mary wanjiru is reluctant to talk in detail about what happened to her. >> there were many problems.erty. if we'e'd had money, i wouldn'te herere. i'd nenever have met my childs father, i wouldn't have got ten pregnant. it happened because of poverty. >> her own mother, it turns out, never told her about the facts of life. >> she was never there. she'd come home late at night, often drunk. she never had any time for me. >> from the age of 10, mary had to look after her younger brothers and sisters. after falling pregnant, she had to drop out of school. then, a friend told her she could train as a hairdresser at the center. it wasn't her dream job, but it's an opportunity denied to most teenanage mothers. >> when i began the training scheme, i realised that many other girls were in the same boat. and that having a baby isn't the end of the world. >> today, vivian anguzuzu has to take her daughter to the hospital. the young mothers can have their babies treated here for free. abigail isn't doing well. the nutritionist asks vivian if she's sticking to the diet shehd recommended for abig