leaders do not respect our rights and the fact that we
are children, and should be protected and given education and not led as bride
to the marriage slaughter-house.
“We are grossly ashamed that the Nigerian Senate, that we,
as children aspire to and look forward to with pride and great respect, could
even consider a law saying our childhood and innocence could be taken away and
our education and future destroyed in exchange for a bride price, and that we
could be sold as slaves to early marriage.”
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