Government responding to issue of child marriage in KP

1 min read

Child brides make up half of the women in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa who suffer from psychological and physical health issues, according to expert Dr Lubna Safeer. Such women are provided counselling and healthcare in two districts of Hazara Division, but these services should be extended to other areas as well, Dr Lubna of the Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health Project told Dawn here.

She said the project was initiated by the government in Mansehra, Malakand, Swabi, Mardan, Chitral, Lakki Marwat, Dir, Nowshera, Haripur, and Dera Ismail Khan districts in 2021 as a pilot project to check child marriages and address their impacts, but couldn`t be stretched over to other districts in the province.

`Upper and Lower Kohistan, KolaiPalas, and Torghar, where child marriage cases are very high but mostly go unreported, haven`t been included in that pilot project,` she said.

Dr Lubna said the basic purpose of the initiative was to assess the mental and sexual health of adolescents at the age of puberty, so the programme`s coverage should be extended to the rest of Hazara Division.

She said depression, marriage adjustment, anxiety, miscarriages, feeble health and medical issues, and iron deficiency were common health issues among child couples, especially girls.

‘Multiple awareness sessions are held at our centres, schools, and colleges with local communities and even at the residences of child marriage victims in collaboration with family welfare workers, she said.

Dr Lubna said the data collected in Mansehra showed that 50 per cent of couples facing health and psychological issues were those who were married off as children.

She said child or early marriages were not taken seriously in society, though they had devastating impacts for couples, especially women.

Acknowledgement: Published in Dawn News on 6th March 2024.
Previous Story

Ministry may finally prepare new education policy

Next Story

Juvenile offenders get exemption in punishments

Latest from Blog

Why Students Cheat

On social media, a wave of videos recently exposed students using advanced gadgets to cheat in examinations. While the focus has been on policing misconduct, a deeper issue remains unexamined: students are not disengaging from education because of a lack of discipline, but because they increasingly question its value. For…

In Unsafe Hands

AN HIV outbreak among children should have been a turning point for Taunsa’s main public hospital. Instead, an investigation by the BBC suggests that little has changed. Undercover footage from the Tehsil Headquarters Hospital, filmed about eight months after the government’s crackdown in March 2025, shows syringes being reused, injections administered through clothing, and unqualified…

Mpox Cases Rise to 25 as Two More Test Positive in Sindh

KARACHI: Two more patients have tested positive for mpox — one in Karachi and the other in Khairpur — on April 14, raising the provincial tally to 25 with, nine deaths this year. Sources told Dawn that all the cases are being linked to local transmission. According to a statement released by the health…
child marriage

Ending Child Marriages

THE Punjab Assembly’s committee approval of the Child Marriage Restraint Bill, 2026, is a welcome and necessary step. By setting 18 as the minimum legal age for marriage for both genders, the province moves to correct a long-standing imbalance and protect children from a practice that has scarred generations. The…

No End to Resistance to Vaccine: Minister

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Health Mustafa Kamal on April 14 said resistance against vaccines could not be mitigated despite spending tens of millions of dollars by Unicef. The minister stated this while chairing a meeting which reviewed the expenditures and measurable impact of the ongoing vaccination awareness campaigns. During a…
Go toTop