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Archive for the ‘Forced Marriage’ Category

Rape, forced marriage and mutilation – women tell their harrowing stories to Home Secretary

Amber Rudd visited The Halo Project which supports victims of forced marriage, FGM and domestic abuse.

Survivors of domestic abuse and forced marriage told their harrowing stories to one of the UK’s most senior politicians.

Home Secretary Amber Rudd visited charity The Halo Project, which supports victims of forced marriage, domestic abuse , honour based violence and female genital mutilation.

She was there to find out how the Home Office could further support the project and combat extremism.

Mrs Rudd spent around an hour with the charity in central Middlesbrough and heard some inspiring and shocking stories from survivors.

One woman, who did not want to be named, spoke of her journey from her native Nigeria to Middlesbrough.

She said: “I was on the verge of committing suicide.

“I was a victim of domestic violence and I was forced to marry someone.

“I tried to run from my life because it was the only way I could get myself out.

http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teesside-news/rape-forced-marriage-mutilation-women-13556857

Forced marriage law is failing

Only one in 30 suspected forced marriages in England is leading to a prosecution.

In the past seven years 8,170 cases of suspected forced marriages were identified by the government’s forced marriage unit. There have only been 395 referrals to the Crown Prosecution Service since 2010, however, of which 268 prosecutions were completed, according to the CPS’s violence against women and girls reports.

During the same period, about 1,250 forced marriage protection orders were issued to protect girls and women at risk, and assist with repatriating victims. Last year 246 were issued, up from 217 in 2015.

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/forced-marriage-law-is-failing-l82r6pprv

Parents accused of breaching forced marriage order by trying to fly children out of UK

Parents accused of trying to take their children out of the country in the breach of a “forced marriage” court order have appeared before Teesside’s top judge.

The Teesside man and woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, appeared at Teesside Crown Court on Thursday.

They are accused of breaching a forced marriage protection order by trying to take their children out of the country.

They have not yet entered pleas.

They were stopped at the departure gate at Newcastle Airport on August 5 last year.

It is alleged they tried to board a flight to Dubai with their children aged four to 15, with a connection flight booked to Islamabad in Pakistan.

The forced marriage protection order was imposed at Middlesbrough County Court in January 2016.

Such orders are imposed to prevent forced marriages or protect people in a forced marriage.

Their case has now been adjourned until September 7 for further investigations to take place.

http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teesside-news/parents-accused-breaching-forced-marriage-13459685

‘Darkness masked in lightness’: the designer using a board game to avoid arranged marriage

In 2016, the Pakistani designer Nashra Balagamwala attended her best friend’s wedding in Karachi. She was approached by an older woman, who asked about her relationship status. “You’re 22 and you’re still single?” the lady gawked.

“She was in shock I wasn’t getting engaged any time soon,” said Balagamwala, who now lives in New York City. “It infuriated her before she walked off.”

Pakistani women can face incredible pressure to wed at a young age. Balagamwala has worn fake engagement rings to weddings, cut her hair to look less feminine and even “become more tanned and therefore more unappealing”, she said.

Now she wants to shed light on arranged marriage in a new board game called Arranged!, which will be released on her website on Wednesday.

The strategy game follows three young Pakistani women as they try to avoid a matchmaker. There are escapist tactics and genuine ways to finding Mr Right.

“My parents have tried to have me married off multiple times,” said Balagamwala. “I want to avoid an arranged marriage without upsetting my parents too much.”

In 2012, Balagamwala started studying at the Rhode Island School of Design. Since graduating last year, she has worked at Hasbro, which makes Monopoly and Jenga, but her parents want to her to return to Karachi, just as her one-year work visa expires.

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2017/aug/08/nashra-balagamwala-pakistan-arranged-marriage-board-gamearranged-marriage-board-game-nashra-balagamwala-pakistan

Close loopholes that allow forced child marriage in the UK

The NSPCC report of increasing calls in relation to forced marriage (Report, 31 July) is alarming. In 2016 more than a quarter of cases dealt with by the Forced Marriage Unit involved under-18s. Child marriage is a harmful practice that has severe, lifelong consequences and is a violation of human rights under international law.

