The Forum > Article Comments > Everything is not gwar in Sudan > Comments
Everything is not gwar in Sudan : Comments
By Alberta Schweitzer, published 13/6/2006Life for an Australian medical worker in a health clinic in Sudan: a personal insight of war-torn Africa.
- Pages:
-
- 1
-
- All
- Pages:
-
- 1
-
- All
You put light, yet again, on the low status of women in the community. And again, it raises questions in my mind.
What is there in the Sudan that enables their menfolk, taken as a job-lot, to have a multiplicity of wives?
There does not seem to be "something in the water" ensuring an imbalance towards female infants - life expectancy at birth, as at 2003, was estimated to be 56 years for males and 58 for females.
If there is such a high level of male multi-skilling in the marital stakes, then there must be a corresponding level of connubially-deficient chaps. Or an equivalence of women working more than one shift.
But, however it works, fecundity is king. Forty-five percent of the population is below the age of 15. Every woman has an average of 5.5 children. The population, at present rate of increase, will double in 25 years. So what, if physically still-developing child brides suffer the agony of fistula - under the current system the husband can discard the now-unappealing child and take another. And the country will remain on target for its projected 84 million by 2050; no doubt to the joy of the Vatican and George W. Bush's fundamentalist Christian supporters.