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Burundi forces couples to marry to ‘show love for country’

Unmarried couples have until the end of 2017 to “legalise” their relationships, the Burundi government said on Friday.
The order is part of an effort to “reform morals” in the country, after Interior Ministry spokesman Terence Ntahiraja said the country was facing a population explosion.
Following the launch of a campaign this month by President Pierre Nkurunziza to “moralise society”, the government has called out “illegal marriages”, polygamy, bigamy and “hundreds of schoolgirls getting pregnant” as reasons for the population boom.
They said that church and state-sanctioned weddings were the solution and were a patriotic duty.
The President added that Burundians should show their love for each other, and their country, by getting married.
The government has since been pressuring unwed couples across the country to tie the knot.
AFP reports: The governor of the southeastern province of Rutana has ordered that “persons living in common-law unions” should be put on a special list by June 22, while the governor of the northwestern Bubanza province has demanded unspecified “sanctions” against “aisle-dodgers”.
Pierre, a 27-year-old farmer living with his partner in Ngozi told AFP that local officials had threatened him with a $25 fine and said any child born out of wedlock would not be eligible for free education and medical costs.
Pierre said he had not married because he could not afford the bride price demanded by his girlfriend’s family.
“She told me she was pregnant. As I am poor, we decided to come together to raise our child,” Pierre told AFP.
“We thought we would legalise our union as soon as we could afford it.”
That was five years ago and the couple is now onto their third child.
To enact the president’s orders, officials have begun organising mass weddings, something one civil society activist opposed as “a violation of human rights because the state has no right to attack two adults who have decided to live together without being married.”
“We want Burundians to understand that everyone is responsible for his life, we want order in this country,” he said.
“All this is done within the framework of the patriotic training programme,” he added, referring to an initiative launched by Nkurunziza in August 2013 to reinforce “positive traditional values.”
Since 2015, when Nkurunziza ran for a controversial third term, at least 500 people have been killed in political violence while around 400,000 have fled Burundi for refugee camps in neighbouring countries, according to AFP.