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UK set to end legal loophole allowing child marriage

by Emma Batha | @emmabatha | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Wednesday, 16 June 2021 09:51 GMT

FILE PHOTO: A bride holds her purse with hands that are decorated with henna patterns, during a mass marriage ceremony held in Karachi January 2, 2015. A total of 50 couples from the Hindu community across Pakistan took their wedding vows during the mass wedding ceremony organized by the Pakistan Hindu Council. REUTERS/Athar Hussain

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Allowing under-18s to marry with parental consent enables child abuse, campaigners say, as UK moves to lift the minimum age

By Emma Batha

LONDON, June 16 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Britain must scrap a legal loophole allowing child marriage "by the back door", lawmakers said ahead of the introduction of a bill in parliament on Wednesday to raise the minimum age to 18.

They said the current law, which allows marriage at 16 with parental consent, sabotaged girls' futures and condoned child abuse.

The loophole also undermines Britain's global efforts to end child marriage in other countries, campaign groups said.

"Child marriage is child abuse," former chancellor Sajid Javid told BBC radio before presenting the bill, which has cross-party support.

"People think this is often something that just happens in developing countries. It doesn't. It's happening right here ... it has to stop," he said, adding that thousands of minors had been coerced into marriages in Britain in the last decade.

The government has also said it is committed to lifting the minimum age to 18.

"It's a big step in the right direction. We're celebrating this moment," Payzee Mahmod of campaign group IKWRO told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Mahmod, who was married at 16, said girls who wed young were pulled out of school and often subjected to marital rape and domestic abuse.

Girls from South Asian and Middle Eastern backgrounds are seen as most at risk of early marriage in Britain because having relationships outside marriage is often considered shameful.

Britain set 16 as the minimum age in 1929 when living together out of wedlock was socially unacceptable.

But campaigners say most girls who marry under 18 nowadays are pressured into it by their families, and that raising the minimum age would empower them to say no.

Parliamentarian Pauline Latham, one of the bill's sponsors, said the current law permitted child marriage "by the back door".

"I've spoken to a lot of ministers to say we cannot let this continue, and they've agreed. Boris is keen to get it through," she added, referring to the prime minister.

An attempt to amend the law last year - spearheaded by Latham - was derailed by the pandemic.

But campaigners said they were confident the legislation, which applies to England and Wales, would pass by next spring.

More than 2,740 under-18s were married in England and Wales between 2008 and 2017, according to official data, but this figure excludes minors wed in traditional ceremonies or taken abroad to marry.

Karma Nirvana, which campaigns against forced marriage, said it had come across cases involving children as young as 11, and marriages between the ages of 13 and 15 were "not uncommon".

Campaigners, who met with Javid on Tuesday, said it was crucial not only to close the loophole, but to make it a criminal offence to assist any underage marriage, including religious marriages and those conducted abroad.

"Criminalisation is a strong deterrent and necessary to protect every child from all forms of child marriage in all settings," said Mahmod, whose sister Banaz was killed by family members after leaving a husband they had chosen for her at 17.

Related stories:

Lawmakers urged to ban child marriage in Britain

Sister of 'honour killing' victim urges Britain to ban child marriage

Child marriage survivors say UK law legitimises 'terrible' abuse

Jump in forced marriages feared after UK lockdown

This story was updated to clarify that Payzee Mahmod is a campaigner with IKWRO 

(Reporting by Emma Batha @emmabatha; Editing by Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, which covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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