In late October, Malaysia’s Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad issued a directive to state officials: raise the minimum age for marriage to eighteen years old.
The move came after a huge public outcry earlier this year after a 41-year-old Malay man married an 11-year-old Thai girl named Ayu. The man, Che Abdul Karim Che Abdul Hamid, was a successful rubber trader. Ayu, who became his third wife, was the daughter of an employee who worked for a family business.
The case has highlighted the issue of child marriage in Southeast Asia, a part of the world where modernization and rapid economic development has sometimes co-existed uneasily with traditional religious and cultural practices.
On this edition of Global Journalist, a look at child marriage in the region, where Islamic law, local traditions and human trafficking all contribute to the phenomenon.
Joining the program:
- Yen Duong, Vietnam-based journalist
- Shareena Sheriff, advocacy manager for Sisters in Islam, a Malaysian women's rights group
- Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, UN Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children
- Grace Agcaoili, child protection specialist, UNICEF East Asia and Pacific office
Assistant producers: Elliot Baumann, Shirley Tay
Supervising producer: Yanqi Xu
Note: This program is audio-only.