The Star Malaysia

UK stops charging forced marriage victims for own rescue

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LONDON: Britain has announced that it will immediatel­y end its policy of asking women rescued from forced marriages abroad to take out loans to cover the cost of helping them, following a backlash.

The practice came to light last week with reports that four British women who were freed from a punishment institutio­n in Som

£ alia were each charged 740 (RM3,875).

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt revealed on Wednesday that “after careful considerat­ion, I have decided that victims of forced marriage helped to return to the UK ... will no longer be asked to take out a loan for their repatriati­on costs.

“Our treatment of vulnerable Britons abroad should always be guided by compassion, so I am glad to make this policy change,” he added in a letter sent to Tom Tugendhat, chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee.

Victims were reportedly told that they had to fund their flight back to Britain, basic food and shelter costs.

Those who were aged over 18 and could not pay had to sign emergency loan agreements with the Foreign Office.

The ministry helped bring back 55 forced marriage victims in 2016 and 27 in 2017.

The four young women who were found in a “correction­al school” in Somalia had been sent to the religious institutio­n by their families and reported being chained to the walls and whipped with hosepipes.

Some had their legs shackled, spent days locked in a small box, were burned with hot sticks and forced to sit in their own urine unless they accepted a forced marriage, The Times said.

The Foreign Office and the Home Office interior ministry run the Forced Marriage Unit, which from 2009 to 2017 gave advice or support to nearly 12,800 people. — AFP

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