More than 1,000 couples marry in Nigeria mass wedding | Inquirer News

More than 1,000 couples marry in Nigeria mass wedding

/ 07:12 AM December 20, 2013

Brides attend a wedding feast at the Kano state governor’s office after taking part in a mass wedding at the central mosque in Nigeria’s second city of Kano on December 19, 2013. More than 1,000 Muslim couples tied the knot at the mass wedding, part of a government programme aimed at promoting stable families. The elaborate event at the city’s central mosque included 1,111 previously divorced women and an equal number of men, many of whom had also been married before. AFP

KANO – More than 1,000 Muslim couples tied the knot at a mass wedding Thursday in Nigeria’s second city of Kano, part of a government program aimed at promoting stable families.

The elaborate event at the city’s central mosque included 1,111 previously divorced women and an equal number of men, many of whom had also been married before.

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The mass wedding program was launched last year by the state government and sharia police, or Hisbah, who enforce Islamic law, in response to what officials have described as a divorce epidemic.

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“We are gathered here today to solemnize the weddings of 1,111 couples under Kano state’s mass wedding program,” Deputy Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje said at the ceremony, the fourth of its kind since May 2012.

“The high divorce rate in our state leads to rampant cases of births outside wedlock, with children being born and dumped which leads to appalling social decay,” Ganduje said.

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Hisbah chief Aminu Daurawa said the program has arranged 4,461 marriages over the last 18 months.

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The deputy governor called for stricter policies to discourage divorce and, when marriages do break up, harsher penalties for men who fail to pay alimony so that single mothers can “provide a good upbringing for their children and make them good citizens”.

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Under the match-making program, the state government pays the traditional bride price, provides brides with furniture and seed money to start a small business.

Kano’s government and the Hisbah have launched a massive crackdown on so-called “immorality,” arresting hundreds of people accused of using drugs, engaging in commercial sex and dressing inappropriately.

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The Hisbah also destroyed 240,000 bottles of beer at a public ceremony last month.

Officially, sharia was restored across Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north in 2001, but the Islamic legal code has been unevenly applied.

Daurawa told AFP the crackdown on immorality and the marriage program are also being applied to Kano’s minority Christian population.

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“We have included 50 Christian couples in this batch in liaison with the Christian leaders in the state and they will have their weddings in church,” he said.

TAGS: divorce, Family, marriage, Nigeria, wedding

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