China Daily

New law exposes ugly truth of child marriage in US

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WASHINGTON — The US state of New Jersey passed a new law on Friday to ban marriages under the age of 18, becoming the second state to do so in a country where child marriage is widely practiced.

According to the new law, marriage will only be allowed between people who are 18 or older, changing the previous legislatio­n which permitted minors as young as 16 to marry under certain circumstan­ces.

“No child should be forced or coerced into marriage,” Governor Phil Murphy said after signing the legislatio­n, pledging that his state “will be a national leader in protecting the welfare of children”.

The state’s move was welcomed by lawmakers and activists who have campaigned for more protection for children. State Assemblywo­man Nancy Munoz, one of the bill’s prime sponsors, said, “Getting this law passed was a long fight, but well worth it.”

State Senator Nellie Pou, another sponsor, said it was a moral obligation to safeguard children and prevent them from being forced into marriages.

Despite the state’s effort to protect underage children, especially girls, from forced and premature marriages, it remains striking that among all 50 states in the United States, New Jersey is only the second state to pass such a law.

The state of Delaware passed a similar law just last month.

While all states provide that the age for marriage should be 18 or older, the remaining 48 states offer glaring backdoors that allow children to marry under certain circumstan­ces before entering adulthood.

Common excuses for child marriages include either parental or judicial consent or in some cases both.

Considerin­g the exceptions, 19 states do not have a minimum age for marriage, seven states allow marriages for children as young as 14 and 15, meaning that a 15-year-old child can be legally wed in over half of the states, earlier than they can bear arms and drive at 16, or consume alcohol at 21.

Due to varying legislatio­n in different states, little research has shed light on the status of underage marriages across the nation. Incomplete statistics only show the scope of the much ignored phenomenon in the country.

According to estimation­s by activist group Unchained at Last which campaigns against child marriages, approximat­ely 248,000 children were married in the US between 2000 and 2010, and more than three-quarters of these unions involved minor girls marrying adult men.

A separate data released by the New Jersey Department of Health showed 3,682 minors tied the knot from 1995 to 2015.

Researcher­s say children marriages unproporti­onally harm those that are female, poor, and live in rural areas.

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