Afghans 'marry off' baby girls for dowries as starvation looms

An Afghan girl holds a doll during a protest outside the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) office to urge the international community to help Afghan refugees, in New Delhi, India, August 23, 2021.

An Afghan girl holds a doll during a protest outside the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) office to urge the international community to help Afghan refugees, in New Delhi, India, August 23, 2021. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis

What’s the context?

Afghanistan's economic meltdown following the Taliban's takeover 100 days ago is pushing destitute families to marry off young daughters - and even baby girls, campaigners say

By Emma Batha and Shadi Khan Saif

LONDON/ISLAMABAD - Jobless and engulfed in debt, Afghan brick kiln worker Fazal said the country's imploding economy had left him with a stark choice - marry off his young daughters, or risk the family starving to death.

Last month, he received a $3,000 dowry payment after handing over his 13- and 15-year-old daughters to men more than twice their age. If the money runs out, he may have to marry off his seven-year-old, he said.

"I had no other way to feed my family and pay off my debt. What else could I have done?" he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation from the Afghan capital, Kabul. "I desperately hope I won't have to marry off my youngest daughter."

Child marriage has increased in tandem with soaring poverty since the Taliban seized power 100 days ago on Aug. 15, with reports of destitute parents even promising baby girls for future marriage in exchange for dowries, women's rights activists said.

Go DeeperAfghanistan: Life under the Taliban
Afghan schoolgirls clutch UNICEF textbooks as school materials are distributed to students in Kabul, March 25, 2002. REUTERS/Jim Hollander
Go DeeperRanks of Afghan girls barred from school swell under Taliban rule
An Afghan boy holds food grains in his cupped hands in central Kabul December 5, 2001. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
Go DeeperAs famine stalks Afghanistan, West urged to rescue stricken economy

They predicted the rate of child marriage - which was prevalent even before the Taliban's return - could nearly double in the coming months.

"It paralyses (my) heart hearing these stories ... It's not a marriage. It's child rape," said prominent Afghan women's rights campaigner Wazhma Frogh.

She said she was hearing of cases every day - often involving girls under 10 years of age, although it was not clear if young girls would be forced to have sex before reaching puberty.

U.N. children's agency UNICEF said there were credible reports of families offering daughters as young as 20-days old for future marriage in return for a dowry.

Crippled by drought and economic collapse, Afghanistan is set to become the world's worst humanitarian crisis, according to U.N. agencies.

As winter sets in, they said millions were on the brink of starvation, and 97% of households could fall below the poverty line by mid-2022.

The hardline Islamist group's sudden return to power saw billions of dollars in Afghan assets frozen abroad and most international aid halted. Food prices have rocketed and millions are jobless or have not been paid.

Frogh said families were marrying off their girls to reduce the number of mouths they had to feed, and to obtain dowries, which typically range from $500 to $2,000, with younger children attracting higher sums.

Parents are also handing over daughters to settle debts. Frogh cited a case in which a landlord had taken a distraught tenant's nine-year-old girl when he could not pay his rent.

In northwest Afghanistan, she said another man had left his five children at a mosque because he could not feed them. The three girls, all thought to be under 13, were wed the same day.

"The number of cases has increased so much because of starvation. People have nothing and cannot feed their children," said Frogh, founder of the Women & Peace Studies Organization, which works with grassroots women leaders across the country.

"It's completely illegal, and not allowed in religion," she added.

UNICEF said it had started a cash assistance programme to help cut the risks of hunger and child marriage, and was liaising with religious leaders to stop ceremonies involving underage girls.

Before the Taliban took over, the legal minimum marriage age was 16 for girls - below the internationally recognised minimum of 18.

The Taliban say they only recognise Sharia law which does not stipulate a minimum age, leaving it open to interpretation.

Rising debt

Brickworker Fazal said his problems began when the economic crisis halted construction work. Like his fellow labourers, he had been paid upfront - $1,000 for six months' work.

With demand for bricks drying up, his boss told him to hand back his advance, but Fazal, who only gave his first name, had already spent much of it on medical treatment for his sick wife.

Local residents said many other kiln workers had also been forced to marry off young girls to repay advances.

The most recent national data show 28% of girls in Afghanistan marry before they reach 18, and 4% before 15.

But Frogh and Afghan women's rights activist Jamila Afghani predicted that up to half of girls could be forced into marriage before they turn 18 if the crisis continued.

Girls who wed young are at higher risk of marital rape, domestic abuse, exploitation and dangerous pregnancy complications.

"It ruins their lives - their psychological, emotional, physical and sexual health," said Afghani, president of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's Afghan section, which has 10,000 members across the country.

"These girls are often treated as servants, as slaves."

Afghani said activists had recently intervened to stop the marriage of a nine-year-old girl to a man in his 30s for a 50,000 Afghani ($538) dowry in Ghazni province in the southeast.

Schools shut

Rights experts said the Taliban's closure of girls' high schools was also pushing parents to marry off their daughters.

"The two most important risk factors for driving child marriage are poverty and the lack of access to education," said Heather Barr of Human Rights Watch, who has worked with women in Afghanistan for more than six years.

The Taliban, which banned girls' education when last in power from 1996-2001, have said they will eventually be able to resume school, but have not clarified under what conditions.

Donors want to use aid as leverage to ensure the Taliban uphold girls' and women's rights.

But Barr said life-saving assistance was needed immediately, adding that delays would leave more families destitute and more girls at risk of marriage.

"You are not doing women's rights any favours by starving women to death," she said.

($1 = 92.9300 afghanis)


Context is powered by the Thomson Reuters Foundation Newsroom.

Our Standards: Thomson Reuters Trust Principles


An Afghan woman holds her phone after an election campaign by Afghan presidential candidate Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai in Kabul June 8, 2014

Part of:

Afghanistan: Life under the Taliban

Three years ago, the Taliban took Kabul. From spiraling poverty to banning women from education, here are our stories on the impact

Updated: September 11, 2024


Tags

  • Gender equity
  • Wealth inequality
  • War and conflict
  • Economic inclusion
  • Underground economies




Get ‘Policy, honestly’ to learn how big decisions impact ordinary people.

By providing your email, you agree to our Privacy Policy.


Latest on Context