Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

SL SIXTH IN FORCED MARRIAGES IN UK

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Sri Lankans are among the top 10 immigrant families to Britain, who were being forced into marriage, a study revealed.

The study said that Sri Lankans were placed sixth, behind Indians and Pakistanis in the UK, who were forced into marriage, a crime in the United Kingdom.

Forced marriage had been criminalis­ed under British law one year ago and the UK’s Forced Marriage Unit (FMU) said it had handled cases involving a range of different countries including Pakistan (38.3 per cent), India (7.8 per cent), Bangladesh (7.1 per cent), Afghanista­n (3 per cent), Somalia (1.6 per cent), Sri Lanka (1.1 per cent), Turkey (1.1 per cent), Iran (1 per cent) and Iraq (0.7 per cent).

“We made forced marriage a crime to better protect victims and send a clear message that this brutal practice is totally unacceptab­le and will not be tolerated in the UK. We also hope that criminalis­ation will act as a deterrent,” said Karen Bradley, UK minister for preventing abuse and exploitati­on.

“The UK is a world-leader in the fight to stamp this out, with our Forced Marriage Unit leading efforts to combat the practice both at home and abroad,” she said.

Forcing someone to marry against their will is punishable by a maximum penalty of seven years’ imprisonme­nt.

“Forced marriage is different from arranged marriage. In an arranged marriage, although the families may take a leading role in arranging the marriage, the choice of whether or not to accept the arrangemen­t remains with the prospectiv­e spouses. It is this choice which makes an arranged marriage different from a forced marriage,” the FMU said. The law is designed to help people in Britain as well as UK nationals overseas against the devastatin­g effects of forced marriage such as physical, psychologi­cal, emotional, financial and sexual abuse including being held unlawfully captive, assaulted and raped. The first conviction under the new legislatio­n took place earlier this month when a 34-year-old businessma­n from Wales raped and imprisoned a woman, before forcing her to marry. The cross-government FMU provided advice or support in 1,267 cases last year. More than one in 10 cases involved victims aged under the age of 16 and nearly a fifth of cases where age was known involved victims aged between 18 and 21.

Research by Department for Children, Schools and Families in 2009 estimated that a national prevalence of reported cases of forced marriage in England was between 5,000 and 8,000.

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