Sierra Leone has overturned a ban on pregnant girls attending school, the government said on Monday, adding that it sought to build a state that embraced every citizen.
In a statement, the education ministry said scrapping the ban “is the first step in building a radically inclusive Sierra Leone where all children… are able to live and lear in safety and dignity”.
In 2015, Sierra Leone banned pregnant girls from going to school after a surge in sexual violence and teenage pregnancies driven by the Ebola crisis.
Women and girls in the former British colony face high levels of sexual violence, partly a legacy of the use of rape as a weapon during the civil war of 1991-2002.
Officials at the time of the ban argued that pregnant girls would be unable to learn and might influence other girls to get pregnant.
Controversial
But the policy proved highly controversial.
Rights groups complained it was discriminatory and left teenage mothers chained to poverty as they were denied education.
In December, the Court of Justice of the West Africa bloc Ecowas and ordered Sierra Leone to retract the ban.