Childline and charities like ours provide support for children at risk but are not the whole solution. The increase indicates a need for urgent action and is a damning indictment of the government’s response to child marriage. Despite the criminalisation of forced marriage, loopholes remain. Eighteen is the legal age for marriage in England, Wales and Northern

Ireland but legislation allows marriage of 16- and 17-year-olds with parental consent, which can mean coercion. In Scotland, the minimum age of marriage is 16 and does not require parental consent.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/aug/03/close-loopholes-that-allow-forced-child-marriage-in-the-uk

Safe houses set up in secret Tees Valley locations for domestic abuse victims

VULNERABLE women will be given a new lease of life with the launch of a housing service for those fleeing abuse.

The Navigator Scheme, recently launched in six local authorities across the North-East, will provide accommodation to women who cannot live in traditional refuges.

There are a many reasons why some escaping domestic abuse and violence may not thrive in a communal refuge, according to charity My Sister’s Place.

Some women may not be comfortable living in such an environment for cultural reasons, while others may have struggled to find stable accommodation due to mental health issues, criminal records or issues with substance misuse.

The charity is hoping the acquisition of new properties will help those who are unable to live in traditional refuges the opportunity to get back on their feet again.

Based in Middlesbrough, My Sister’s Place were recently given the keys to one property in the town and are in the process of acquiring another, with the view of expanding the service if needed.

As part of the project, other organisations in Redcar, Hartlepool, Stockton, Darlington and Durham are working with local authorities to help women.

Middlesbrough’s Halo Project, which helps victims of honour based violence and forced marriages, are working to manage housing specifically for women from black, minority and ethnic backgrounds.

http://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/15421400.Safe_houses_set_up_in_secret_locations_for_domestic_abuse_victims/

Parents in court accused of breaching ‘forced marriage’ order by trying to take children to Pakistan

The man and woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, appeared at Teesside Magistrates’ Court

Parents accused of breaching a forced marriage protection order by trying to take their children out of the country have appeared in court.

The Teesside family, who cannot be named for legal reasons, were stopped at the departure gate at Newcastle Airport on August 5 last year.

The man and woman are accused of trying to board a flight to Dubai with their three daughters and son aged four to 15.

Teesside Magistrates’ Court heard that prosecutors say the family also had a connection flight booked from Dubai to Islamabad, in Pakistan.

This allegedly put the pair in breach of a forced marriage protection order imposed at Middlesbrough County Court in January 2016.

http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teesside-news/parents-court-accused-breaching-forced-13327460

A teenage girl dies every 20 minutes through pregnancy or childbirth, latest figures show

‘It is unacceptable that so many girls are dying simply because they do not have access to contraceptives, or because of myths or cultural barriers’

One teenage girl dies every 20 minutes around the world as a result of pregnancy or childbirth, according to new figures which show pregnancy remains the number one killer of girls aged 15 to 19.

Nearly 30,000 teenage girls die every year from complications arising through pregnancy or childbirth, with girls from poorer families and rural areas most at risk, according to the charity Save the Children.

Pregnancy-related problems such as bleeding, blood poisoning, obstructed labour and complications resulting from unsafe abortions are the leading causes of death among older teenage girls around the world.

Babies born to teenage mothers are also at greater risk of infant mortality than those born to slightly older mothers, with the mortality rate 30 per cent higher for babies born to teenagers than for those born to women in their 20s.

Although the overall rate of pregnancy and childbirth-related deaths has been declining steadily since 1990, in many countries thousands of girls each year become pregnant before their bodies are ready – sometimes through forced marriage or rape.

http://www.independent.co.uk/News/health/teenage-girl-dies-every-20-minutes-through-pregnancy-or-childbirth-save-the-children-foreign-aid-a7834571.html

There have been 110 forced marriages in Hertfordshire in the last three years

A new report has found that there has been 110 forced marriages in Hertfordshire in the last three years.

Between April 2013 and February 2017, Hertfordshire Constabulary recorded more than 100 cases of forced marriages, in which 77 per cent of victims were found to be female.

The findings have been published in a report called Honour Based Violence and Abuse, Female Genital Mutilation and Forced Marriage: Shaping Services for Priority Victims in Hertfordshire.

The research was conducted by the University of Roehampton and the University of Essex after being commissioned by the police and crime commissioner.

Findings also show that there has been a further 160 crimes that constitute as honour based abuse.

http://www.hertfordshiremercury.co.uk/there-have-been-110-forced-marriages-in-hertfordshire-in-the-last-three-years/story-30419044-detail/story.html

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