access to the opportunities that allow them to choose when, and who, to marry", said Farah Naz -Country Programme Manager, Plan International in Pakistan extraordinarily high rates of child marriage were found among females surveyed in Bangladesh, with 73% being married before they turned 18 years old. 27% of girls were married between the ages of 12 and 14. This compares to 2.8% of males in survey areas in Bangladesh.
In Indonesia, 38% of married females in survey areas were married under 18 years of age. The percentage of men married before they turned 18 was 3.7.
Rashid Javed, country director of Plan International in Asia says: "Ultimately, the endurance of child marriage lies in deeply ingrained gender discrimination, but economic factors, girls economic dependence, and tradition all play strong roles."
"However, our research shows that changing communities' attitudes and acceptance of child marriage not a remote or insurmountable challenge; a combination of education, economic opportunity, access to health services, and stricter, enforced legal frameworks make a substantial difference to the levels of acceptance and prevalence of child marriage."
"Plan International believes that the minimum age of marriage is 18, as declared in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child", Says Rashid Javed-Country Director Plan International in Pakistan
Research found a direct link between levels of education (for both children and parents), income, access to economic opportunity, and access to sexual and reproductive health services and levels of support for child marriage in a community. Improved access to each of these met with a corresponding decline in levels of acceptance of child marriage.
The report concludes that consistent and long term intervention by NGOs, community groups, governments, and institutional, individual, community and family-level actions would have a substantial impact on the rate and acceptance of child marriage in all three countries. A suite of 40 practical, concrete recommendations concludes the report.
The report and its recommendations will guide Plan International's programming and advocacy regarding child marriage in Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Indonesia, as well as inform interventions in other countries.