Shame on US: Congress defeats bill to protect girls from dangerous child marriages
The US House of Representatives just defeated S. 987 (The International Protecting Girls by Preventing Child Marriage Act), despite passing unanimously in the Senate. By failing to pass the Child Marriage bill, our country turns a blind eye to practices enslaving children into marriage.
Here's the update from the Washington Post's Post Partisan blog.
Ironically, the background published at GOP.gov for the Republicans in Congress makes a good case to PASS the bill:
"The United Nations Children's Fund estimates that 60 million girls in developing countries between the ages of 20 and 24 were married before they reached the age of 18. Experts estimate that the number will increase by 100 million over the next decade if current trends continue. Child marriage is often carried out through force or coercion. In some countries, it is not uncommon for girls as young as seven or eight years old to be married. Marriage at an early age puts girls at greater risk of dying as a result of childbirth. Pregnancy and childbirth complications are the leading cause of death for women 15 to 19 years old in developing countries.
Some Members may be concerned that Foreign Affairs Committee Ranking Member Ros-Lehtinen sought changes in the text of S. 987, but, those were not accepted by the Democrat Majority. Rep. Ros-Lehtinen has introduced those provisions as a stand-alone bill. CBO estimates that the Ros-Lehtinen bill (H.R. 6521) would cost no more than $1 million in outlays over five years, while S. 987, as passed by the Senate, would cost an estimated $67 Million in outlays over five years. H.R. 6521, while removing the language in S. 987 that would create the $67 million in costs, would nevertheless provide for: (a) Sense of the Congress statements that child marriage is a violation of human rights and that its prevention should be a goal of US foreign policy; (b) a requirement for a multi-year strategy to prevent child marriage in developing countries; (c) a requirement for a subsequent report on the strategy, including an assessment of current US efforts to prevent child marriage; and (d) inclusion of reporting on practices of child marriage in annual Human Rights reports and reports by the Secretary of State on countries that are proposed recipients of US security assistance.
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