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Bangladesh govt intensifies efforts to end child marriage with UN support

Bangladesh govt intensifies efforts to end child marriage with UN support

Photo: Courtesy

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Over the next four years (2024-2027), UNFPA and UNICEF aim to achieve significant milestones through the joint work plan by engaging over 1,200,000 adolescent girls (aged 10-19) in life skills or comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) interventions

Desk Report

Publisted at 4:52 PM, Wed Jun 5th, 2024

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The Ministry of Women and Children Affairs, in collaboration with UNFPA and UNICEF, has launched Phase III of the Global Programme to End Child Marriage (GPECM), aiming to reach the most marginalized communities and bolster efforts to end child marriage by 2030.

The new phase focuses on strengthening the legal framework, increasing education completion rates, and shifting social norms, reads a press release.

Despite a downward trend in some districts, child marriage remains prevalent among underprivileged, uneducated, and rural girls.

While addressing the launching event Simeen Hussain (Rimi), the state minister at the Ministry of Women and Children Affairs said, “Eradicating child marriage is a cornerstone of our commitment to safeguarding the rights of children in Bangladesh. We commend the collaborative efforts of UNFPA and UNICEF and affirm our commitment to working closely and effectively to implement the National Plan of Action to End Child Marriage and roll out the Child Marriage Restraint Act. We also must focus on the behavioural aspect for changing people’s outlook as law alone cannot change what is being practised for long.”

The Prime Minister of Bangladesh has publicly pledged to abolish marriages for girls under the age of 18 by 2041.

Supporting the government, the Global programme will leverage multi-sectoral, scalable, and evidence-based interventions to ensure the full execution of the National Plan of Action to End Child Marriage.

“Currently, the rate of reduction of child marriage in Bangladesh is only 2.1% per year, which means it will take Bangladesh over two centuries — 215 years — to eliminate child marriage,” said Kristine Blokhus, country representative to UNFPA Bangladesh.

"Keeping girls in school is a game changer. Increased, targeted investments in sexual and reproductive health services and comprehensive sexuality education equip adolescent girls with the tools to make informed decisions about their bodies and lives and empower them as agents of change and future leaders," she added.

"UNICEF is entering this new phase with a renewed commitment to empowering every child, especially rural adolescent girls and young women with life skills,” said Stanley Gwavuya, OIC representative of UNICEF in Bangladesh.

“Working in districts with a high prevalence of child marriage, we will work with partners to address the root causes, engage key actors, and provide comprehensive support to both unmarried and married adolescent girls," he added.

During the previous phases, UNFPA and UNICEF collaborated closely to assist the government in reaching 5.5 million girls, analysing factors driving child marriage, empowering grassroots organizations, and strengthening services and protection for vulnerable girls in Bangladesh.

Over the next four years (2024-2027), UNFPA and UNICEF aim to achieve significant milestones through the joint work plan by engaging over 1,200,000 adolescent girls (aged 10-19) in life skills or comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) interventions.

Additionally, over 6,100,000 individuals will be reached with mass media messaging on child marriage, the rights of adolescent girls, and gender equality. The program will also involve 2,174,300 individuals and 1,206,413 boys and men in group education and dialogue sessions to address harmful masculinities and gender norms.

The joint efforts of UNFPA, UNICEF, and partners underscore the collective determination to ensure every girl and boy in Bangladesh can enjoy their childhood and thrive to their full potential without the threat of child marriage.

In particular, the initiative will address the root causes of child marriage such as poverty, gender-based violence, limited access to sexual and reproductive health services, climate shocks, and humanitarian emergencies.

Launched in 2016, the UNFPA-UNICEF Global Programme to End Child Marriage is the largest global initiative to address child marriage.

It is supported globally by the Governments of Belgium, Canada, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, the United Kingdom, the European Union, and Zonta International.

 

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