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Sunday, 26 July 2015

Indian child bride, 13, writes letter begging to stop marriage but father vows to continue


An Indian groom puts vermilion on the forehead of his underage bride during a mass marriage in the village of Malda in 2006.
A 13-year-old girl in India has written a letter begging her headteacher to save her from becoming a child bride.
The pupil, named as Duli Hembrom by Indian media, reportedly failed to convince her parents against the match and turned to her school.
She said the wedding, set for tomorrow in Jamshedpur, could stop her completing her education at Milan Mithi Uchha Vidyalaya.
“I do not want to get married,” pleading with the headteacher to stop the marriage in any way possible.
“I took an oath at the time of admission that I will not get married before I turn 18. I do not wish to get married early.


father, Lachhu Hembrom, told the Hindustan Times that the wedding would go ahead and child marriage was common in their society because it was “difficult to find a suitable match for a grown-up girl”.
Jharkhand, the state in which Duli lives, is one of the worst for child marriage in India, with more than 40 per cent of women married or in a union by the age of 18, according to UN statistics.
Around 18 per cent of girls in the country are married by the age of 15 and 47 per cent by the time they are 18.
The United Nations Population Fund (UFNPA) said the practice is a human rights violation that remains widespread in developing countries where there is poverty and gender inequality.

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