Child marriage costs countries billions in lost earnings: World Bank

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AFP Accra
Last Updated : Dec 06 2018 | 10:25 AM IST

Respect Ruvimbo Topodzi was 15 and walking home from school in her native Zimbabwe when a 22-year-old man asked her out. She turned him down but it was too late.

Her father saw them and assumed they were already together. He told her she had to marry the man and live with him. She dropped out of school and soon became pregnant.

It was only when her husband became abusive that she was allowed back to the family home.

Since then, Topodzi has been working to stop other girls having the same experience.

She took on the government to change the law and increase the minimum legal age of consent for marriage from 16 to 18.

"As a mother and survivor of child marriage, I am so passionate about ending child marriage," she told AFP at a recent conference on the subject in Ghana's capital Accra.

"I know how it feels to be married early and I know how you handle things in your marriage -- that is so difficult."

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First Published: Dec 06 2018 | 10:25 AM IST

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