Tag: child marriage

  • Judicial corrective for a social malady 

    Judicial corrective for a social malady 

    The Supreme Court judgement is remarkable for the reason that it puts judiciary and the society on the same side of the fence in prescribing a multifaceted approach to deal with a social ill that had continued to affect millions of young girls and boys despite the presence of a law — PCMA 2006, criminalising child marriage, writes D.C. Pathak 

    The October 18 order of the Supreme Court on child marriage and the arguments it heard on October 21 in the case about the legal validity of the so-called ‘marital rape’, are both significant so far as they pertained to a possible intervention of judiciary in matters that weighed in individual’s rights against the mandate set by socio-cultural outlook and customs. 

    A three-judge bench headed by the then Chief Justice of India D. Y. Chandrachud, filled a loophole in the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act (PCMA), 2006, when it declared on October 18 that child ‘betrothals’ used as a clever ploy to duck punishment under the Act, violated basic rights of ‘free choice, autonomy and childhood’ and urged the Parliament to outlaw them. 

    Supreme Court.

    Showing a deep understanding of the nature of this social malaise the apex court placed emphasis on ‘prevention’, saying that ‘prosecution’ alone was ineffective in bringing about a social change. It pointed out that PCMA was a social legislation which needed the collective efforts of all stakeholders for its success. 

    The Centre had moved the PCM (Amendment) Bill in December 2021, seeking precedence of the Act over personal laws which was pending with the concerned Standing Committee of Parliament. 

    The Supreme Court taking note of this, declined to extend the child marriage ban to all faiths leaving it to Parliament to legislate on it but as already mentioned, did recommend prohibition on child betrothals that were favoured by some communities in the name of protecting the girl child. This practice somewhere reflected in the innate thinking in society about considering a girl as a ‘burden’ to be passed on to someone else through marriage. 

    Even with the advancement of society towards acceptance of a ‘small family’ and realisation of the importance of ‘education for all’, the average family still fell for the social malady of following a differential between a boy and a girl when it came to spending its resources on their upbringing. 

    If child marriage is indefensible from all angles then the apex court was expected to ban it for all communities; it seems however, that the Supreme Court did not want a judicial diktat to settle a socio-political problem and favoured an evolution of law in this regard through the Parliamentary process, as would befit a democratic dispensation. 

    The Supreme Court judgement is remarkable for the reason that it puts judiciary and the society on the same side of the fence in prescribing a multifaceted approach to deal with a social ill that had continued to affect millions of young girls and boys despite the presence of a law — PCMA 2006, criminalising child marriage. 

    The ruling calls for stronger enforcement and enhanced accountability. Significantly, it recognises that both girls and boys suffered because of child marriage: girls faced physical and emotional abuse while boys were exposed to new pressures and responsibilities that altered their entire course of life. 

    The Supreme Court ordered the appointment of dedicated Child Marriage Prevention Officers (CMPOs) across the districts to focus on the prevention of child marriages and also specially empowered District Magistrates and Superintendents of Police to prosecute individuals who facilitated or promoted such marriages. On the whole, the Supreme Court admirably underlined the need for a shift in social attitudes on child marriage while endorsing stringent legal measures against the malady. 

    Another matter of deep cultural significance being currently examined by the Supreme Court is the exception in Section 375 sub-clause (2) of IPC repeated in Section 63 (2) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Samhita (BNS) enacted in December 2023, according to which, non-consensual intercourse by a husband with his wife, provided she was not less than 15 years as mentioned in IPC and revised to 18 years in BNS, was excluded from the definition of rape. 

    A three-judge divisional bench headed by Chief Justice Chandrachud began the hearing of petitions against the exception, termed by the petitioners as ‘marital rape’, on October 17. 

    The petitioners sought criminalisation of marital rape whereas the Centre has taken the stand that punishment of non-consensual sex in wedlock will impact conjugal relationships and lead to ‘serious disturbances’ in the institution of marriage. There was also a concern that there might be misuse of the provision of consent as it would be difficult for the husband to prove it. 

    The Supreme Court held the last hearing on October 22 to examine the constitutional validity of a law that granted immunity from prosecution to a husband who forced his wife, not a minor, to have sex with him. On October 23, the court adjourned the case by four weeks as Chief Justice Chandrachud was retiring on November 10, compelling a reconstitution of the Bench. 

    This case illustrates the legal and social nuances that the Supreme Court went into by way of raising questions that were truly instructive. The court asked if domestic violence including wrongful confinement and cruelty preceding the forced consent was punishable, then how could the act of sex in that situation be exempted from legal liability? 

    The Chief Justice wondered if making this kind of sex act a punishable offence would not amount to creating a new penal provision by the judiciary that was not under its purview. 

    In the Indian context, the pre-intercourse aggressiveness and even violence are not uncommon. It is also possible that a certain kind of submissiveness on the part of the wife, traceable to gender inequality, existed across many sections of society. 

    The spread of education and financial independence still eluded many Indian women. Cultural legacies governed the institution of marriage in India and what prevailed generally in the economically developed societies of the West was not necessarily an ideal comparison. Also, it can be presumed that wherever ‘marital rape’ was reported as an offence it would certainly result consequentially in a divorce. 

