SOCIETY: STOLEN INNOCENCE
”I got married at the age of 10 and my bride was also of the same age,” says Veeru, a 40-year-old landless farmer in a village in district Tando Allahyar, 200km northeast of Karachi. Now father of five children — four sons and a daughter — three years ago, he arranged the marriages of his daughter and a son at the age of 10 and 12 respectively, thus repeating what had been done to him.
He followed the dictates of his community and these marriages were the result of ‘Badlo’ or ‘Watta Satta’, local words for marriages arranged in exchange of daughters. “My son, Mithoo, now 15, was in class 5 when he got married but did not go back to school, and my daughter-in-law, Dharmi, was never sent to school as per the local tradition,” reflects Veeru.
Not willing to break the tradition, Veeru is all set to marry his second son, 13-year-old Narain, a class 8 student, in December this year. Veeru is aware of the disruption of his son’s studies but he appears helpless before social pressure.
The dilemma of child marriages in rural Sindh
“If we refuse to marry our children a heavy social fine will be imposed on us along with a community boycott,” he says.
An elderly uncle of Narain thinks that “only the government can stop this tradition from our community as we cannot stop it by ourselves. If the government ensures the implementation of law forbidding child marriages, we will breathe a sigh of relief.”
The dilemma facing Veeru and his community is not an isolated case; child marriages are widespread in rural parts of Sindh as well as other parts of the country. Globally around 15 million girls are married before the age of 18 each year and the practice is most common in rural areas of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, according to Girls Not Brides, a London-based international organisation working on the issue. South Asia has the highest prevalence of child marriage in the world with Bangladesh at the top in the region (52 percent), followed by India (47 percent), Nepal (37 percent), Afghanistan (33 percent) and Pakistan (21 percent) in 2016.
It is believed that education is a key factor that can discourage child marriage. To improve education facilities the Sindh government has increased the allocation for education by 24 percent in the current budget (2017-2018).
However, merely an increase in budgetary allocation will not improve the situation as it has been observed in the past that much of the budget is underutilised — only the non-development part that is spent on salaries is fully utilised. Reforms are necessary in the education sector so as to increase the enrolment and retention levels of children — particularly of girls — to reduce early child marriages.