With 37% girls marrying before 18, Nepal not doing enough to curb child marriages, says rights group
Human Rights Watch says poverty, dowry, child labour and lack of education among factors leading to child marriage.
Girls
pictured getting ready for 'Ihi', their first marriage ceremony, in
Kathmandu. A new report reveals that one in three girls in Nepal get
married before they reach 18 - Image for representation onlyREUTERS/Gopal ChitrakarThe Nepal government has come in for heavy criticism for not doing enough to end child marriages in the country.
Human Rights Watch (HRW), a New York-based rights group, said that
the Nepal government's inaction to curb the practice has caused "deep
harm" to both boys and girls across the country. It said the government
has failed to take "concrete steps" to achieve its goal.
The Himalayan country vowed to end child marriage by 2020 but
recently postponed its target to 2030. The country, which is still
reeling from last year's massive earthquake, has the third highest rate of child marriage in Asia. A 118-page report
titled Our Time to Sing and Play: Child Marriage in Nepal, released by
HRW on Thursday (8 September) said 37% of Nepali girls marry before
turning 18, while 10% marry before reaching 15. It estimated that 11% of
the boys too get married in their teens.
Child marriage has been
illegal in Nepal since 1963 and the minimum age for both the genders to
get married is 20 years. However, traditional practices, poverty and
political instability are causing the law from being fully enforced. The
report has documented the same along with the devastating consequences
of those marriages.
"Many children in Nepal – both girls and boys –
are seeing their futures stolen from them by child marriage," said
Heather Barr, senior women's rights researcher at HRW. "Nepal's
government promises reform, but in towns and villages across the
country, nothing has changed."
HRW researchers also found that
"police rarely act to prevent child marriage or bring charges, and
almost never do so unless a complaint is filed." It said despite the law
citing the practice as a crime, government officials in the country
were officially registering child marriages.
The report said
poverty, social pressure, lack of access to education, child labour and
dowry practices were among the factors that has been leading to child
marriages. These incidents reportedly take place more prominently among
Nepal's Dalit and lower-caste communities.
The rights group
interviewed more than 100 people who were married when they were in
their teens. It also discovered that some girls chose to get married at a
young age to escape domestic violence or poverty, and that there has
been a rise in the number of such cases. The minimum age for both the genders to get married in Nepal is 20 yearsREUTERS/Gopal Chitrakar"My
parents wanted me to marry someone they had chosen. There were two or
three proposals. My parents liked them, but I didn't," said a
16-year-old, who eloped with a man she got acquainted with only through
phone calls.
The report said many girls did not know child
marriage was illegal in the country. Even those who knew the law said
they were afraid of lodging a formal complaint out of fear it could
bring trouble to their parents.
The HRW documented that many girls were also forced to have children before their bodies were biologically ready.
It added that the earthquake that struck in April 2015
made the situation worse as millions of people became homeless.
Although no survey has given numbers, it is believed that families in
the earthquake-hit areas are desperate to get their daughters married
off so "they can have one less mouth to feed", according to Rashmila
Shakya of Child Workers In Nepal, Associated Press reported.
Dr
Kiran Rupakhetee from Nepal's Ministry of Women, Children and Social
Welfare said the government is changing its policy to end child
marriages. Earlier, those above 18, but below 20 years, who got married
with their parents' consent were exempted from being charged. But under
the new policy, the minister said there would be no exceptions.
Anyone
who violated the law would be jailed for three years and fined Nepalese
rupees 10,000 ($95), which is more than a month's salary for many in
the country.
The news agency reported that Nepal's government has
denied HRW's charges and said it was making good progress to end the
illegal practice.
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