The issue of child marriages has been hotly debated in the assemblies and the media of late.
While there are laws that protect the innocence of children, there are considerable religious, cultural and social factors that overshadow these laws.
In this special report, Dawn analyses existing legislation, examines proposed provincial bills and looks at the contradictions within the laws already in force.
Shagufta Begum was married before she turned 15. Her husband, whom she speculates may have been in his 50s when the marriage took place, was already married but did not have a son.
His family suggested he take a younger second wife, who would have several decades to bear him more children; ideally sons.
Shagufta was married around 50 years ago.
Back then, the only legislation on child marriages in Pakistan was the Child Marriage Restraint Act 1929, which originally stated that a girl was of marriageable age when she turned 14.
After the Muslim Family Laws Ordinance 1961 (VIII) was promulgated, the age was raised to 16.
Shagufta’s husband died after the birth of her fourth son, when she was 35.
“I was left with four children and I didn’t even have a degree. It feels like I have spent an eternity alone.”
“I never knew why I was married off so young, or to such an old man. My family was well-off, they were educated. I was studying at a school and wanted to be a lawyer and I still love films and dramas that have a legal angle,” she said.
In the 50 years since Shagufta’s wedding, the legal situation around child marriages has changed significantly.
Since the 18th amendment, provinces have become responsible for drafting their own laws on child marriage, while the Child Marriage Restraint Act 1929 remains in place in federal territory.
The Sindh government was the first to legislate on child marriage, passing the Sindh Child Marriages Restraint Act in 2013.
Punjab followed two years later with the Punjab Marriage Restraint (Amendment) Act 2015.
The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan governments are also currently drafting their own child marriage acts.
However, for activists the existing legislature on child marriage is rife with lacunae and contradictions.
The 1929 act served as a starting point for much of the legislation that has followed.
The marriageable age for girls in the 1929 act is 16, and 18 for boys. According to the act, the offence is non-cognisable.
In non-cognisable offenses, the police cannot arrest a suspect without the court’s permission. This means that the police are not empowered to act against child marriage even if they are made aware of a case.
Family courts could only take cognisance of the offence based on a complaint by the union council, or, “an authority the provincial government may prescribe”.
However, no cognisance can be taken “after the expiry of one year from the date on which the offence was alleged to have been committed”.
In comparison to this, the Sindh act has increased the marriageable age for girls to 18 and makes it a cognisable offence, non-bailable and non-compoundable, and the punishments are much harsher – with two to three years rigorous imprisonment as well as a fine.
Ayesha Inam, project manager at Oxfam Novib, said this was a major step towards equality.
“The provincial government has tried to cover most lacunae in the 1929 act... removing the discrimination that was part of the 1929 act,” she said.
She also commended the heavier punishments in the Sindh act, which can vary from Rs100,000 to Rs300,000 in fine as well as two to three years imprisonment.
However, Ms Inam said that the Sindh act didn’t ask for proof of age. She said the bride and groom’s CNICs should be required at the time of the marriage to prove their ages.
The Punjab act lies somewhere between the 1929 and Sindh acts.
While the marriageable age for girls remains 16 and the offence is still non-cognisable, the Punjab act has ordered harsher punishments: six months imprisonment and an Rs 50,000 fine for marrying a child, solemnising a child marriage, as well as for a parent or guardian.
Question of age
Zohra Yusuf, chairperson of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP), said there had been certain cases where the police acted against child marriages, adding, “Some people have been imprisoned in Sindh for violating the child marriage act. But the enforcement has not been enough.”
However, human rights activists are unhappy with Punjab’s decision to not increase the marriageable age.
Ambareen Sharif of Oxfam pointed out that while the Punjab act had failed on many fronts, “it demands a CNIC for the nikkah. This means that they have effectively raised the age because you can’t have a CNIC before 18.”
However, she added, the move had created confusion in the province.
After what they witnessed in Sindh and Punjab, activists also have recommendations for improving existing and upcoming legislation.
For instance, they point out that one of the key challenges in legislating against child marriages is the lack of documentation.
The lack of registration of marriages, even births and deaths – particularly in rural areas – make the implementation of existing laws much harder.
“Sometimes you can even register a marriage, but you can’t give the right age because the birth [of the bride or groom] has not been registered,” says Ambareen Sharif of Oxfam.
“…If you try to stop parents from marrying their children by saying the child looks underage, the parents can just lie and say the child is of age adding that because his or her birth wasn’t registered, there is no documentary proof,” Ms Sharif says.
Faizan, who lives in Islamabad and has been married for two years, was married at 15 to a girl of the same age. While their nikkah has not been registered yet, they had registered the birth of their daughter.
Anees Jillani, a lawyer and rights activist, argues in favour of laws that make it mandatory to produce proof of age at the time of marriage: “If the production of Form-B is made compulsory for registering a marriage, it would help.”
That the debate and the push for reform is far from over is evident from the fact that the National Assembly Standing Committee on Religious Affairs rejected amendments – including a provision to raise the marriageable age for girls to 18 – to the 1929 act after members of the Council of Islamic Ideology called the bill “un-Islamic”.
PML-N lawmaker Marvi Memon has since withdrawn the proposed amendments.
Family pressure
In the middle of all this, a 17-year-old girl in Islamabad was married to her 32-year-old fiancé at the start of the year. Saira said she was not forced into the wedding and that she would continue her studies after marriage even though her engagement came as a shock.
“My parents had never indicated they wanted to marry me off early, and I hadn’t wanted to either. But my own uncle came to ask for my hand for his son, so my parents felt they couldn’t say no. That’s how it is with families. They did ask me, and I said yes because I thought that is what was expected of me. They are my parents; surely they will make the right decisions for me.”
After a pause she adds, “I think if I want to call it off, no one will object though I am getting used to the idea.”