Nepal: An 18-year-old girl from Muktikot village of Sappata region in ward 1 of Swamikartik Khapar Rural Municipality got married two years ago. A grade 10 student at the time, she quit her studies and soon became a mother. Her daughter is now nine months old.
In
Mutikot village, several young girls below the age of 20 are already mothers.
The
18-year-old’s neighbour, a 19-year-old girl, has an eight-month-old baby who is
currently ill. The young mother is worried sick about her child as she does not
know what ails her infant.
Most
young boys and girls of Muktikot drop out of school before grade 10 and get
married. By the time they reach their early 20s, they are parents to at least
two children.
Dil
Bahadur Rokaya, a teacher at Raghumata Secondary School in Sappata, said
underage marriage is a decades-old problem in Sappata and it does not show any
signs of abating.
“Since
mid-April 2023, four female students studying in grades eight, nine, and ten
have dropped out of school after getting married,” said Rokaya. “While most
girls who get married early stop coming to school as they get busy with
household work and familial life, the boys start looking for ways to earn money
to support their new family.”
According
to the 19-year-old young mother, there are 255 Dalit families in Muktikot of
Sappata and most of the young people in the families are already married.
“There is not a single family who can depend on their agricultural output to
see them through the year. So our husbands leave the village to look for jobs
to support us,” she said. Her 20-year-old husband went to India for employment
last November.
It is
customary for young married boys of Musikot to go to India looking for jobs as
there are no income-generating opportunities in the village. Paucity of arable
land also makes it difficult for the families to survive on farming.
Early
marriage and teen pregnancies have had adverse effects on the health of young
mothers, says Mala Shahi, auxiliary nursing midwife of Muktikot Basic Health
Centre. Women in Muktikot are facing several health problems such as anaemia,
asthma, organ failure, and uterine diseases, among others.
“Young
women age rapidly due to their poor health and lack of nutritious food during
and after pregnancy,” she said. “They also refuse to visit the health post even
if they are suffering from health issues. It’s the lack of awareness that keeps
them away. They think it is normal practice to marry young and have children
soon after. They do not think about the repercussions on their health.”
However,
when a free health camp was set up in the rural municipality last September,
864 women from Muktikot came for checkup.
Bhakta
Kaila, senior auxiliary health worker of the health unit of the Swamikartik
Khapar Rural Municipality, said, “Of all the women who came for checkup from
Muktikot, 435 were suffering from serious illnesses. Most were ailing from
uterine prolapse, vaginal bleeding, vaginal discharge, and asthma.”
The
specialist doctors at the camp concluded that most health issues faced by the
women of Muktikot were due to early marriage, teen pregnancy, frequent
pregnancies, poor nutrition, and insufficient rest during and after pregnancy.
Ajaya
BK, chairman of ward 1 of Swamikartik Khapar Rural Municipality, said that
after men leave the village to earn money, the women work day and night to take
care of family members.
According
to the data of a ‘smart survey’ conducted by the Health Directorate,
Sudurpaschim Province on 467 children between the ages of six to 59 months from
nine local units in Bajura in the last fiscal year, 48.8 percent were stunted,
30.6 percent were underweight, and 8.6 percent were suffering from severe acute
malnutrition.
DN Giri,
data management officer at the directorate, said that 51.2 percent of children
in Swamikartik Khapar Rural Municipality are underweight, which is the highest
among local units in the district. The national prevalence of underweight
infants during birth is 12 percent. Similarly, the number in Sudurpaschim
stands at 20 percent.
“The
directorate has made plans to reduce the number of underweight children to 1.4
percent by 2030, but it will be very difficult to achieve that goal in remote
areas such as Swamikartik Khapar,” said Giri.
The
study revealed that 55.8 percent of children in Swamikartik Khapar were
stunted, 51.2 percent were underweight, and 11.6 percent had severe acute
malnutrition.
According
to Gyanendra Dawadi, province coordinator of the Multi Sector Nutrition Plan
(MSNP), among the nine local units of Bajura, children of Swamikartik Khapar
Rural Municipality, Jagannath Rural Municipality, and Himali Rural
Municipalities—in the northeast region of the district—are highly affected by
malnutrition.
“In
Muktikot of Sappata, most women with poor economic conditions give birth at a
young age and have many children. They do not seek treatment in health
institutions in times of need, and do not get enough rest during and after
pregnancy,” said Dawadi.
Ajay BK,
ward chair of ward 1 of Swamikartik Khapar Rural Municipality, said their
efforts to control child marriage have not been successful due to deep-rooted
traditions.
“In one
year, we separated 12 teenage couples who were married and living together, but
the parents did not agree with our decision,” said BK. “Also, the 12 girls were
pregnant so we did not take action against their underage marriage,” said Ajay.
According
to the District Health Office, Bajura, in the fiscal year 2022-2023, out of the
total 3,061 deliveries in the district, 435 were under 20 years of age.
Post Photo: Arjun Shah
The
National Census 2021 puts the number of married women and men in Bajura at
69,098 and, among them, 49,810 got married before the age of 20. Among the
underage marriages, 30,627 were women and 19,183 men.
The law
bars marriage before the age of 20. But in most rural communities in the
northeast region of Bajura, including Swamikartik Khapar's Sappata, where child
marriage is common, women and men do not register their marriages.
According
to ward chair Ajay BK, most underage married couples do not even have
citizenship certificates.
“For
newborns, birth registration is mandatory to get child support allowance,
scholarships, and other financial assistance provided by the government. Most
underage parents do not register the births of the child to avoid legal
hassles,” said BK. “Some doctor their documents to increase their legal age.”
The
Constitution of Nepal has guaranteed children’s fundamental right to be
protected from violence, abuse, trafficking, and early and forced marriages.
Article 39 Clause (5) states that no child shall be subjected to child
marriage, transported illegally, kidnapped, or taken hostage. These actions are
punishable under federal law.
Children
who are victims of such actions have been guaranteed the right to receive
compensation from the perpetrators, including their parents, according to the
law. But the reality in places like remote Swamikartik Khapar’s Sappata is
quite different.
Controlling
early marriages and teen pregnancies is getting increasingly hard in Himali
Rural Municipality too as the parents themselves encourage their wards to marry
young, says Govinda Bahadur Malla, the rural municipality chairman.
“Compared
to the past couple of years, the practice of child marriage has decreased. But
in the rural areas where people stick to age-old customs, it has not gone
down,” said Malla.
Bharat
Bahadur Rokaya, chairman of Swamikartik Khapar Rural Municipality, said that in
remote areas, especially in poor families where there is a shortage of food and
other resources, girls are seen as a liability, so the parents marry them off
at an early age.
“We have
for long been conducting awareness campaigns to control child marriage, but
have not been very successful. Currently, we are planning to get help from the
police to increase public awareness and inform people that child marriage is a
punishable crime,” said Rokaya.
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