Gulf News

Wedding of schoolboy and girl triggers outcry against child marriages in Egypt

Child rights advocates demand tougher penalties for families who get children married before legal age of 18

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The wedding of a boy and a girl in a Delta village has triggered an outcry in Egypt, prompting child rights advocates to demand a tougher penalty against child marriages.

Families of the bride and the groom — aged 12 and 10, respective­ly — allegedly held a lavish party to celebrate their unlawful marriage in the village of Al Ma’sara in Dakahlia province, around 120km north of Cairo.

Singers and belly dancers performed at the well-attended ceremony, Egyptian media reported, dubbing the newlyweds the world’s youngest spouses. Images of the couple, a seventh grader bridegroom and a fifth grader bride, went viral online showing the small couple sitting next to each other during the purported party.

The groom’s 35-year-old father was quoted in local newspapers as saying that he decided to get his son married because he was eager to attend his wedding party and to “feel joy of seeing his children” early in life. The child bride appeared at the party clad in a red dress, rather than the white gown traditiona­lly worn at weddings, so as to avoid trouble with authoritie­s, witnesses claimed.

In an attempt to stop child marriages, Egypt issued a law in 2008, setting marriage at 18 years for both sexes.

This law does not criminalis­e underage marriages, it bans their official

Child marriages are thought to be rife in Egypt’s rural areas due to cultural traditions that recommend early weddings and childbirth.

In such cases, families shun official registrati­on of the marriage until the couples reach although registrati­on. the lawful age of matrimony at 18. Without this registrati­on, birth certificat­es are not issued for children resulting from this marriage; consequent­ly they are denied access to state-supported health care and education services.

The state-appointed National Council for Motherhood and Childhood has denounced child marriages as “assassinat­ion of childhood”.

“Such marriages take Egypt back to the time of ignorance and backwardne­ss,” the council’s chairwoman, Maya Mursi, said.

She added that the council’s branch in Dakahlia has been asked to take legal action against the families of the two children. Other rights groups have vowed to sue both families for alleged child abuse.

Dar Al Ifta, Egypt’s highest Islamic authority, has urged state institutio­ns to make concerted efforts to stop marriages among minors.

“There are wrong concepts that prevail in society, particular­ly in the countrysid­e, encouragin­g underage marriages,” Khalid Omran, an official at Dar Al Ifta, said.

“Marriage eligibilit­y means the proper age of being able to build and care for a good family,” he told private television station Al Hayat.

“Many marriages end in divorce because one or both spouses were not mature.”

 ?? Courtesy: Al Watan ?? The boy and a girl aged 12 and 10, respective­ly, who reportedly married in the Egyptian province of Dakahlia.
Courtesy: Al Watan The boy and a girl aged 12 and 10, respective­ly, who reportedly married in the Egyptian province of Dakahlia.

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