One girl under 15 married every seven seconds, says Save the Children

Reuters
October 11, 2016

LONDON: One girl under15 is married every seven seconds, according to a report by Savethe Children released on Tuesday, with...

LONDON: One girl under15 is married every seven seconds, according to a report by Savethe Children released on Tuesday, with girls as young as 10married off - often to much older men - in countries includingAfghanistan, Yemen, India and Somalia.

Early marriage not only deprives girls of education andopportunities but increases the risk of death or childbirthinjuries if they have babies before their bodies are ready.

"Child marriage starts a cycle of disadvantage that deniesgirls the most basic rights to learn, develop and be children,"said Save the Children International CEO Helle Thorning-Schmidt.

"Girls who marry too early often can´t attend school, andare more likely to face domestic violence, abuse and rape.Theyfall pregnant and are exposed to STIs including HIV."

The report ranks countries from the best to the worst inwhich to be a girl, based on child marriage, schooling, teenpregnancy, maternal deaths and number of female lawmakers.

Niger, Chad, Central African Republic, Mali and Somalia wereranked at the bottom of the index.Researchers say conflict, poverty and humanitarian crisesare major factors that leave girls exposed to underage marriage.

The shutting down of schools in the wake of the Ebolaoutbreak led to an estimated 14,000 teen pregnancies in Sierra
Leone during the Ebola outbreak, Save the Children said.

The global charity gave the example of Sahar, who did notwant to give her real name, a teenage Syrian refugee inLebanon.

Married to a 20-year-old man, aged just 13, Sahar isnow two months pregnant."The wedding day, I was imagining it would be a great daybut it wasn't.It was all misery.It was full of sadness," Savethe Children quoted Sahar as saying.

"I feel really blessed that I am having a baby.But I am achild raising a child."

The UN's children's agency UNICEF estimates the number ofwomen married in childhood will grow from 700 million today toaround 950 million by 2030.Save the Children´s report coincides with International Dayof the Girl on Tuesday, which was set up by the United Nationsin 2011 to recognise the rights of the 1.1 billion girls aroundthe world and the challenges they face.


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