Berliner Boersenzeitung - Nigerian state holds mass weddings for 1,800 couples

EUR -
AED 4.013324
AFN 73.207854
ALL 98.121754
AMD 423.119348
ANG 1.969724
AOA 997.04937
ARS 1084.716805
AUD 1.646028
AWG 1.958581
AZN 1.856032
BAM 1.961119
BBD 2.206665
BDT 130.604214
BGN 1.954931
BHD 0.411767
BIF 3165.963229
BMD 1.092653
BND 1.438588
BOB 7.552414
BRL 6.280904
BSD 1.092954
BTN 91.926474
BWP 14.533283
BYN 3.576668
BYR 21416.006654
BZD 2.202955
CAD 1.511828
CDF 3107.505968
CHF 0.943391
CLF 0.037879
CLP 1045.210038
CNY 7.763525
CNH 7.778922
COP 4825.157417
CRC 558.810443
CUC 1.092653
CUP 28.955315
CVE 110.6829
CZK 25.325461
DJF 194.186504
DKK 7.458891
DOP 66.078217
DZD 145.343689
EGP 53.672413
ERN 16.389801
ETB 132.156271
FJD 2.44891
FKP 0.836065
GBP 0.838535
GEL 2.966536
GGP 0.836065
GHS 17.943912
GIP 0.836065
GMD 78.125293
GNF 9429.598872
GTQ 8.434876
GYD 228.648027
HKD 8.492375
HNL 27.40359
HRK 7.527322
HTG 143.818737
HUF 409.472308
IDR 17177.986541
ILS 4.093757
IMP 0.836065
INR 91.923073
IQD 1431.375955
IRR 45992.516108
ISK 148.907145
JEP 0.836065
JMD 172.79865
JOD 0.774797
JPY 165.613655
KES 140.952673
KGS 94.156561
KHR 4452.562874
KMF 492.294533
KPW 983.387814
KRW 1506.015249
KWD 0.334592
KYD 0.910762
KZT 535.858405
LAK 23971.723317
LBP 97847.111963
LKR 320.275693
LRD 208.669493
LSL 18.990253
LTL 3.226321
LVL 0.660935
LYD 5.282956
MAD 10.697215
MDL 19.519761
MGA 5042.59512
MKD 61.53322
MMK 3548.895624
MNT 3712.836286
MOP 8.748046
MRU 43.593849
MUR 50.294618
MVR 16.83769
MWK 1896.296428
MXN 21.925577
MYR 4.747565
MZN 69.793272
NAD 18.979792
NGN 1815.683673
NIO 40.19325
NOK 11.96869
NPR 147.082559
NZD 1.822366
OMR 0.420689
PAB 1.092854
PEN 4.123128
PGK 4.382086
PHP 63.81638
PKR 303.646931
PLN 4.357884
PYG 8546.17821
QAR 3.977805
RON 4.975396
RSD 117.02752
RUB 106.8605
RWF 1491.471892
SAR 4.10473
SBD 9.068288
SCR 15.049124
SDG 657.230803
SEK 11.694319
SGD 1.436513
SHP 0.836065
SLE 24.858065
SLL 22912.391991
SOS 623.904749
SRD 38.139058
STD 22615.719336
SVC 9.562936
SYP 2745.324742
SZL 18.979778
THB 36.691613
TJS 11.639461
TMT 3.824287
TND 3.374657
TOP 2.559104
TRY 37.487297
TTD 7.413037
TWD 34.874767
TZS 2942.923174
UAH 45.328636
UGX 4012.846572
USD 1.092653
UYU 45.473329
UZS 13980.50036
VEF 3958194.345952
VES 47.424828
VND 27693.300441
VUV 129.72204
WST 3.060723
XAF 657.734832
XAG 0.032392
XAU 0.000401
XCD 2.95295
XDR 0.818813
XOF 658.297799
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.972105
ZAR 19.005173
ZMK 9835.190571
ZMW 29.480685
ZWL 351.833949
  • RBGPF

