Legislating against child marriage


July 22, 2010
Legislating against child marriage

A spokesman for the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa government recently announced that legislation would be introduced forbidding the marriage of children under the age of 18. While this is an encouraging sign, there is a long way to go before any of the provinces can claim to have done enough to protect children’s rights.

The announcement of the Khyber-Pukhtunkhwa government has not come out of the blue. A draft bill to this effect had been prepared two years ago. It has taken quite a while for a decision to table it in the provincial assembly. The legislative attempt will however supplement ongoing efforts to protect children through collaborations between relevant line departments like social welfare and women’s development, specialised multilateral agencies like Unicef, and several non-government organisations. Efforts of a similar nature, offering special consideration to juveniles, have also been taken in Balochistan and Sindh as well. Punjab actually pioneered the attempt to create comprehensive legislation to support the otherwise sporadic measures to protect children, with help from the Punjab Destitute and Neglected Children’s Act back in 2004. This enabled the Punjab government to create the Child Protection and Welfare Bureau (CPWB) and a Child Protection Court in Lahore. Since then, the CPWB has put in place district child protection units in Gujranwala, Faisalabad, Multan, Rahim Yar Khan, Rawalpindi and Sialkot. However, the task at hand to protect children from abuse, negligence, discrimination, violence and exploitation is huge.

The CPWB in Punjab has offered dozens of runaway, street children temporary refuge but what perhaps needs to be done is that the children’s parents should be contacted. They should be mildly admonished for their neglect or abuse, and this should be done prior to sending the children back to the parents or the whole effort will be wasted.

There is a complex range of issues that need to be addressed if Pakistan is to fulfill its obligations under the Convention of the Rights of the Child. Some required efforts have to do with meeting pending needs such as good schooling, adequate health facilities, sufficient nutrition, sufficient time to rest and play, etc. Given the dilapidated state of education and health facilities, the meagre incomes of the majority of families in the country, ensuring access to these basic needs seems more like a wish-list than a realistic goal. Still, many poor parents do what they can, in the hope that their next generation will live better lives than themselves. Unfortunately, however, multitudes of parents continue to discriminate against girls, make their children drop out from school to supplement household incomes, and sometimes their behaviour is even harsher than that.

Conversely, a range of measures are needed to ensure protection of children to prevent their abuse inside and outside their homes. Exploitation of children can take many forms. Early marriages or domestic violence are just the tip of the iceberg. Many poor children work for long hours in hazardous circumstances ranging from work in leather tanneries or mechanic workshops, to working for professional begging mafias. The growing threats of human smuggling and pornography also pose added risks to the vulnerable children. The use of Pakistani children from southern Punjab to serve as camel jockeys in the UAE may have been curbed since the glare of international publicity against this phenomenon, but sending under-aged girls on fake passports to entertain the expatriate work-force in the Gulf continues.

Horrifying incidents of sexual abuse of young children are also evident, even though such incidents are only sporadically reported in the media. Many of these incidents involve abuse of young boys at the workplace. Cheap hotels around the bus-stand areas in Rawalpindi or Peshawar for instance are infamous for such activities, where perpetrators of such damaging acts roam freely without fear of prosecution or punishment.

Given this immense range of problems, it is imperative that child protection efforts in the country not only aim to undertake preventive or rehabilitative measures, but also become more proactive in terms of apprehending perpetrators of child abuse. Otherwise ensuring a secure environment for our country’s children will not move beyond delayed legislative attempts, and their half-hearted application.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 23rd, 2010.

COMMENTS (5)

Natasha Kamal | 14 years ago | Reply This is indeed a good attempt to portray the state of child rights in Pakistan. I only wish the government would sit up and take notice, try and promulgate the child protection bill nation-wide. While it is commendable that various provinces are trying to take steps on their own, it still does not address the issue. We are after all still one nation, why cant we take universal positions and decisions, or are we already on our way to split the nation?!
SharifL | 14 years ago | Reply Good article. I think we should concentrate on girls marriages more, because they are the ones who suffer most. As Banori ha pointed out above, it will get opposition from the conservative Muslims, because they would claim this to be anti Islamic. Islam is a good religion, but we have to admit that things have moved on, in regards with girls maturity, since those days 1400 hundred years ago. A marriage should be for two adults to decide to live together and start a family. It is more than just sexual satisfaction. It is therefore, imperative that the minimum age of girls be increased to at least 20. In a society such as Pkaistan, men are used to subjugate women and it is much easier to do so when the girl is still a 'child' than when she is grown up and knows how to defend herself. Equality for women is a top priority. Only an educated and mature person can show the kids the correct way to become good human beings. Most of the kids from families where mother has no say are not flexible and show trends of abnormality.
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