The Free Press Journal

Outcry in Somalia over ‘forced child marriage’ bill

- CARA ANNA /

An outcry is rising in Somalia as parliament considers a bill that would allow child marriage once a girl's sexual organs mature and would allow forced marriage as long as the family gives their consent.

The bill is a dramatic reworking of years of efforts by civil society to bring forward a proposed law to give more protection­s to women in one of the world's most conservati­ve countries.

The new Sexual Intercours­e Related Crimes Bill "would represent a major setback in the fight against sexual violence in Somalia and across the globe" and should be withdrawn immediatel­y, the United Nations special representa­tive on sexual violence in conflict, Pramila Patten, said in a statement Tuesday.

The bill also weakens protection­s for victims of sexual violence, she said.

Already more than 45% of young women in Somalia were married or "in union" before age 18, according to a United Nations analysis in 2014-15.

Somalia in 2013 agreed with the UN to improve its sexual violence laws, and after five years of work, a sexual offenses bill was approved by the Council of Ministers and sent to parliament.

But last year the speaker of the House of the People sent the bill back "in a process that may have deviated from establishe­d law" asking for "substantiv­e amendments," the UN special representa­tive said.

The new bill "risks legitimizi­ng child marriage, among other alarming practices, and must be prevented from passing into law," UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet said this week, warning that its passage would "send a worrying signal to other states in the region." Thousands of people in Somalia are circulatin­g a petition against the bill, including Ilwad Elman with the Mogadishub­ased Elman Peace organizati­on.

The UN mission to Somalia in a separate statement has called the new bill "deeply flawed" and urged parliament to re-introduce the original one. That original bill "will be vital in preventing and criminaliz­ing all sexual offenses," the Somalia representa­tive for the UN Population Fund, Anders Thomsen, said.

The contentiou­s new bill comes as women's rights groups openly worry that the coronaviru­s pandemic and related travel restrictio­ns in Somalia have worsened violence against women and female genital mutilation. Nearly all Somali women and girls have been subjected to that practice.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India