In recent years, one of the
bright spots on women’s rights globally has been growing awareness of how
harmful child marriage is — and increasing efforts by countries around the
world to end it.
Sadly, not in Indonesia.
The Constitutional
Court missed a chance last month to help the millions – yes, millions – of
Indonesian girls who are marrying as children, under the age of 18. Indonesia’s
1974 Marriage Law permits women and men to marry as they choose once they reach
21, but allows girls to marry at 16 with parental permission. Boys must wait
until they are 19 to marry with parental permission.
Because a large
proportion of marriages in Indonesia are arranged by parents, the parental
permission exception doesn’t protect girls, but instead establishes the age at
which many are forced to marry. According to Unicef, 17 percent of girls in
Indonesia are married before they reach 18. Three percent of girls marry before
15.
Six Indonesian women’s
rights activists — Indri Oktaviani, Yohana Tantiana, Dini Anitasari,
Sa’baniah, Hidayatut Thoyyibah, Ramadhaniati — along with the Children
Human Rights Foundation (YPHA) asked the court to rule that no girl could marry
before 18. They argued that the law violates rights guaranteed by the
Indonesian constitution, discriminates against women and violates Indonesia’s
international obligations.
In an 8-to-1 vote, the
judges rejected the petition, upholding the 1974 Marriage Law’s provisions on
age. They wrote that there “was no guarantee that with increasing the age from
16 to 18 there will be a reduction of divorce rates, health improvements and
reduction of other social problems.”
There is overwhelming
evidence that child marriage has devastating consequences for girls. Such
unions often result in early pregnancy, which carries serious health risks —
including death — for both mothers and babies. Married girls are unlikely
to stay in school, and more likely to live in poverty. They’re also more likely
than women who marry at a later age to face domestic violence.
The court’s ruling
should not be the end of this story.
Indonesia is a party
to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
(CEDAW), and the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Under these core human
rights conventions, Indonesia is legally obligated to protect the rights of
girls and women, including the right to be free from discrimination, to the
highest attainable standard of health, to education, to free and full consent
to marriage, to choose one’s spouse, and to be free from physical, mental, and
sexual violence. The current marriage law violates these rights.
Yohama Yembise, the
minister of women’s empowerment and child protection in the government of
President Joko Widodo, has spoken out against the court’s ruling. Her ministry
should work with activists to draft legislation to reform the 1974 Marriage
Law, setting 18 as the minimum age of marriage. The president should support
this reform.
Indonesia’s House of
Representatives should also get involved in this important issue and support
administration reforms setting the age of marriage at 18. But if Joko’s
government proves unwilling to act, the House should take the lead.
The Constitutional
Court’s ruling should not be seen as a defeat for ending child marriage in
Indonesia. Instead, it should galvanize the Joko government, the House and
Indonesian activists to work together not only to change the law, but to change
public thinking about how best to protect Indonesia’s girls.
Heather Barr is a
senior researcher on women’s rights at Human Rights Watch.
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