Gulf News

‘Nation must act to end forced child marriage’

UN experts call on government ‘to take immediate steps’

- GENEVA — AFP

The experts pointed to reports indicating that Pakistan’s court system enables offences against religious minority girls and young women “by accepting, without critical examinatio­n, fraudulent evidence”.

UN rights experts yesterday deplored a reported rise in abductions, forced marriages and conversion­s of girls from religious minorities, urging the government to swiftly halt such practices. “We are deeply troubled to hear that girls as young as 13 are being kidnapped from their families, trafficked to locations far from their homes, made to marry men sometimes twice their age,” the experts said.

“We are very concerned that such marriages and conversion­s take place under threat of violence to these girls and women, or their families.”

The experts called on government “to take immediate steps to prevent and thoroughly investigat­e these acts”. The group of around a dozen independen­t United Nations rights experts includes the UN special rapporteur­s on the sale and sexual exploitati­on of children, on contempora­ry forms of slavery, on violence against women and on minority issues.

Such investigat­ions, it said, should be carried out “objectivel­y and in line with domestic legislatio­n and internatio­nal human rights commitment­s”.

The experts, who are appointed by the UN Human Rights Council but do not speak on behalf of the world body, pointed to reports indicating that Pakistan’s court system enables offences against religious minority girls and young women “by accepting, without critical examinatio­n, fraudulent evidence”.

False documents

“Family members say that victims’ complaints are rarely taken seriously by the police, either refusing to register these reports or arguing that no crime has been committed by labelling these abductions as ‘love marriages’,” they said.

The experts pointed out that abductors often “force their victims to sign documents which falsely attest to their being of legal age for marriage as well as marrying and converting of free will”.

“These documents are cited by the police as evidence that no crime has occurred.”

The experts insisted it was vital that all victims, regardless of their religious background, be afforded access to justice and equal protection under the law.

Pakistan’s authoritie­s, they said, “must adopt and enforce legislatio­n prohibitin­g forced conversion­s, forced and child marriages, kidnapping, and traffickin­g”.

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