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Coronavirus despair forces girls across Asia into child marriage

MenInG

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Absolutely shocking this - Why dont governments step in and stop this nonsense?

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Tens of thousands of girls across Asia are being forced into child marriage by desperate families plunged into poverty because of the coronavirus pandemic, as campaigners warn that years of progress tackling the practice is being undone.

Child marriage has long been practised as part of tradition in communities from the Indonesian archipelago to India, Pakistan and Vietnam, but numbers had been decreasing as numerous initiatives worked to spread awareness of its dangers and encouraged access to education and women's health services.

These improvements are being eroded as the impact of the virus causes mass job losses, leaving parents struggling to feed their families, experts say.

"All of the gains we've made in the past decade are really going to suffer," explains Shipra Jha, head of Asia engagement at NGO Girls Not Brides.

"Child marriage is firmly rooted in gender inequality and patriarchal structures. What's happened is that it's become compounded in the COVID era," she adds.

Poverty, lack of education, and insecurity drive child marriage even in stable times, so periods of crises exacerbate the problem, the NGO says.

Worldwide, an estimated 12 million girls are wed every year before the age of 18, according to the UN.

Girls Not Brides warns that unless urgent action is taken to tackle the economic and social impact of the virus - an additional 13 million child marriages will take place in the next decade.

In Asia, organisations are reporting that the forced unions have already begun, estimating tens of thousands are already affected - though hard data is yet to be collated.

"There has been an increase in child marriages during this lockdown period. There is rampant unemployment, job loss. Families are barely able to make ends meet, so they think it's best to get their young daughters married off," says Rolee Singh who runs India's "1 Step 2 Stop Child Marriage" campaign.

"We have also seen children get married because the other party offers money or some kind of assistance in return. These families don't understand the concept of trafficking - it's a worrisome trend," says activist Singh.

'COVID-19 generation'
Fifteen-year-old Muskaan says she is being forced to marry the 21-year-old next door by her mother and father, street cleaners in the Indian city of Varanasi who have six other children to feed.

"My parents are poor, what else could they have done? I fought as much as I could but eventually had to give in," the teenager explains, in tears.

Save the Children has already warned that violence against girls and the risk of forced unions, particularly among minors, "could become more of a threat than the virus itself".

And while education has been hailed as the central tenet in the battle against child marriage, activists warn that with lockdowns forcing hundreds of millions out of school, girls in the poorest parts of the world will be worst affected.

Earlier this month, 275 former global leaders, education experts, and economists urged governments and organisations such as the World Bank to ensure that the fallout of the coronavirus does not create a "COVID generation... robbed of their education and a fair chance in life."

"Many of these children are adolescent girls for whom being in school is the best defence against forced marriage and the best hope for a life of expanded opportunity," said an open letter signed by dignitaries including former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, former UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy, and former prime ministers including Pakistan's Shaukat Aziz, and the UK's Gordon Brown and Tony Blair.

Baby boom
Jha, who is based in Delhi, agrees economic pressure is part of the problem but insists that child marriage is complex, particularly in Asia where there are fears that lockdown school closures mean idle teenagers will turn to each other and damage family reputations.

"The biggest fear that families have is that (teen girls) may become close to a boy, start exploring their sexuality, or become pregnant. Honour is closely linked to this situation...That's a huge thing," she adds.

She adds the problem has been aggravated as governments shift resources from key development areas such as education, family planning and reproductive health to battle the virus.

Indonesia's family planning agency has warned that the nation, already home to 270 million people, could see a huge baby boom early next year due to school closures and dwindling access to contraception.

At 18, Lia has already been married twice. Her first union was forced on her after she was seen alone with the man - who was not a relative - taboo in the conservative region of West Sulawesi in Indonesia where she lives.

The community insisted she wed the man despite a three-decade age gap.

She escaped that unhappy situation and found love, but her dreams of a career have been put on hold once more.

With little access to family planning advice, she became pregnant during lockdown. Her family insisted she marry the 21-year-old father.

"I used to dream of becoming a flight attendant," recalls the teen, who asked that her real name not be used.

"But she failed and ended up in the kitchen," interrupts her new husband Randi, who has not declared their nuptials to authorities.

Shattered dreams
Indonesia, which has one of the highest rates of child marriage in the world according to UNICEF, last year raised the legal age for wedlock from 16 to 19 for both sexes in a bid to tackle the problem.

But there are loopholes - local religious courts can approve underage unions.

Indonesia's Islamic authorities officially permitted more than 33,000 child marriages between January and June of this year, compared with a total of 22,000 for the whole of 2019, according to the Ministry of Women Empowerment and Child Protection.

Indian leader Narendra Modi has also said the country will raise its marriage age, from 18 to 21, but Girls Not Brides says such moves are tough to enforce and do not address the root causes.

