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India among five countries account for half of child marriages

child marriage

Five countries, including India, account for about half of the child marriages in the world, according to a new UNICEF analysis. Apart from India, the other countries that add to child brides are Bangladesh, Nigeria, Ethiopia and Brazil.

The analysis  ‘COVID-19: A threat to progress against child marriage’, pointed out that ten million additional child marriages may occur before the end of the decade as a result of Covid 19 pandemic. It said that this threatened years of progress in reducing the practice.

The analysis noted the proportion of child marriages decreased by 15 per cent, from nearly one in four to one in five. This means that about 25 million girl child marriages  were averted in the last ten years. “This remarkable accomplishment is now under threat. Over the next decade, up to 10 million more girls will be at risk of child marriage because of COVID-19, “said the UNICEF analysis released on International Women’s Day.

UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore noted that Covid -19 pandemic has made an already difficult situation for millions of girls even worse. “Shuttered schools, isolation from friends and support networks, and rising poverty have added fuel to a fire the world was already struggling to put out. But we can and we must extinguish child marriage,” she said.

Fore pointed out that the International Women’s Day was a moment to “remind ourselves of what these girls have to lose if we do not act urgently – their education, their health, and their futures.”

The UNICEF said that girls marred at a young age face serious lifelong consequences. They are more likely to experience domestic violence and less likely to remain in school. It increases the risk of early and unplanned pregnancy. It could also isolate girls from family and friends, taking a heavy toll on their mental health and well-being.

COVID-19 IMPACT IN FIVE WAYS

PREVENTION

Social protection programmes and poverty alleviation strategies are central to preventing child marriage and improving the economic and social conditions that make girls more vulnerable. Conditional cash transfers can intervene in improving girls’ retention or progress in school and delay child marriage. Cash or in-kind transfers with delayed marriage as a condition have as much as a 50 per cent success rate in forestalling child marriage.

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