The Mercury

Court convicts mother who tricked daughter

- Samuel Osborne

A MOTHER who tricked her teenage daughter into going to Pakistan and forcing her to marry has been jailed for four and a half years.

The mother, from Birmingham, had forced the victim to marry a male relative who was 16 years older than her.

Years earlier, the man had taken her virginity and she became pregnant after a marriage contract was entered into against the girl’s will. The then 13-year-old had to undergo an abortion on returning to the UK. Her GP reported his concerns to social services.

Deceived

The judge at Birmingham Crown Court said the unemployed mother had acted with “cowardice” and “deceit”.

It is the first time a forced marriage case of this kind has been successful­ly prosecuted in a criminal court in the UK.

Jurors heard how as the girl had approached her 18th birthday, she was tricked by her mother into going to Pakistan on what she believed was a family holiday.

The mother, who cannot be named for legal reasons to protect the identity of the victim, was convicted of deceiving the victim to go to Pakistan, in order to enter into a false marriage, forced marriage and perjury, after she later lied about the incident in the High Court.

Judge Patrick Thomas QC told the mother: “You had cruelly deceived her. She was frightened, alone, held against her will, being forced into a marriage she dreaded.

“You must have known that was her state of mind. Yet for your own purposes, you drove the marriage through.

“Her courage and respect for the truth throughout these proceeding­s have been admirable, and are a marked contrast to your own cowardice and deceit, continuing right through this trial and no doubt hereafter.” The judge added: “You have sought to blame her for everything, and yourself have accepted responsibi­lity for nothing.”

Prosecutor Deborah Gould said the victim “feels guilty” for taking her mother to court. She said on the daughter’s behalf: “If it wasn’t me in this position could it have been one of my brothers or sisters?

“My message to other young girls is keep yourself safe. Do not go along with it, tell them to their face.”

Gould added: “She was proud of herself for coming to court.”

During the trial, the girl told the court of her objections to wedding preparatio­ns.

Despite her protests, the couple were married in September 2016, just after she had celebrated her 18th birthday.

The teenager had described how she was taken to get ready for the ceremony, and an imam gave her papers to sign and asked if she wanted to get married.

The judge said he had no doubt the victim was “coerced” by her mother to say “I do” or “I accept” three times, before signing.

Jurors heard the complainan­t recall how she cried to her mother, who continued leading her by the arm to meet her husband-to-be, and then put on her ring. She said: “I didn’t want to get married to him.”

Chris Gibbons, defending, admitted the case crossed the custody threshold but said of the defendant: “She has been unemployed and on state benefits. She’s worried about what might happen to the family.”

The new offence of forced marriage came into effect on in June 2014, but prosecutio­ns have been rare.

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