User:Umk5717/Women in Niger

Fertility and family life
Niger has the highest total fertility rate in the world. Motherhood in Niger has many complications. Due to economic factors, healthcare inadequacy, and traditional practices, women are at a crucial disadvantage by the time they have their first child.

Although sometimes with the complicity of their family, young girls are often sold into child marriages or sex work. The practice of wahaya allows for slave traders to exploit girls as young as 9, selling them either as domestic servants or commercial sex workers. Niger is a common place for human trafficking to take place, as it is a source, point of transit, and a final destination for victims of trafficking both within and outside the country's borders. Young women, sold into their unions, are then at the will of the master in the traditional master-slave cycle that wahaya fuels.

The highest TFR (almost 7 children/woman) in the world coupled with an extremely high adolescent birth rate suggests that the young women in Niger have children at an unprecedented rate. A high rate of child marriage would, naturally, lead to very young mothers and a high fertility rate, as aforementioned. The national median age at first child for women in Niger is 18.1 years old, falling second only to neighboring Chad.

With child marriage, high adolescent birth rates, and an even greater TFR comes maternal mortality. With a maternal mortality ratio of 555 per 100,000 births, Nigerien mothers must overcome preexisting complications to ensure both lives come out successfully. A lack of quality medical care, adequate health care professionals, and economic well-being all contribute to Niger's very high maternal mortality ratio. Young women are also at a higher risk for complications during child birth. The vast majority of women who give birth at a young age and endure complications during child birth are married women. (I went ahead and put this in here so you didn't have to go into the Wikicode. Feel free to move it or do what you see fit - JL)

NOTE: will be changing description under picture in this section from " Niger has the highest rate of child marriage and the highest total fertility rate in the world" to "Niger has the highest total fertility rate in the world"

Child Brides
Child marriage is a common practice in Niger, with it standing amongst the top countries in the world in child marriage rates. Around 75% of Nigerien girls are married by their 18th birthday, and 28% are married before their 15th birthday. Although child marriage is common throughout all of Niger, it is of particular standing in south Niger. A marriage is legally binding when a girl, the bride, is of 15 years of age or older, and a boy, the groom, is of 18 years of age or older. However, this law is not always followed. A lot of marriages are off the record, with girls as young as 9 years old being married. These marriages also do not always include the consent of the girl who is being married. These off-the-record marriages do not undergo the traditional marriage practices of Niger, including the presence of a Nigerien civil authority as well as documentation requirements such as a birth certificate.

Families who struggle financially often are the first to marry their daughter(s) off because of the bride price that comes along with marriage in Niger. Families who agree to give their daughters hand in marriage receive some form of payment from the groom or the groom's family, and they are also lifted of the financial responsibility of their daughter. Many families report that if a wealthy man offers a large sum of money for their daughter's hand in marriage, they have no choice but to allow the marriage due to their financial struggles, regardless of their daughter's age. Daughters are taught that marriage is not about love or about liking their spouse, it is about gaining financial stability. Early marriages do, however, increase adolescent pregnancy, increasing Niger's population and in turn, increasing poverty rates. Married women have little access to any form of education. Married women claim to regret not having the opportunity to attend school. Unmarried women report that they feel as though their plans of gaining an education or job would be hindered by marriage. These women also report that they feel as though marriage is a way to gain protection and security, but that without their husbands, they would be left with nothing. Thus, many women would like to receive an education before being married which is not possible, as reported, for women who are married at an early age.

The government in Niger has recognized the problems and struggles the country faces in regards to unreported child marriages and the abuse and discrimination of women. There have been several laws and acts passed that are meant to help with these issues in Niger such as the civil rights code, the penal code, the Convention on the Right of the Child (1999), the National Policy on Gender (2008), and the Convention of Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (1999). Still, there is little to no change in the customs of child marriage and gender-based discrimination in Niger. Other organizations have formed in hopes to end child marriage in Niger, such as Plan International Niger (PIN).