Cape Argus

Child marriages decline, led by big fall in South Asia

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NEW DELHI: A significan­t fall in child marriages in South Asia had reduced the rate of marriage for girls globally, the UN children’s agency said yesterday.

More educationa­l opportunit­ies for young girls, government investment­s in adolescent girls and strong advocacy about the illegality of child marriage saw 25 million fewer child marriages in the past decade.

Unicef said progress in India helped reduce the risk of a girl in South Asia marrying before her 18th birthday to about 30% from nearly 50%.

Some 650 million women living today were married as children.

A girl forced to marry young is less likely to finish school and more likely to be abused and suffer pregnancy complicati­ons, said Anju Malhotra, Unicef’s principal gender adviser.

Such marriages are also more likely to perpetuate poverty.

In India the legal age for marriage is 18 for women and 21 for men.

Parents responsibl­e for underage marriages can be imprisoned and government programmes aim to encourage girls to stay in school, but the practice persists in a largely conservati­ve culture where marriage is viewed as the most important event in a girl’s life.

The global burden of child marriage has shifted to sub-Saharan Africa. According to Unicef data, about one in three of the world’s most recently married girls are in sub-Saharan Africa, compared to one in five a decade ago.

“Each and every child marriage prevented gives another girl the chance to fulfil her potential,” said Malhotra.

“But given the world has pledged to end child marriage by 2030, we’re going to have to collective­ly redouble efforts to prevent millions of girls from having their childhoods stolen through this devastatin­g practice.”

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