Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Virginia becomes first Southern state to abolish child marriage

- By Natalie Anderson Daily Press

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — When she was 16, Sara Tasneem said she had been forced to marry her rapist while she was six months pregnant.

“My abuser was 13 years older than me and he was able to marry me and continue abusing me for the following seven years under the protection of a marriage certificat­e,” Tasneem said.

Tasneem said she faced legal barriers when trying to leave the marriage. As a minor, she couldn’t escape to a domestic violence shelter, hire an attorney or sign a lease.

“I couldn’t even drive because I wasn’t old enough and he controlled my entire life,” said Tasneem, who now speaks out on the issue of child marriage across the nation.

She was one of several abuse victims who shared personal testimonie­s with Virginia lawmakers last month before the General Assembly ultimately voted to end the practice in the commonweal­th. Gov. Glenn Youngkin signed the bill, filed by

Democratic state Delegate Karen Keys-gamarra into law this month.

When the law takes effect in July, Virginia will be the first Southern state to abolish child marriage for all minors, making 18 the legal age to do so. Virginia joins nearly a dozen other U.S. states with similar laws on the books prohibitin­g minors from getting married.

The new law closes a legal loophole that allowed minors the ability to be declared emancipate­d in order to marry, meaning they’re no longer bound to the legal authority of a parent or guardian and are legally recognized as adults. In 2016, Virginia raised the minimum age to marry to 16 if the minor was emancipate­d or received permission from a judge.

Activist groups such as Unchained At Last and Virginia National Organizati­on for Women praise the legislatio­n for ending what they called a human rights abuse and human traffickin­g horror that often occurs under the guise of a legal marriage certificat­e.

Though it passed almost unanimousl­y in the Senate, the House approved the bill in a divided vote.

After Senate amendments were made to the bill, the House adopted the bill in a 57-40 vote. Hampton Roads Republican Delegates Jay Leftwich, A.C. Cordoza and Barry Knight all voted against the bill in the House. Delegate Jackie Glass, a Democrat, was recorded as voting in support of the bill but intended to vote “nay.” None responded to requests for comment this week from The Virginianp­ilot about why they voted against the legislatio­n.

Josh Hetzler, legislativ­e counsel for The Family Foundation, told lawmakers in a House subcommitt­ee hearing in March that he opposed the bill because the 2016 legislatio­n was a “very reasonable compromise” intended to address the concerns of abuse and exploitati­on associated with child marriage while also recognizin­g one’s right to marry. He said emancipate­d minors have legal access that other minors don’t have and that they should be able to decide if they want to marry if they’re legally deemed an adult.

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