Indonesia’s Child Bride
Shame
Statistically, around 1,000 girls are
married every day in Indonesia, which means the nation has one of the most
alarming child marriage rates in the Asia-Pacific region. Because of the
widespread practice of nikah siri – marriages that are not registered
or recognized by the state – the exact figures on child marriage in the country
remain hard to ascertain.
Poverty, culture and religion are all
elements that contribute to the widespread practice, one that has unfortunately
found support from some of the decision makers.
In 2015, Indonesia's Constitutional Court
refused to raise the legal marriage age to 18 during a judicial review of the
1974 Marriage Law. That decision will no doubt increase the number of child
brides throughout the archipelago. Ironically, the court reached its decision
amid a global campaign to end child marriage.
The current Marriage Law sets the minimum
age for girls to marry at 16. The law also includes a clause that allows girls
under the age of 16 to marry, if their parents obtain a dispensation from the
local Religious Court.
These dispensations are in large part
granted to families who do not wish to live with the perceived shame of having
an unwed, pregnant daughter. Dispensations are also often extended to families
who only suspect their daughters of engaging in sexual relations.
Unplanned pregnancies are a driving force
behind child marriage, and unfortunately these are largely caused by cultural
and religious taboos against sex education and the use of contraceptives.
One of the many tragic results borne out
of the high frequency of child marriages and child pregnancies in Indonesia is
the striking maternal and infant mortality rates.
Poverty and a lack of adequate sex
education are both causes and effects of child marriage that, when coupled with
family and communal traditions, result in a dangerous cycle of poverty and
suffering for the young women involved.
A 2016 report by Unicef notes that girls
who are married are 11 times less likely to be enrolled in school when compared
to unmarried girls of similar age.
The National Commission on Violence
Against Women (Komnas Perempuan) has stated that child marriage is a form of
gender-based violence. As the commission's deputy chairwoman, Yuniyanti
Chuzaifah, once said: "The state, by continuing to permit child marriage
in Indonesian society, is failing to uphold the rights of girls, the same
rights that the state has committed to protect by signing various international
human rights treaties."
Education Minister Muhadjir Effendy, who
accompanied Jokowi during Monday's meeting with Unicef, explained that the
government will use its 12-year compulsory education program to try to prevent
child marriages by keeping children in school.
Along with ensuring that children finish
their schooling, the government should also move to enact legislative change
and engage in public campaigns to tackle the disturbing prevalence of child
marriage in Indonesia.
Jack Britton is a writer and
volunteer with Komnas Perempuan in Jakarta.
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