The Province

Almost forced to marry cousin

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In 2016, Britain’s diplomatic mission in Bangladesh helped an 18-year-old British girl escape from a village in the South Asian nation just days before she was being forced to marry her first cousin. Two years later, a court has sentenced her parents on charges of forced marriage, marking only the second conviction of this kind in British history.

The young woman in question, who has not been named in news reports to protect her identity, was studying for endof-year exams when her parents took her out of school for what was supposed to be a sixweek vacation in Bangladesh, the Guardian reported. But within days of arriving, she was told that she was to marry her first cousin.

When she resisted, her father threatened to “chop her up” and later physically assaulted her, the BBC reported. She tried appealing to her mother, who made clear that the plan was for the young woman to marry her cousin — in part so he could get a visa, as prosecutor Michelle Colborne told a British court in May, when the couple was convicted.

Despite the intimidati­on, the woman said, she never acceded to the marriage. “I thought it was disgusting because it was my first cousin and stood my ground,” she told the court.

Days before the wedding, the woman’s younger sister informed the British High Commission of what was happening; the diplomatic mission worked with armed police to separate the woman from her family and escort her back to Britain, the BBC wrote. The 20-year-old is living in Britain under a new identity. She said the decision by a judge in Leeds to sentence her father and mother to 4½ and 3½ years in jail, respective­ly, brought her great relief.

A recent investigat­ion by the Guardian found that more than 3,500 cases of forced marriages were reported to British police from 2014 to 2016.

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