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The Quest To End Child Marriage In Indonesia

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Tuesday, October 15th, 2019
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Indonesia must change its laws to end child marriage in the world’s most populous Muslim country where thousands of girls are trapped in a kind of “hell”, an Indonesian lawmaker said on Monday.

Indonesia has one of the worst records for under-age marriage – its high number of child brides puts it among the top 10 countries worldwide, according to campaign group Girls Not Brides.

The Constitutional court ruled last year to change the minimum marriage age for girls, currently at 16, in a move applauded by women’s rights groups.

The ruling did not specify an increase and gave legislators three years to decide what the new minimum age should be.

 

5 March, 2018, Kediri Village, Lombok  Indonesia: Local girls from left, Holida,18, Suci,18 and Ria,16, walking the streets of the K.R Bedil Utara village after talking with Girls Not Brides Mabel van Orange about child marriage and sexual health issues. The girls were inspired to join the local child protection units to spread the message about the dangers of child marriage often walking the streets of the villages with a megaphone and placards. Picture by Graham Crouch/Girls Not Brides
5 March, 2018, Kediri Village, Lombok Indonesia: Local girls from left, Holida,18, Suci,18 and Ria,16, walking the streets of the K.R Bedil Utara village after talking with Girls Not Brides Mabel van Orange about child marriage and sexual health issues. The girls were inspired to join the local child protection units to spread the message about the dangers of child marriage often walking the streets of the villages with a megaphone and placards.
Picture by Graham Crouch/Girls Not Brides

But a senior lawmaker from the ruling party of Indonesian President Joko Widodo said there have been no progress.

“Why has there has been a lack of response on the child marriage issue? It is as if we don’t care,” said Eva Kusuma Sundari from the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle.

Sundari wants a minimum marriage age of 18 introduced urgently and has the support of 20 lawmakers from different political parties.

“It is like living in hell when a child gets married and made to carry another child,” the 53-year-old told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from Jakarta.

“They lose their freedom, their rights to education and their future. It kills their dreams especially for the girls who cannot continue school,” she added.

Campaigners say the law should be changed because it discriminates against girls, who can marry at 16 whereas the legal age for men is 19.

Poverty and tradition often lead families to marry their children in the Southeast Asia archipelago of 260 million people where one in four girls is wed before they turn 18, according to the United Nations’ children agency, UNICEF.

On average over 3,500 Indonesian girls are married every day and in some cases religious courts have endorsed the marriages of Indonesian girls younger than 16.

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