KARACHI – The Pakistani Senate has passed a bill to end child marriage, making marriage illegal for girls under the age of 18 to marry. That sounds like good news in a country where it is estimated that 21% of girls under 18 are married, often being forced to do so as early as age 12.
Human Rights Watch observer, Saroop Ijaz, noted that “This is an important first step. The situation in terms of child marriage, particularly for girls, is very, very grave.”
“Deeply rooted in tradition” is a euphemism created by the United Nations to describe the practice ingrained in Muslim and tribal practices especially prevalent in poverty-stricken rural towns and villages.
Senator Sherry Rehman, the author of the bill, stated the obvious when she observed that “Those are egregious statistics for a South Asian country with pretensions to moderate values.”
Unfortunately, the National Assembly, the lower house of Pakistan’s Parliament, tabled the bill when it was presented to them just a day later. The Federal Minister for Parliamentary Affairs noted that, because the Council for Islamic Ideology had opposed a similar bill in the past, he could not support this one.
Pakistan is already in violation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. That agreement, ratified by Pakistan 29 years ago, “sets a minimum age of marriage at 18.” Furthermore, the country is a party to the South Asian Initiative to End Violence Against Children that includes a mandate to end child marriage.
The root of the problem is that morality cannot be legislated in Pakistan or anywhere else. Laws may be enacted, but they cannot be enforced unless there is a united will to do so. Even if the National Assembly eventually passes the bill currently before them, there is little evidence that there is a will to enforce a ban on child marriage at the national, provincial, or local level.
We must face the reality that human injustices will not be eliminated until Jesus Christ returns to rule His kingdom on earth. Christians must remain focused on ministering to those in despair that is often beyond our ability to comprehend.
Read more about the impact of child marriage in these previous Missions Box stories:
- Preventing Child Marriage in Bangladesh – There’s an App for That
- Instances of Child Marriage Down in India, Up in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Save the Children: Girls under 15 marry every seven seconds
Sources:
- Mission Network News, Child Brides: Pakistan’s unethical practice
- The National, Pakistan passes bill to end child marriage amid anger from religious parties
- Gulf News, Pakistani parliamentarian again oppose the child marriage prohibition bill
- Radio Free Europe, Pakistan To Create Court System Designed To Tackle Violence Against Women
- Business Recorder, Child marriage bill to be tabled soon in KP
- Urdu Point, Proper Implementation Of Early Child Marriage Laws Urged
- Girls Not Brides, Child Marriage Pakistan
- Save the Children, Every Last Girl