Tanzania’s Supreme Court of Appeal on Wednesday upheld an earlier ruling banning parents from marrying off girls as young as 15.
A high court ruling in 2016 had declared “unconstitutional” sections of Tanzania’s marriage act that allowed the practice. It also directed the government to raise the legal age of marriage to 18 years within a year.
That judgment followed a legal challenge by children’s rights activists, who argued that the existing law had pushed many girls into underage marriages.
But Tanzania’s attorney general launched an appeal — one of its claims was that child marriage could protect unmarried girls who get pregnant.
The Supreme Court of Appeal dismissed the attorney general’s appeal on Wednesday and asked Tanzania’s government to respect the previous ruling, according to court documents seen by CNN.
With two out of five girls being married off before their 18th birthday, Tanzania has one of the highest rates of child marriage in the world, according to UN estimates.
Children’s rights campaigners said local advocacy groups must continue to mount pressure on government to implement the ruling.
“We welcome the news, but the marriage act needs to be amended to reflect the court’s judgment that the minimum age of marriage in Tanzania should be 18 for both boys and girls,” said Jean-Paul Murunga from campaign group Equality Now said.