    5.4100

    66.41

    +8.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.2000

    7.3

    +2.74%

  • NGG

    1.0200

    65.47

    +1.56%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    9.41

    +0.96%

  • GSK

    0.0500

    37.02

    +0.14%

  • SCS

    0.0700

    12.32

    +0.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    24.68

    +0.16%

  • RELX

    0.8500

    47.91

    +1.77%

  • RIO

    0.4900

    65.5

    +0.75%

  • BTI

    0.3500

    35.46

    +0.99%

  • BCC

    4.2300

    138.49

    +3.05%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    25.04

    +0.48%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.27

    +1.28%

  • BP

    0.2300

    29.96

    +0.77%

  • BCE

    -0.2800

    28.84

    -0.97%

  • AZN

    -5.1600

    66.27

    -7.79%

Nigerian state holds mass weddings for 1,800 couples
Nigerian state holds mass weddings for 1,800 couples / Photo: Kola Sulaimon - AFP

Nigerian state holds mass weddings for 1,800 couples

Textile trader Yusuf Abdullahi admitted he could not afford to marry despite being 30 years old until Nigeria's northern Kano state financed and staged mass weddings for 1,800 couples.

Text size:

Customary gifts for newlyweds were also provided by the state as part of efforts to enable the poorest to get married.

Abdullahi was one of the grooms dressed in a traditional white robe and red cap who took advantage of the weekend ceremonies.

"Life is really tough, this is why I could not get married, though I wanted to, until this time," Abdullahi told AFP inside Kano's central mosque where he and scores of other grooms waited for the religious service on Friday.

The brides wore a bright red veil over a long robe.

The mass wedding services also took place in mosques across the state.

"I pray my marriage becomes the key to my prosperity," Abdullahi said.

Rising prices for fuel, housing, transport and food have driven some Nigerians, most of whom live on less than $2 (1.90 euros) per day, further into poverty.

And getting married can be expensive.

- Expensive traditions -

The state government "took full responsibility of the entire wedding processes and requirements", paying the 50,000 naira ($65) bride price and for customary furniture and food gifts, said Kano governor Abba Kabir Yusuf said.

All 1,800 couples were received at the governor's residence on Saturday and given their gifts.

A bride price is a tradition in some parts of Africa where the groom pays an amount of money to the bride's family, an obstacle to marriage for some couples.

In the conservative Muslim state where cultural norms are strong, the bride's family provides furniture and kitchenware, while the groom provides accommodation, boxes of clothing, cosmetics, jewellery, footwear and handbags.

"The dire economic situation in the country has made it difficult for brides and grooms to provide the furniture and trousseau (clothes) required for marriage," Abba Sufi, director-general of Kano's Sharia police, Hisbah, told AFP.

The government also presented 20,000 naira grants to each bride "as seed money to start small businesses" and to help lessen financial burdens on their husbands.

The mass wedding programme has helped boost Kano's economic development by providing work to furniture makers, hospitality workers and textile traders, Yusuf said.

- Rampant divorce -

Mass weddings are often popular among women because they ban divorce without the wife's consent.

Divorced women with children in the conservative society can face financial hardship and difficulty remarrying.

Sharia police made couples sign a document pledging not to refer "irreconcilable disputes" to them for reconciliation and not to divorce without their consent, Sufi said.

Kano has the highest divorce rate of any Nigerian state, thought to be extenuated by the economic decline of the once thriving manufacturing region.

"Every groom has to have an occupation, a means of income, for him to participate in the mass wedding," Sufi said.

Financial responsibility falls mainly on the husband's shoulders but poverty coupled with rising inflation have led authorities to encourage women to work.

- Vocational training -

Brides took part in a vocational training session before the wedding where they were taught how to make household products as a source of income.

"The wisdom behind teaching the brides some vocational skills is to make them self-reliant because life has become so expensive," Na'isa Ahmad, one of the trainers told AFP during the session.

"But if a woman has a trade she will be of help to herself, her husband and the society as a whole," she said.

The brides were taught how to make bodycare products, room freshener and insecticide, according to Maimuna Yakubu Yakasai, a 47-year old bride who took part in the training.

"We have learnt a lot. If you have a trade that fetches you some little money you can pay for little cash expenses (which) is a relief to your husband," she said.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)