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Kwania registers 5,375 cases of teenage pregnancy in 21 months

Poor parenting and the ineffective justice system have been blamed for the ever increasing vice of teenage pregnancies. File Photo

Kwania, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT | Kwania district has reported a high incidence of teenage pregnancy in a period of twenty one months, hence threatening to cut short the pursuit for education amongst girls of school going age.

The information was contained in data presented by the district probation officer, Moses Opio, during a district steering committee quarterly meeting held on Tuesday by Plan International Uganda.

According to the data, a total of 5,375 cases of teenage pregnancies were registered in the district from January 2020 up to September 2021.

According to the report, 3,046 cases was recorded in 2021 and 2,329 cases recorded in 2020. Aduku town council registered 1,270 cases, Nambieso 976, Chawente 970 cases, Abongomola 955, Inomo 827 and Aduku sub county recorded 377 respectively.

Moses Opio, the District Probation and welfare officer blamed both parents and the ineffective justice system for the prevailing crisis, adding that if parents were playing their roles well, these would not have happened.

Kwania District Chairman Geoffrey Alex Ogwal attributes the surge to poor parenting coupled with greed for dowry, poverty, peer pressure and tradition.

He asked the government to work on the welfare of the police officers to boost the enforcement capacity against the causative vices.

Emmanuel Oscar Ogwang, the Executive Director Safe Aids Uganda, a local community based organization in Chawente sub county noted that they have encountered challenges with police officers in managing defilement cases.

He said their efforts to handle the rising cases have been jeopardized by some police officers who demand money from perpetrators of defilement for selfish gains.

Leonard Agum, the Kwania District Community Development Officer asked parents to closely monitor their children to mitigate the rising cases of gross violations of child rights in the district.

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