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NEW
MEASURES TO END FORCED MARRIAGES
(27 October 2004)
New
laws and a specialist taskforce to promote human rights and protect
victims are at the heart of a Government drive to prevent forced
marriages, the Home Office announced today. The new measures build
on existing work with public agencies, the voluntary sector and
community leaders to raise awareness of forced marriage and to encourage
victims to seek support and advice. They also strengthen immigration
controls in order to break the cycles of violence that follow forced
marriage.
The
package includes:
- a
new joint Home Office-Foreign Office Forced Marriage Unit;
- a
consultation to be launched later this year on whether to create
a specific criminal offence of forcing someone into marriage;
- forced
marriage to be targeted as a specific abuse in the revision of
key inter-agency guidance on safeguarding and promoting the welfare
of children which will have statutory backing;
-
the minimum age for marriage entry clearance will be raised from
16 to 18
-
an additional forced marriage entry clearance post to be created
in Islamabad to help reluctant spouses and increase our ability
to support victims.
Home
Secretary David Blunkett said: "Forced marriage is simply an
abuse of human rights. It is a form of domestic violence that dehumanises
people by denying them their right to choose how to live their lives.
The appalling practice of forced marriage represents the opposite
extreme and that is why Government is taking tough action to eradicate
it.
"It
is very encouraging that a large number of community and faith leaders
and voluntary organisations have come forward to take a full part
in raising awareness of these problems and the support that is available.
We look forward to working in close co-operation with them and hearing
what they have to say through our consultation exercise."
Foreign
Secretary Jack Straw said: "Our
High Commissions and Embassies work intensively with police and
judiciary overseas to stop Britons being forced into marriage. In
difficult and stressful conditions our consular staff have removed
victims from situations of extreme emotional and physical trauma.
They have rescued victims who have been held captive, raped or forced
into an abortion.
"However,
more can certainly be done and we hope these new measures will drive
forward increasingly effective co-operation between all those groups
who are determined to tackle the abuse, both in the UK and overseas."
Commenting
on today's government announcement about new measures to tackle
forced marriages Aneeta Prem, magistrate member of the Metropolitan
Police Authority, said: "I welcome plans being considered by
ministers to tackle the unacceptable practice of forcing someone
to marry against their will. Almost
1,000 cases of suspected forced marriages have been dealt with by
the UK authorities since 2000, mainly involving links to south Asian
countries. Many UK forced marriages involve people from Pakistan,
Bangladesh or India, but it should be noted that cases are also
reported from East Africa, the Middle East, other parts of Asia
and even Eastern Europe."
"We
should also recognise that forced marriages are not just a women's
issue - although we are talking about a much smaller number, men
are sometimes forced into marriage too.
"It
is common to confuse forced marriages with arranged marriages. They
are fundamentally different - a forced marriage is when one or both
parties are coerced into marriage completely against their will,
while an arranged marriage can be a very successful and happy union
between consenting individuals and their families.
Aneeta
concluded: "In recent years I have heard some truly horrific
examples of young women who have suffered mental and physical torture,
rape, kidnap and in the most extreme cases have even been murdered.
These accounts indicate to me the need for urgent and concerted
action to tackle what is an unacceptable abuse of universal individual
rights. I welcome the wide spread consultation announced and look
forward to real progress being made against this often hidden crime."
Over
the last five years the Government has achieved increasing success
in dealing with this abuse, including:
-
The establishment in 2000 of the Community Liaison Unit (CLU)
in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office which has dealt with almost
1000 cases of forced marriage and has rescued and repatriated
around 200 young people from overseas.
-
The production of extensive guidance for social workers and police
officers. This has lead to increasing awareness in the statutory
sector of the abuse, with hundreds of cases coming to light and
being successfully resolved. Further guidelines for education
professionals will be released at the end of this year.
-
Close work with refuges, NGOs and community groups to raise awareness
of the abuse amongst potential victims. We have produced and distributed
widely the leaflet 'Forced Marriages Abroad: Your Right to Choose',
which was designed jointly with women's groups working on the
issue.
DOMESTIC
VIOLENCE, CRIME & VICTIMS BILL
The
Government's Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Bill is the biggest
overhaul of domestic violence law in 30 years, proposing tough powers
for the police and the courts to protect victims and prosecute abusers.
These include:
*
making common assault an arrestable offence;
* making breach of a non-molestation order a criminal offence,
punishable by up to five years' imprisonment; and
* giving courts the power to impose a restraining order where
a defendant has been acquitted but the court believes the victim
needs protection.
It
builds on the Government's ongoing reform of the criminal justice
system, rebalancing the process in favour of victims and witnesses.
Further
information on work to tackle forced marriage is available at www.homeoffice.gov.uk/comrace/race/forcedmarriage/index.html
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