The planned mass wedding of about 100 orphans on May 24, 2024, supported by the Speaker of the Niger State Assembly, Abdulmalik Sarkin-Daji, has sparked widespread outrage across Nigeria.
The orphans, who have all lost parents to attacks by armed bandits across the country are feared to be underage girls, but the Imams Forum of Niger have said that the girls are not below 18 – the legal age of marriage.0
0in the face of the controversy, Nigeria’s Women’s Affairs Minister Uju Kennedy-Ohanenye said she has filed a court order to stop the ceremony, because critics have expressed concern that some girls may be younger than 18, or being forced to comply for financial gain.
Minister Kennedy-Ohanenye said the girls “deserve better” and that her department was looking into who the 100 girls are, their ages and whether they consented to the marriage.
Her department will offer the girls education and training, she said, adding that if the Niger State speaker attempts to block these efforts “there will be a serious legal battle between him and the Ministry of Women Affairs”.
On Friday, senior presidential aide Abiodun Essiet reiterated Ms Kennedy-Ohanenye’s plan of action.
Human rights activists in Nigeria have launched a petition to stop the plan.
According to international campaign group Girls Not Brides, 30% of girls and 1.6% of boys in Nigeria are married before the age of 18. Some 12% of girls are married before their 15th birthday.
Child marriages are most common in the northern part of the country, among poor, rural households. It is seen as a way to reduce their families’ financial burdens or to improve political and social alliances.
Northern Nigeria is mostly Muslim and religious and cultural norms, such as polygamy, favour the practice