Rising Divorce Drives Daily Child Visits

Author: Qaiser Sherazi
1 min read

RAWALPINDI:

With the close of 2025, a record and alarming increase has been witnessed in meetings between divorced parents and their separated children at the family facilitation centre of the Rawalpindi Judicial Complex.

The rise, which continued throughout the year on a monthly basis, is primarily attributed to the growing divorce rate.

Previously, meetings with separated children were allowed once a week on a designated day with the permission of a family judge.

However, due to the sharp increase in the number of divorced couples, such meetings are now being held on a daily basis. According to the in-charge of the family facilitation centre, between 45 and 65 divorced mothers, fathers, grandparents and close relatives visit the centre daily to meet children.

On a weekly basis, 360 to 390 divorced couples visit the facility, while the monthly figure ranges between 9,000 and 10,500. From January 1 to December 31, 2025, a total of 22,185 divorced parents met their estranged children at the centre.

These meetings often present emotional and heart-rending scenes.

Children who live with their mothers after divorce are visited by fathers, grandparents, aunts and uncles, while children living with fathers where mothers have remarried are visited by maternal relatives including grandmothers, grandfathers and aunts.

Parents bring pizzas, burgers, juices, cakes, sweets, chicken roast and pulao for the children, along with toys, garments, shoes, bicycles and cash gifts. Each meeting lasts between 30 and 40 minutes, and at one time, 15 to 20 couples can meet their children at the facility.

Parents and elders visiting the centre voiced serious complaints about the condition of the facility. Visitors including Waris Ali, Masood Khan and Iftikharuddin said the waiting area is completely open to the sky, with cement and iron benches that are impossible to sit on during severe cold.

They said the benches remain wet and dirty due to morning dew and are never cleaned. There is no drinking water facility, and parents are forced to wait under the open sky. A small plastic shed exists, but rainwater enters from all sides, leaving visitors soaked.

They demanded construction of a proper roof, replacement of iron and cement benches with chairs, arrangements for protection from sun and rain, and expansion of the centre to allow at least 50 parents to meet children at one time.

They also called for converting the single-storey building into a triple-storey facility and introducing an online meeting system to ease difficulties.

The parents’ central demand was that instead of meetings at court facilitation centres, children should be handed over to the estranged parent twice a month for a full day, against strict guarantees and surety bonds.

They suggested that CNICs and passports of visiting parents and relatives be deposited as security for one day. This, they said, would provide children with a more homely environment during meetings.

Article (Opinion) published in Express Tribune on January 1st, 2026. 

Previous Story

Pakistan to Enter 2026 as Fifth-most Populous Country

Latest from Blog

Pakistan to Enter 2026 as Fifth-most Populous Country

ISLAMABAD: The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) says that as Pakistan enters 2026 as the world’s fifth most populous country, with a population exceeding 225 million, high population growth and fertility rates, persistent gender inequality, and rising climate vulnerability, the urgency of addressing population dynamics has intensified. These realities underscore…

Over 2,000 Cybercrime Suspects Arrested This Year

RAWALPINDI: The National Cyber Crime Investigation Agency (NCCIA) has investigated 2,196 cybercrime cases this year, including ransomware attacks, online fraud, data breaches, and cyber-enabled financial crimes. It has also detained 2,902 suspects and disrupted five significant organised cybercrime networks that would operate both domestically and abroad in the current year.…

Another Child Dies in Karachi after Falling into Manhole

An eight-year-old boy, Dilbar Ali, lost his life after he accidentally fell into a manhole in Mehran Town, Sector 6-G of Korangi Industrial Area. The sad incident is one more tragedy, highlighting administrative negligence and the persistent danger posed by uncovered sewerage infrastructure in Karachi. According to police and residents,…

Motorcycle Licences at 16 in Punjab: Mobility, Maturity and the Burden of Responsibility

The newly proposed initiative has opened a deeper debate about accountability, maturity, enforcement and whether the state is regulating reality or retreating from responsibility. LAHORE: In early December 2025, a province-wide traffic enforcement drive in Punjab created a controversy after police registered over 4,600 cases and arrested around 3,100 people in 72…

Man Arrested on Charges of Raping Girl in AJK

MUZAFFARABAD: Police in the Jhelum Valley district of Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) arrested a mosque imam (prayer leader) and Quran teacher in the early hours of December 28 on charges of raping a nine-year-old girl. Station House Officer (SHO) Hattian Bala Manzar Hussain Chughtai told Dawn that at around…
Go toTop