In Vietnam, the legal age to wed is 18, but UNICEF says one in 10 girls are married before. Among ethnic groups, the figure is almost double that.

Local charity Blue Dragon say they have seen girls as young as 14 get married and child unions increase since schools closed due to the pandemic.

May, 15, who is from the northern Hmong hill tribes, married her 25-year-old construction worker boyfriend in June after getting pregnant as the virus swept the country.

Her parents could not afford to keep her and the baby, so she moved six hours away to her husband's family farm.

"They're farmers and they could not earn enough for us," she explains.

Now, instead of homework, she does housework and helps harvest the crops.

"I don't think much about my future," she admits.

UNICEF says ending child marriage will help break intergenerational cycles of poverty.

It states: "Empowered and educated girls are better able to nourish and care for their children, leading to healthier, smaller families. When girls are allowed to be girls, everybody wins."

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...irls-asia-child-marriage-200902071153195.html
 
India's coronavirus lockdown has had an adverse impact on children, pushing up incidents of child marriage and child labour, reports the BBC's Divya Arya.

Thirteen-year-old Rani has just won her first battle in life. Her parents tried to force her to marry this summer, but Rani reached out for help and managed to stop the wedding.

Rani (not her real name) was in the eighth grade when India's federal government suddenly imposed a lockdown in March, shuttering everything from schools to businesses to stop the spread of coronavirus.

Within a month, Rani's father, who was battling tuberculosis, found her a match.

Rani was not happy. "I don't understand why everyone is in a rush to marry girls," she said. "They don't understand that it is important to go to school, start earning and be independent."

It is illegal for girls under the age of 18 to marry in India. But the country is home to the largest number of child brides in the world, accounting for a third of the global total, according to UNICEF. The charity estimates that at least 1.5 million girls under 18 get married here each year.

This year might be worse. Childline, a children's helpline, has reported a 17% increase in distress calls related to early marriage of girls in June and July this year compared to 2019.

Millions lost their jobs during the prolonged lockdown from the end of March to early June. Many of them included India's informal and unprotected workers, who, have been pushed deeper into poverty.

According to the government, more than 10 million of these works, many of them young men, returned to their hometowns and villages during the lockdown because of loss of work. So parents of young girls - worried for their safety and anxious about their future prospects - are marrying their daughters off to ensure their wellbeing.

Another reason is that parents are expected to pay for big weddings, but covid restrictions have limited the size of weddings.

So parents who have received offers of marriage this year have been quick to take them up, according to Manisha Biraris, the assistant commissioner for Women and Child Welfare in Maharashtra state.

"It was easier, cheaper and they could get away with inviting very few people."

Although the country began reopening in June, many jobs have not returned and the economy is still struggling. Schools are still shut, leaving vulnerable adolescents at home.

Schools have been agents of change in India, especially in poor communities like the eastern state of Odisha, where Rani lives. They are a space where girls can reach out to teachers and friends for help when facing pressure to marry from their family.

image captionA child helpline has reported a rise in distress calls about child marriage

But with schools closed, a crucial safety net is gone.

"In extremely poor communities, girls are already not encouraged to study. Once they leave school it's hard to convince families to get them back in," said Smita Khanjow from Action Aid, which has been working on UNICEF's special program on child marriage in the five most-affected states.

Rani's close school friend was married off early this year, she said. But Rani said she was able to stop her wedding after she called the emergency national helpline for children, Childline. Along with the help of a local NGO and the police, staff at Childline were able to stop the ceremony.

But Rani's troubles didn't end there. Her father passed away soon after.

The girl who sabotaged her own weddingThe children struggling to survive India's lockdown

"I want to go back to school when it reopens, and now I need to work harder as my father is no more," she said. "It is my responsibility to help my mother run the household."

The situation has been dire for boys too. According to Ms Khanjow, from Action Aid. She and her colleagues are increasingly coming across cases of teenage boys being pushed into working in factories to support their families

In India, it is a criminal offense to employ a child for work. But according to the last census, in 2011, 10 million of India's 260 million children were found to be child labourers.

It's not an easy decision for families. Four months into the lockdown, Pankaj Lal gave in to a trafficker's offer for his 13-year-old son. He had five children to feed but almost no earnings from pulling his rickshaw.

IMAGE COPYRIGHTGETTY IMAGES

image captionMillions of children are illegally employed across India

Mr Lal agreed to send his son more than a 1,000km (690 miles) from his native Bihar state to Rajasthan to work in a bangle manufacturing factory for 5,000 rupees ($68; £52) per month. That is a substantial sum for a family struggling to survive.

Mr Lal broke down as he described his decision to send his son so far away.

"My children had not eaten for two days," he said. "I volunteered myself to the trafficker, but he said nimble fingers were needed for this work and I was of no use to him. I had almost no choice but to send my son away."

