Julius Musaasizi Kizito, the Buikwe District Education Officer, also emphasized that it is time for communities to acknowledge the reality of teenage pregnancy among school-going girls. He stressed that the issue goes beyond the COVID-19 pandemic and called for a fundamental change in how schools handle pregnant students.
Just a week
before her final examinations, Sarah
Namukisa, a student at the Medical Laboratory Training School in Jinja,
was abruptly expelled. Her offence? She was pregnant.
Sarah’s
story is not an isolated incident; it’s a reflection of a harsh reality faced
by thousands of schoolgirls across Uganda. In both public and private
institutions, pregnant students are routinely expelled, pressured to drop out,
or stigmatised into silence. For many, the dream of education ends with two
pink lines on a test.
Labila Sumayah Musoke, a programs officer at the Initiative for Social Rights and
Empowerment (ISRE), says that this is often framed as a measure to "protect
the school environment" or "maintain moral standards."
“Pregnancy is not a crime, and
removing a student from school because she is pregnant does not uphold academic
standards or moral values. Expelling a pregnant girl does not solve the problem. It
creates a lifelong crisis,” she said.
She
added that this practice is nothing short of institutional abuse and a systemic
failure that punishes girls for realities beyond their control and perpetuates
inequality in Uganda’s education system.
“Practices like these strip
young mothers of their future, expose the government’s failure to create
inclusive and supportive learning environments, and seriously hinder Uganda’s
progress toward achieving Sustainable Development Goals 3 (Good Health), 4
(Quality Education), and 5 (Gender Equality).”
According to the 2024 National
Population and Housing Census, nearly 50% of Uganda’s population is under the
age of 18. Alarmingly, 26% of primary school-aged children are out of school,
with early pregnancy and child marriage among the leading causes. National data
further shows that 1 in 4 girls aged 15 to 19 has begun childbearing, and 22%
of girls aged 14 to 18 drop out of school due to pregnancy. Of those, only 8%
ever return to complete their education.
Other available reports reveal a
troubling pattern: instead of receiving care and support, pregnant girls are frequentlystigmatised, isolated, and
punished. While some are officially expelled, many others drop
out silently, driven away by the fear of shame, bullying, or social rejection.
Celetine Mugenyi, 22, a
resident of Makindye, became pregnant during her Senior Four year. Her mother
pleaded with the school headteacher, who reluctantly allowed her to sit for her
final exams. But with more pressure from home and school after receiving her
results, she dropped out.
“At 16, I had to start life on my own. It’s
been incredibly hard; most of my teenage years felt wasted. I was unemployable
and doing odd jobs just to survive.”
Last
year, Mugenyi
took a bold step and enrolled in adult education. She sat for her Senior Six
exams and is now preparing to pursue higher education.
“To
me, education is everything, and I think it is for other girls,” she says.
“If a girl still has the will and capacity to learn, she should be given that
chance.”
Sarah
Opendi, Chairperson of the Uganda Women
Parliamentary Association, also raised concerns over the continued expulsion of
pregnant students. She argues that as Uganda steps up its fight against teenage
pregnancy, there must also be deliberate efforts to support those who become
pregnant rather than exclude them.
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out...on a nation.”//
Opendi
points out that many of the girls who fall pregnant are not acting out of
choice, but are victims of abuse, often involving relatives or older men who
take advantage of their vulnerability. She emphasises that denying these girls
access to education only worsens their situation and undermines efforts toward
gender equality and justice.
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However, Rev.
Richard Rukondo, the Provincial Coordinator for Youth and
Children's Ministry at the Church of Uganda, held a divergent view. He said that
pregnant girls should first be sent home for rehabilitation and allowed to
return to school only after giving birth. He added that most schools are not
equipped with the necessary facilities to support expectant students, which
could create additional challenges. According to Rukondo, allowing time for
recovery and proper care at home can help these girls return as more focused
and prepared students.
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out...omwana oyo.”//
Sumayah
Musoke disagreed with this narrative. According to her, schools should support
rather than expel pregnant girls. She noted that many schools use morality as a
justification, claiming that pregnant students set a bad example. However, she
says there is no evidence that these girls are more immoral than others, and if
they are healthy, they should be allowed to continue learning.
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Musoke
further added that the longer a girl stays out of school, the less likely she
is to return. For many, expulsion ends their hopes of becoming professionals
and increases the risk of poverty, early marriage, and continued abuse.
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out...never return to class.”//
Julius
Musaasizi Kizito, the Buikwe District Education Officer, also emphasised that
it is time for communities to acknowledge the reality of teenage pregnancy
among school-going girls. He stressed that the issue goes beyond the COVID-19
pandemic and called for a fundamental change in how schools handle pregnant
students.
“We
often say, ‘If you get pregnant, we will take action,’ yet girls continue to
become pregnant. When that happens, what is the solution—send them away?” he
questioned.
He
recounted an incident where a headteacher allowed a pregnant student to remain
in school, only to face backlash from the community and the school’s governing
body, who accused the school of encouraging immoral behaviour. Kizito further
criticised religious leaders who oppose keeping pregnant girls in school
without offering any practical solutions.
“They
say, ‘We don’t want them here,’ but the reality is that the girl is already
pregnant. Expelling her only takes away her chance at a better future.
Religious institutions and communities need to acknowledge the current
realities, rather than clinging to outdated moral positions that do more harm
than good.”
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Kizito
also highlighted the absence of support systems for pregnant girls who wish to
continue their education. “Who takes care of the baby when the mother is in
class? Should we consider establishing daycare centres within schools?”
Commenting on the matter, Grace Mutyabya,
a mother of four from Wakiso, expresses mixed feelings about the issue.
"I'm
torn," she admits. "As a parent, I believe in discipline and setting
standards, but I also know that life is not always black and white. If a girl
is pregnant, does that mean she should lose her education entirely? I’m not
sure expelling her helps anyone. At the same time, I understand the concerns
schools and communities have. It’s not an easy situation."
Grace says that instead of quick
punishments, schools and families need to have deeper conversations about how
to handle such cases with care and responsibility. "These girls still have
a future, and we shouldn't close the door on them too quickly."
After
COVID-19, when many teenage mothers became pregnant during the lockdown, the
Ministry of Education softened policies to allow pregnant and breastfeeding girls
to remain in school. Education Minister Janet Kataha Museveni launched a
campaign supporting their reintegration.
Some
schools and NGOs began offering programs to help young mothers return to class.
For example, in districts like Otuke, over 1,363 teenagers got pregnant between
January and July 2021, and many were supported to continue their education.
Several
schools created spaces to accommodate expectant and breastfeeding girls,
following government directives that allowed them back after the disruptions
caused by the pandemic. However, in other districts like Kumi and Kaberamaido,
many girls stayed away from school due to social stigma and other pressures.
But, as the days of COVID-19 fade in the minds of many, the softened policies allowing pregnant girls to stay in school
appear to be slipping. Community and school attitudes are shifting back toward
stricter, less supportive approaches and returning to the old practices of
exclusion and stigma.