family. Eventually my mother was convinced and she talked my father out of it.”
Vicious cycle
Child marriages limit or put an end to the choices available to young girls about their own bodies, let alone receiving education, said Dr Yasmin Qazi, a former public health expert.
“Young girls who are married off are seldom in a position to make choices about their health. Besides pressure from the families, they also lack education and end up making bad choices for their and their babies’ health, resulting in the alarming figures of maternal and infant mortality we see in Pakistan,” she said. “Bearing a child robs the girls’ bodies of the nutrients they need to grow. In addition to that, insufficient child spacing results in poor health of the babies born.”
In Pakistan, according to the State of World’s Children report released by Unicef, 11 percent of girls are married before they are 15 while 24 percent are married before they reach the age of 18, putting their health and education in jeopardy.
The figures also reveal that Pakistan girls currently aged between 20 and 24 years gave birth before they turned 18 and one-third of all under-five children in the country were under-weight.
Around 86 babies of every 1,000 babies born die every year and the infant mortality rate is 8.6 percent, one of the highest in the world.
Leading the change
These young girls reach out to their own families and neighbours, before moving on to elders and other stakeholders of their own community to explain to them the risks which young girls were exposed to - ranging from domestic violence and access to health and education facilities - if they are married early.
In 2014, Sindh became the first province in the country to have introduced a law to criminalise marriage before the age of 18. But the implementation of the law leaves much to be desired.
This is where the young campaigners come in. During the past year, each of the 90 young schoolgirls has already reached 100 homes in their communities.
But before they were allowed to venture out on their own, they were educated on the issue by an international organisation, Rutgers-WPF.
“We trained 210 girls in the rural areas of Karachi, including Bin Qasim, Malir and Gadap towns while 250 are working in Sanghar district,” said Rutgers-WPF country chief Qadeer Baig.
He said projects by welfare organisations are frequent but they seldom make a lasting impact in the society. “This is why we thought of engaging the very section of society most affected by early marriages. The phenomenon kicks off the cycle of lack of education and subsequent poor health resulting from poor and limited choices,” he added. “We engaged girls studying in government schools in Sanghar and Malir districts and educated them about the risks of early marriage. Not only that, we had to work with them and train them to give them confidence to speak out and assume the role of young leaders in their areas.”
He said for ensuring the implementation of the child marriage restraint law, it was imperative not to offend people but engage them to change their attitudes from within. To help the young girls, teachers from their schools were also given the same training.
Justice Shaiq Usmani said a marriage was a contract between two adults who consented to its emotional, physical and social implications.
He suggested adding a provision in the law which made it mandatory for a qazi to report every month the number of nikahs he had performed and how old the brides.
He also recommended setting up a watchdog body in every district of the province comprising retired judges, journalists and parliamentarians, to bring the cases of early marriages to the notice of the local magistrate.
Provincial women development and social welfare minister Rubina Qaimkhani said the civil society had a lot more resources than the government. She added that it was also the civil society which had lobbied for the passage of the child marriage restraint law and kept the government departments working in the right direction. "The government does not have the resources to train people on the grass-roots level so it is encouraging to see the civil society taking up the task.”
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