Millennium Post (Kolkata)

5 countries, including India, account for about half of total child brides in the world: UNICEF

Worldwide, an estimated 650 mn girls & women alive today were married in childhood, with about half of those occurring in Bangladesh, Brazil, Ethiopia, India and Nigeria, according to the analysis

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Five countries, including India, account for about half of the total child brides in the world, according to a new analysis released by UNICEF said on the occasion of Internatio­nal Women’s Day.

According to the analysis ‘COVID-19: A threat to progress against child marriage’, 10 million additional child marriages may occur before the end of the decade, threatenin­g years of progress in reducing the practice.

Worldwide, an estimated 650 million girls and women alive today were married in childhood, with about half of those occurring in Bangladesh, Brazil, Ethiopia, India and Nigeria, according to the analysis.

To off-set the impacts of COVID-19 and end the practice by 2030 the target set out in the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals progress must be significan­tly accelerate­d, it said.

One year into the pandemic, immediate action is needed to mitigate the toll on girls and their families. By reopening schools, implementi­ng effective laws and policies, ensuring access to health and social services including sexual and reproducti­ve health services and providing comprehens­ive social protection measures for families, we can significan­tly reduce a girl’s risk of having her childhood stolen through child marriage, said UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore.

With 25 million child marriages averted in the last decade, UNICEF warned on Internatio­nal Women’s Day that these gains are now under serious threat.

Quoting its previous report, UNICEF said one in three of the world’s child brides lives in India.

The UN body said the persistenc­e of child marriage remains a potential challenge to India achieving Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal 5 by 2030 even as its progress has been one of the strongest among countries in South Asia during the last decade.

The analysis said findings from NFHS surveys between 1992-93 and 2015-16 show the percentage of young women who married in childhood has halved (from 54 to 27 per cent), and the pace of decline has increased in the last decade.

“The decline has been led by urban areas, which only had 18 per cent of women in the age group of 20-24 reporting (in 2015-16) as compared to 32 per cent in rural areas having got married before the age of 18,” it said.

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