South Africa virginity bursaries unlawful, rules gender commission Published duration 17 June 2016

image copyright AFP image caption Students selected for the scheme have already received virginity tests as part of an annual Zulu ceremony

An official body in South Africa has ruled that university bursaries offered to proven female virgins were unlawful and should be scrapped.

The Uthukela municipality in KwaZulu-Natal province introduced the bursaries to reduce Aids and child pregnancies.

But the Commission for Gender Equality ruled that a bursary "contingent on a female student's virginity is fundamentally discriminatory".

The scheme caused an uproar when it was unveiled earlier this year.

In a ruling made after rights groups referred the scheme to it, the commission said: "It goes against the ethos of the constitutional provisions in relation to dignity, equality and discrimination."

"Virginity is not intrinsic to the task of studying," it added.

The municipality, which is in a socially conservative part of South Africa, has not yet commented.

The commission has given it 60 days to respond to its recommendation that the scheme should be closed, the AFP news agency reports.

media caption South African mayor awards virgin scholarships in bid to curb HIV

An estimated 6.3 million people in South Africa are HIV-positive, with more than one in 10 people living with the virus.

Teenage pregnancy are also on the rise in South Africa.

In 2013, a government-backed survey found that teen pregnancies had risen to nearly 100,000, up from 68,000 just two years earlier.

When the scheme was unveiled, Uthukela mayor Dudu Mazibuko said the virginity tests would not be carried out by the municipality or universities.

Instead, schoolgirls who had already undergone the tests as part of an annual ceremony hosted by the Zulu king would qualify for the bursaries, she said.

Teenage pregnancy in South Africa

2013: 100,000 South African teenagers became pregnant

2012: 81,000 teenage pregnancies

2011: 68,000 teenage pregnancies

180 out of 1,000 pupils become pregnant or make someone pregnant

Teenage mothers account for 36% of maternal deaths every year

Source: Human Sciences Research Council, World Bank; Stats SA 2013

Related Topics South Africa