By Golnar Ghazivakili and Muriel Weyermann
Although they have been outlawed for centuries, Bangladesh remains the country with the second highest rate of child marriages. Girls who are married off at a young age are often pressured to get pregnant as soon as possible, which makes child marriage a catalyzing factor for teenage pregnancies. They become housewives and mothers, which leaves them with no education or prospects in the employment market. If we want to combat teenage pregnancy, we must simultaneously tackle the continued forcing of young girls into marriage. Women’s Hope International is working in Bangladesh to reduce child marriage and sustainably change misconceptions.
A third of Bangladeshi girls is married off before the age of 18. This inevitably leads to early teenage pregnancies, which brings many health risks and diminishes their access to education and employment. They remain in the poverty spiral and face the risk of suffering from obstetric fistula, a birth injury leading to constant pain, incontinence, and social exclusion. Moreover, girls who are physically and emotionally not mature enough to conceive have a higher risk of dying during pregnancy or childbirth (UNFPA, 2022). Furthermore, studies show that babies who are born to teenage mothers can have lower survival rates (ibid.). Teenage pregnancy thus increases when girls are denied their sexual and reproductive rights (Plan International, 2022).
The high rate of child marriage and subsequent teenage pregnancies is mainly due to cultural factors and occurs mostly in poverty-stricken areas of Bangladesh. One deciding aspect is women’s social standing. In a patriarchal society like Bangladesh, women and girls are denied the right to control their own bodies. Their roles in society are fixed as child bearers and care givers. Unmarried women are bestowed with low social standing and are prone to sexual harassment and rape. Fear of social stigmatization leads families to believe that marrying their daughter is the morally right choice. As wives, girls are seemingly protected from other men.
In a patriarchal society like Bangladesh, women and girls are denied the right to control their own bodies. Their roles in society are fixed as child bearers and care givers.
Although national laws have been in place to prohibit child marriage for centuries, and revised in 2017 to the “Child Marriage Restraint Act”, they are easily bypassed, due to a “special provisions”. Due to a corrupt political system, those who permit child marriage are rarely prosecuted because they are well connected with powerful people in relevant institutions. There is thus a certain impunity for illegally marrying a child and forcing it into teenage motherhood. Moreover, only a third of the children in rural areas possesses a birth certificate, and their age is often forged on the marriage certificate (Plan International, 2020).
Teenage pregnancy is often also tied to a lack of understanding and communication of contraception for young girls who have or will be married off. Sexual health and birth control are taboo in the majority of religious communities of Bangladesh. Hence, often girls are not offered education on their contraceptive choices and safe sex. This is also due to the patriarchal and religious ideal of women as child bearers and the idea that sex is only permissible when it results in reproduction.
Moreover, only a third of the children in rural areas possesses a birth certificate, and their age is often forged on the marriage certificate.
Together with our local partner organization LAMB, Women’s Hope has implemented a project with the aim to combatting child marriage for the last four years (mid-2018 – mid-2022) in Parbatipur, which is a large district in Northern Bangladesh, counting 300’000 residents, who live in one of the lowest income settings of the country.
The focus lied not merely in preventing forced marriages, but also in detecting early married girls who need support in making their own decisions and offering them information on the dangers of child marriage as well as access to health services.
Measures taken to put an end to child marriage and teenage pregnancies in Bangladesh confront the different aspects discussed above. They intend to reduce cultural, social, and financial factors which catalyze child marriage and are divided in desired project outcomes:
The focus lied not merely in preventing forced marriages, but also in detecting early married girls who need support in making their own decisions and offering them information on the dangers of child marriage as well as access to health services.
The COVID-19 pandemic has unfortunately also taken its toll on our project. Educational institutions were closed for 18 months, 543 days – one of the world’s longest coronavirus shutdowns (Aljazeera, 2021).
During lockdown, more underaged girls at risk of getting married off as they were forced to stay home from school (UNICEF, 2021). During the COVID-19 crisis, the project postponed activities which required mass gathering, and project staff restricted field movement due to the lockdown. However, they continued e-based communication with various stakeholders, community people, and adolescents. They also advocated to get support for the most vulnerable pregnant women and mothers through food packages.
Women’s Hope works to ensure the sustainability of the project to end child marriage by directly including families and communities. Permanent change can only be sustained in an environment willing to adapt their cultural misconceptions. Therefore, those involved in the project take ownership and responsibility. Some illustrative preliminary results of the end line evaluation are as follows:
Permanent change can only be sustained in an environment willing to adapt their cultural misconceptions.
Due to the project’s success and its evident necessity in fighting child marriage, Women’s Hope continues to work with LAMB on the Ending Child Marriage project in Bangladesh. Incorporating the feedback of girls and women during the field visit in February 2022 and the recommendations of the end line report, an additional focus will lie on integrating boys in the process of educating and awareness raising. If sustainable change is to be achieved, boys must become allies to girls’ empowerment. The project will profit from men’s role in delaying marriage at a young age and ideally preventing child marriage. Additionally, including boys could also have a positive effect towards gender equality. Men and boys’ engagement with women’s issues alongside them is vital to achieve lasting change in social norms.
Women’s Hope together with LAMB will continue to strive for a world in which girls and women have control over their own bodies and can exercise their reproductive and sexual rightsIf sustainable change is to be achieved, boys must become allies to girls’ empowerment. The project will profit from men’s role in delaying marriage at a young age and ideally preventing child marriage.