Despite restrictions on transport and movement, traffickers were able to tap into their powerful nexus to move children across state lines using new routes and luxury buses.

Suresh Kumar, who runs NGO Centre Direct, says a crisis is waiting to happen. He has been rescuing child labourers from traffickers for more than 25 years.

"The number of children we have rescued has more than doubled from last year. Villages have emptied out and the past months have seen the traffickers grow stronger and make use of the lockdown which has stretched authorities and the police," he said.

Childline, however, reported a drop in distress calls related to child labour. Activists say this could be because children give in to their parents cry for help.

image captionSix boys were rescued from being trafficked when buses were stopped by police

The government has taken steps to stop trafficking, including passing a more stringent law, and asking states to strengthen and expand anti-human trafficking in the wake of the lockdown.

States have also been asked to spread awareness about trafficking, and keep shelters for women and children accessible even during the pandemic.

But, activists say, most traffickers get away with paying fines because they are connected to powerful people. Mr Kumar said families rarely report trafficking, and those that do register police complaints are threatened.

Mr Lal 's family got lucky - the bus carrying his son was stopped while on its way and the children inside were rescued. His son is now quarantining in a child care centre in Rajasthan and will return home soon.

"It was a moment of weakness," he said. "I will never send my child to work again even if it means we have to survive on morsels."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-54186709
 
Measures to deal with the spread of coronavirus could lead to the biggest increase in child marriage in 25 years, Save the Children warns.

The charity says the economic fallout of the pandemic is pushing more people into poverty, with girls being forced out of school and into work or marriage.

Around 12 million girls are victims of early marriage every year, but another half a million are now estimated to be at risk.

Girls in South Asia are thought to be the most vulnerable, followed by parts of Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean.

"The increase is set to reverse 25 years of progress, which saw child marriage rates decline," Save the Children says.
 
Coronavirus: Pandemic to cause 'greatest surge in child marriages in 25 years', charity warns

Around 2.5 million young girls are at risk of early marriage by 2025 due to the coronavirus pandemic, a charity has warned.

Save the Children described the numbers as the greatest surge in child marriage rates in the last 25 years, reversing progress made towards ending the practice.

This year, an estimated 500,000 more girls are at risk of being forced into child marriages, with an extra one million expected to become pregnant.

These numbers are in addition to the 12 million girls anticipated to become victims of child marriage already.

The rise in numbers is attributed to the economic consequences the coronavirus pandemic has had, pushing more families into poverty.

South Asia is expected to see the largest increase, with nearly 200,000 more girls at risk of child marriage this year.

Girls in Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean are also among the most vulnerable.

If action is not taken, around 61 million child marriages could be seen by 2025.

Karen Flanagan, a child protection advocate for the charity, said "we believe this is the tip of the iceberg", as the figures only account for known cases.

She added that an increase in poverty because of COVID-19 means many girls are forced "to support their families, to go without food, to become the main caregivers for sick family members, and to drop out of school with far less of a chance than boys of ever returning".

Ms Flanagan continued: "A growing risk of violence and sexual exploitation, combined with growing food and economic insecurity, especially in humanitarian emergencies, also means many parents feel they have little alternative but to force their girls to marry men who are often much older.

"These marriages violate girls' rights and leave them at increased risk of depression, lifelong violence, disabilities, and even death - including from childbirth, given their bodies simply aren't ready to bear children."

She added that while 78.6 million child marriages have been prevented over the last 25 years, progress to end the practice "has slowed to a halt".

The charity has called on world leaders to commit to speeding up progress on child marriage and gender equality.

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...-marriages-in-25-years-charity-warns-12086940
 
The Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Monday declared any marriages under the age of 18 years as unlawful as it issued directives to hand over a 16-year-old girl to her mother in an early marriage case.

Justice Babar Sattar of the IHC issued the written order on the plea of a woman, Mumtaz Bibi, seeking her daughter's recovery, Express News reported.

The woman had filed a plea with the court in May 2021 regarding the girl's 'abduction', while the latter had submitted with the court about marrying at her own free will.

In its directives, the judge ordered Station House Officer (SHO), Golra area to hand over Sawera Falaksher to her mother from the Darul Aman.

In the written order, Judge Sattar observed that a girl under the age of 18 can't marry on her own will, while her relatives also can't proceed with an agreement to the same effect.

It further stated that the legal age for puberty is 18 years and that the same could not be decided on the basis of physical changes that emerge at the age.

The judge further directed that the issue of the matter not carrying enough clarity in the Muslim Family Laws Ordinance be placed before the Cabinet Division and parliament.

The judge subsequently asked the authorities to hand over the girl to her mother on the basis of her age.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2345865/ihc-declares-marriages-under-18-unlawful
 
I do not think anything can be done.

If you make the whole society into a godless society , you cannot implement morality, its a dog eat dog world.
 
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