    In the case before the Supreme Court, one of the petitioners pleaded that exception to marital rape violated the right to equality and privacy while another linked the exception to the tradition of ‘patriarchy’ that was against the ethos of the Constitution. 

    The Centre’s stand seemed to accommodate the Indian cultural tradition in the modern approach to marriage. In its petition the Centre made out that the idea of consent had to be viewed differently in marriage since there was ‘an expectation of reasonable sexual access from one’s spouse’ and this made it ‘excessive and disproportionate’ to punish a husband under anti-rape laws. 

    The government at the same time firmly declared that there was no compromise with criminality associated with domestic violence and cruelty. This case before the Supreme Court, like the one pertaining to child marriage, is testing the merit of judicial intervention in matters that were on the borderline of customs and cultural tradition on one hand, and the modern law on the other. It is to be seen if as in the other case, Supreme Court adopts a reformative approach in interpreting the Penal Code on the issue of marital rape too. 

    (The writer is former Director of the Intelligence Bureau. Views are personal) 

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  • Millions of Pak women are crippled by early marriages

    Millions of Pak women are crippled by early marriages

    Child marriages forced over 631,000 female students to either not attend school or leave classes midway due to early marriages, writes Dr. Sakariya Kareem

    High rates of child marriages are crippling the lives of girls in Pakistan, forcing them to leave schools, bear children at tender age and manage families when they should have been swinging free with friends in parks and river banks.

    The country witnesses over 600,000 child marriages in a year. As a result, Pakistan is home to nearly 19 million child brides; 1 in 6 young women are married in childhood.

    The Pakistan Demographic Health Survey 2017-18, pointed out that 13.5 per cent of girls and 2.6 per cent of boys in Pakistan were victims of child marriage. The survey said 3.6 per cent of girls in the country get married before the age of 15; 18.3 per cent get married before the age of 18. The rate of child marriages was 23 per cent, all of which caused a financial loss to the national exchequer to the tune of $800 million.

    Child marriages lead to an extraordinarily high rate of mortality, according to a joint research report of UN Women and the National Commission on the Status of Women, a national organisation working to improve the condition of women in the country. The report estimated that early childbearing and ignorance of reproductive health practices lead to high mortality, costing the country Rs 636 billion in a year. Early marriages also cause an annual increase of 21 per cent in the birth rate of children and 22 per cent in the death rate of children.

    The joint UN report had much more stark reminders. Child marriages forced over 631,000 female students to either not attend school or leave classes midway due to early marriages. Of these, 360,000 were from the Punjab, 136,000 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 170,000 from Sindh and 28,800 from Balochistan.

    Child marriages have been cited as one of the main causes of domestic violence. About 14 per cent of the cases of domestic violence in the Punjab were attributed to early marriage. The rate was 42 per cent in Sindh, 53 per cent in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and 50 per cent in Balochistan.

    Early marriages also force women to leave the job market abruptly. This numbers about a 21 per cent reduction, estimated to be an indirect annual loss of Rs 26.8 billion in wages.

    Although Pakistan signed the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1990 under which marriage under the age of 18 was a violation of the human rights of children, the state has hardly done anything concrete to prevent such a large number of child marriages.

    Experts cite poor health and sexual exploitation as two important outcomes of child marriages. Amjad Latif, advocacy and communication manager of Rahnuma, a member organisation of the Family Planning Association of Pakistan, said those who visited their medical facilities faced health problems due to early marriage. She pointed out that young girls also faced sexual exploitation due to ignorance and lack of financial independence.

    A large number of women in Pakistan thus remain bonded to a practice which causes serious health and emotional problems. The state, despite conventions and speeches, remains oblivious to the critical needs of at least half of its population.

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  • Leaders Raise Concerns Over Child Marriage in Gilgit-Baltistan

    Leaders Raise Concerns Over Child Marriage in Gilgit-Baltistan

    Speakers voiced worry about the lack of regulations safeguarding women in the area, especially the practice of early child marriage….reports Asian Lite News

    Civil society representatives including the head of the National Commission on the Status of Women (NCSW) expressed concerns over the absence of laws and constitutional protections for women in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, Gilgit-Baltistan region, especially underage marriage, according to Dawn.

    To empower women in Gilgit-Baltistan, they wanted swift legislation. The NCSW recently organised a two-day National Consultation on Child Marriage, with the second round taking place in Gilgit on Friday, with the assistance of partners United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Unicef, and UN-Women.

    GB Minister of Women’s Development Ms Dilshad Bano, GB Assembly Speaker Nazir Ahmed Advocate, GB Secretary of Social Welfare Development Fida Hussain, experts, policymakers, and representatives from federal and GB departments were among the attendees, Dawn reported.

    Speakers voiced worry about the lack of regulations safeguarding women in the area, especially the practice of early child marriage.

    A law to prohibit child marriage was going to be introduced in the GB assembly, according to Speaker of the GB Assembly Nazir Ahmed Advocate, Dawn reported.

    He said that a law to ban underage marriages was presented to the GB legislature in 2015, but it has not yet been tabled.

    As the event’s primary guest, Ahmed commended the NCSW chairperson in particular for his significant interest in the problem of child marriage in Great Britain. In our society, he noted, “we do not permit anyone to drive, work, or enter into an agreement before reaching the age of majority, which is 18 years.” (ANI)

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