Caption: PRX default Piece image
PRX default Piece image 

Alfred’s story: Sudanese youth journalist reports on early marriage in Southern Sudan

Series: Digital Diarists: Sudanese Youth Voices
From: UNICEF
Length: 00:08:27

Alfred’s story: Youth journalist reports on early marriage in Southern Sudan Read the full description.

Default-piece-image-1

Alfred’s story: Youth journalist reports on early marriage in Southern Sudan

As Alfred Malish, now 14, has grown up, he has noticed an alarming thing happening around him: His female classmates are leaving school early to get married.

Early marriage still happens with some regularity in Sudan, most often for girls, who are sometimes as young as 12 when they’re married off. Marriage at such an early age can be an obstacle to further education; it can also result in complications should the girl become pregnant before her body is adequately developed.

‘People will not like you’

Alfred became aware of the problem after his friend Stella became pregnant at 15.

"I wanted to go to Senior One [class in school] but I'm pregnant, so I can't go," Stella tells Alfred in an interview he conducted last month as part of a radio story on the problem of child marriage in Southern Sudan.

In a warning to other girls in similar circumstances, Stella recalls being ostracized by her friends and her community.

"People will not like you, no one will be your friend and you'll stay alone," she says, adding: "My sisters, I want to tell you like this. Don't run to marriage. Don't attempt to get married at an early age. Giving birth is very difficult."

To hear the full audio, sign up for a free PRX account or log in.

More from UNICEF

Caption: PRX default Piece image

Dorothy’s story: Youth journalist reports on preventing skin diseases in Southern Sudan (00:04:35)
From: UNICEF

15-year old Dorothy Lurit’s radio piece is about skin diseases in Sudan, and good hygiene practices that can prevent them.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Michael's Story: Families struggling to pay school fees in Southern Sudan. (00:05:46)
From: UNICEF

Michael Lual, 17, reports on families struggling to pay school fees in Southern Sudan.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Peter’s story: Youth journalist reports on food insecurity in Southern Sudan (00:05:36)
From: UNICEF

Peter Yel, 16, reports on high food prices in Southern Sudan.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Tereza’s story: I want to be a pilot (00:05:17)
From: UNICEF

17-year-old Tereza Kitale, a student in Juba, southern Sudan, talks about her dream of becoming a pilot.
Caption: February 2012, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Mia Farrow gives a girl a dose of oral polio vaccine at an immunization site in the town of Moundou in Logone Region, Chad., Credit: UNICEF/NYHQ2012-0062/Asselin

Podcast #58: Mia Farrow on visiting the crisis-afflicted Sahel region (00:08:45)
From: UNICEF

Actress, activist and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Mia Farrow speaks to podcast moderator Femi Oke about her experiences in drought-hit Chad.
Caption: Pau Gasol, the NBA star and UNICEF Goodwill ambassador playing with Ethiopian children in the communities where UNICEF supports education, health and protection programs., Credit: ©UNICEF Etiopía/Bilbo/2010/Fernández

Podcast #57: Pau Gasol on making early childhood a priority (00:08:11)
From: UNICEF

UNICEF podcast moderator Kathryn Herzog speaks with UNICEF Ambassador and NBA player Pau Gasol about the importance of early education.
Caption: A girl learns to identify numbers on her first day at a UNICEF-supported preschool in the Baliqchilar settlement, Azerbaijan., Credit: UNICEF/NYHQ2011-1625/Pirozzi

Podcast #56: Global Action Week promotes early childhood education (00:10:55)
From: UNICEF

UNICEF podcast moderator Kathryn Herzog speaks with Jack P. Shankoff, Director of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, and Chloe O’Gara, Program Officer ...
Caption: A girl rests in a UNICEF-supported nutrition centre in Koubigou, a camp for persons displaced by conflict, near the town of Goz Beïda, in the eastern Sila Region., Credit: UNICEF/NYHQ2012-2512/Esteve

Sounding the alarm for children in the Sahel (00:02:13)
From: UNICEF

As the hunger season begins in the Sahel region of Africa, UNICEF is launching a massive fund-raising campaign to help the more than 1 million children in danger of dying ...
Caption: Yupa Wahup, 5, and a classmate wash their hands at Ban Triem Early Childhood Development Centre in Ban Triem, Thailand. UNICEF provides safe water supplies, sanitation facilities and promotes hygiene education at the centre., Credit: UNICEF/NYHQ2009-2066/Estey

Podcast #55: What does achieving the MDG target on water mean for schoolchildren? (00:12:17)
From: UNICEF

UNICEF podcast moderator Femi Oke speaks with Murat Sahin of UNICEF and Alexander Schratz, Executive Director of Philippines-based NGO Fit for School, about how the ...
Caption: Children displaced by Tropical Storm Washi look at UNICEF-provided colouring supplies, at a child-friendly space in a high school in the coastal city of Iligan, Northern Mindanao Region. The spaces offer safe places for children to play, learn, and regain, Credit: UNICEF/NYHQ2011-2138/Palasi

Podcast #53: Ensuring children’s right to education in rapidly growing urban areas (00:10:42)
From: UNICEF

UNICEF's podcast moderator Femi Oke speaks with experts about the impact of rapid urbanization on children and education.

Piece Description

Alfred’s story: Youth journalist reports on early marriage in Southern Sudan

As Alfred Malish, now 14, has grown up, he has noticed an alarming thing happening around him: His female classmates are leaving school early to get married.

Early marriage still happens with some regularity in Sudan, most often for girls, who are sometimes as young as 12 when they’re married off. Marriage at such an early age can be an obstacle to further education; it can also result in complications should the girl become pregnant before her body is adequately developed.

‘People will not like you’

Alfred became aware of the problem after his friend Stella became pregnant at 15.

"I wanted to go to Senior One [class in school] but I'm pregnant, so I can't go," Stella tells Alfred in an interview he conducted last month as part of a radio story on the problem of child marriage in Southern Sudan.

In a warning to other girls in similar circumstances, Stella recalls being ostracized by her friends and her community.

"People will not like you, no one will be your friend and you'll stay alone," she says, adding: "My sisters, I want to tell you like this. Don't run to marriage. Don't attempt to get married at an early age. Giving birth is very difficult."