Young and pregnant in Sierra Leone
- Published
Pregnant girls in Sierra Leone are prevented from attending school, as they are thought to be a bad influence on their peers.
In April 2015 - just as schools re-opened after the Ebola crisis - the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology issued a statement banning pregnant girls from mainstream education and from sitting exams.
The ban was enforced through invasive physical examinations of the girls.
Just under two years on, and the ban is still in place. Learning centres typically specialising in skills such as catering, tailoring, and hairdressing act as alternatives to school and are open to pregnant girls.
Olivia Acland photographed these girls, collecting their stories, and often do not return to mainstream education after being pushed out of it.
Twenty-year-old Emma said:
"I moved to this learning centre when I got pregnant and am studying catering. At my old school I had to tell my teacher I was pregnant because she caught me sleeping at the desk. After that I was pulled into the principal's office and told not to come back."
Isatu is 18 and wants to be a hairdresser, she said:
"I am learning the skills in a learning centre near to where I live. I used to dream of becoming a doctor but I don't think that is realistic any more. I doubt I'll ever go back to school."
"I remember my principal saying that it is an abomination for the school to have pregnant girls attending," Jeneba continued.
"As soon as I started to show I left. When I see my friends in their school uniforms I feel sad and ashamed."
Photographs taken by Olivia Acland