19th مارس 2026

Laws and protections on ending violence against women and girls in Mozambique

According to the World Bank Group, 37% of women aged 15–49 in Mozambique have experienced physical or sexual violence by an intimate partner, highlighting the widespread nature of gender-based violence.

These resources provide a country snapshot on laws and protections on ending violence against women and girls, collated in 2025 to inform Equality Now’s advocacy across Africa.

What’s inside the publication?

  • International and  regional laws ratified/acceded to, or signed
  • National legislation
  • Policy frameworks
  • Support mechanisms
  • Legal gaps and implementation challenges

Who’s it for?

  • SOAWR members
  • Civil society organisations
  • Legal professionals

Key recommendations

Mozambique has strengthened its legal frameworks through laws prohibiting child marriage, promoting equality in the family, and criminalising rape and exploitation of children. However, harmful practices and limited protections in customary contexts continue to affect women and girls. Closing these gaps and improving enforcement and service delivery remain critical.

Key recommendations:

  • Strengthen enforcement of laws prohibiting child marriage, including penalties for traditional and religious authorities involved in illegal unions.
  • Expand survivor-centred support services, especially in rural areas, by increasing the reach of multisectoral mechanisms, police units, and mobile clinics.
  • Ensure consistent application of the Family Law Act, particularly in cases involving domestic violence and abuse.
  • Improve access to justice by training police, prosecutors, and judges on trauma-informed GBV response and rights-based procedures.
  • Reform customary marriage practices, including by addressing polygamy in unregistered unions, to ensure equal protection and legal security for women.
  • Increase community awareness and prevention efforts to address harmful social narratives which normalise GBV and promote reporting.

Enhance coordination across sectors, including health, social protection, law enforcement, and judicial mechanisms, through well-resourced, functioning referral pathways and support services.

Explore more resources

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Laws and protections on ending violence against women and girls in Namibia

This factsheet and infographic outline Namibia’s laws, protections, implementation and legal gaps, and support systems and mechanisms on ending violence against women and girls, and provide key recommendations to strengthen prevention, accountability, and survivor-centred responses.

Laws and protections on ending violence against women and girls in Djibouti

This factsheet and infographic outline Djibouti’s laws, protections, implementation and legal gaps, and support systems and mechanisms on ending violence against women and girls, and provide key recommendations to strengthen prevention, accountability, and survivor-centred responses.

Laws and protections on ending violence against women and girls in Eastern & Southern Africa

This collection of factsheets and infographics outlines the laws, protections, implementation challenges, legal gaps, and support mechanisms in 10 select countries in Eastern and Southern Africa related to ending violence against women and girls. Focused on Botswana, Djibouti, Lesotho, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, Sudan, Somaliland, South Sudan, Uganda, and the publications provide key recommendations to strengthen prevention, accountability, and survivor-centred responses across diverse legal and policy contexts.

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