Ufrivillige ekteskap

Kriminaliserer tvangsekteskap

Storbritannia vil kriminalisere tvangsekteskap med en øvre strafferamme på fem år. Den nye loven annonseres denne uken etter pågående debatt om en høy utbredelse av praksisen, også overfor barn. Om den rotfestede praksisen kan stoppes ved lovgivning, er nok lite sannsynlig. Myndighetene er særdeles sent ute, nå over 50 år siden de første vandret inn fra land som India og Pakistan.

Hege Storhaug, HRS

”Moderne slavehandel”, er hva statsminister David Cameron har definert tvangsekteskap som. Det anslås at mellom 5 – 8 000 tvangsgiftes årlig på de britiske øyene, og der det yngste eksemplet er ei jente på fem år. Ifølge Home Office tvangsgiftes flere hundre mindreårige årlig. Nå vil myndighetene kopiere Norge. Det skal sendes et signal til aktuelle grupper om at praksisen ved kriminell ved å innføre en særlov.

HRS har ved flere anledninger tatt til ordet mot særlovgivning knyttet til tvangsekteskap og kjønnslemlestelse.

Families who coerce their children into a forced marriage could face up to five years in jail under legislation to be announced by the Prime Minister this week.

The new law will criminalise the practice, which occurs in some ethnic communities.

Forcing someone into wedlock would become a criminal offence in its own right under the proposals.

Breaching an existing forced marriage civil protection order – which prevents a young person being made to marry against their will – would also be a criminal act, punishable by five years in prison.

The Home Office says the number of forced marriages is increasing and estimates that there are between 5,000 and 8,000 cases in England a year. Most involve families from Afghanistan, North and East Africa, India, Bangladesh, Iran, Iraq, Pakistan and Turkey.

A source said: ‘The Government wants to be seen to be sending out the message to families within these communities that this kind of thing will not be tolerated any more.

‘The Prime Minister wants to stamp this out and feels that he will have the support of the public behind him.’

Earlier this year a report from the Government’s Forced Marriage Unit revealed that a five-year-old girl had become Britain’s youngest victim of forced marriage. She was just one of 400 children to receive assistance from the unit in 2011. More than a quarter of the 1,500 cases last year involved minors.

Every year hundreds of young people are at risk of being taken abroad by their parents to be forced to marry against their will.