New Delhi: PovertyUnemployment and serious economic problems in Ghur province Afghanistan has led to child marriage, and many families are allowing their young girls to marry middle-aged men in exchange for money, weapons, weapons Or livestock, Raha Press reported.
The report said that some shocking stories have come to the fore where families have sold their one-year-old daughters for money, livestock and weapons.
The buying and selling rate of an underage girl is usually between 100,000 and 250,000 Afghans in the province.
According to sources, if the buyer does not have the cash, he will give arms or cattle to the girl’s family in return.
According to the report, such incidents occur more in remote districts of the state than in the national capital.
buy and sell girls or child marriage Exchange for money was common before, but after the fall of the Afghan government and the ensuing economic turmoil, more families are forced to take this route.
Habiba Jamshedi, a women’s rights activist in the west of the country, said that women constitute half of the society’s population and should not be treated in an inhuman or un-Islamic manner.
Jamshedi said that families who are ignorant of the laws of girls and women misuse them.
Jamshedi stressed that one of the reasons for child marriage is the lack of proper awareness about the role and status of women, the report said.
Taliban Officials in Ghor province declined to comment on the issue.
The report said that some shocking stories have come to the fore where families have sold their one-year-old daughters for money, livestock and weapons.
The buying and selling rate of an underage girl is usually between 100,000 and 250,000 Afghans in the province.
According to sources, if the buyer does not have the cash, he will give arms or cattle to the girl’s family in return.
According to the report, such incidents occur more in remote districts of the state than in the national capital.
buy and sell girls or child marriage Exchange for money was common before, but after the fall of the Afghan government and the ensuing economic turmoil, more families are forced to take this route.
Habiba Jamshedi, a women’s rights activist in the west of the country, said that women constitute half of the society’s population and should not be treated in an inhuman or un-Islamic manner.
Jamshedi said that families who are ignorant of the laws of girls and women misuse them.
Jamshedi stressed that one of the reasons for child marriage is the lack of proper awareness about the role and status of women, the report said.
Taliban Officials in Ghor province declined to comment on the issue.
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