A landmark case is underway in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Four men stand accused of child marriage, a charge that carries a maximum sentence of 15 years under the country's 2007 Child Rights Act. The trial has drawn international attention, with the British government providing financial and technical support to the prosecution.
This is not merely a legal proceeding; it is a stress test for the rule of law in a nation where nearly one in three girls is married before the age of 18. The defendants include a local chief, a religious leader, and two businessmen, all alleged to have married girls as young as 12. The children, now teenagers, are testifying behind screens.
Their evidence will be corroborated by demographic data: Sierra Leone has one of the highest rates of child marriage in West Africa, driven by poverty, cultural norms, and weak enforcement of existing laws. The UK's involvement is symbolic but tangible. British funding has trained prosecutors and judges, and a senior British barrister is advising the legal team.
Critics argue this amounts to judicial imperialism. Supporters counter that it is a necessary intervention to protect children. The verdict will send a signal: either that impunity for this practice has ended, or that the law remains a paper tiger.
The data are clear: child marriage correlates directly with lower educational attainment, higher maternal mortality, and increased risk of domestic violence. For the victims, justice delayed is justice denied. For the country, this trial is a turning point.
The evidence must speak. The numbers must count.









