In my three years as Minister for Family and Community Services and Minister for Women, I saw many shocking situations. One which shocked me more than most was that of a young girl, barely 13 years old, who had allegedly entered into an “arranged marriage” to a man twice her age.
If this shocks you – and it should – then think of the girls we do not hear about. In the case of the 13 year old, the response from caseworkers and police was swift, but more often the crime is hidden by a towering brick wall of cultural silence.
Let’s take the shocking case of Raina Farrah, an Australian girl taken to Syria and forced into marriage as a teenager. Of course, this prompted a whole lot of questions, many published here on Mamamia.
Trouble is, in communities where forced underage marriage is acceptable or even encouraged, these questions aren’t asked. Mothers don’t ask the police to free their daughters, and fathers don’t ask permission to punish their daughters who disobey.
What happened to Raina – this extraordinary young woman – also happens, we suspect, to other young Australian girls. Taken from school, shipped overseas, married and made pregnant. Returning here to live with their family until miraculously, on their eighteenth birthday, a man arrives from overseas and legally marries her.
It’s all so horrible, but solutions are not simple.
Last month the Premier Mike Baird and I launched with the Federal Government the Second Action Plan to Reduce Violence Against Women and their Children. The plan recognises forced underage marriage as an issue that must be addressed by all Australian governments.