A 16-year-old girl pleads with her parents not to barter her into a marriage.
Komol, from India,
dreamed of continuing her education, going to college and providing a
better life
for her parents. But what she wanted counted little.
She became pregnant with her first child at age 16, in a marriage she did not want.
"Since then, I have
hardly ever been allowed to step out of the house," Komol was reported
as saying, in a United Nations Population Fund report released
Wednesday. "Sometimes, when the others are not at home, I read my old
school books, and hold my baby and cry."
"She is such an adorable little girl, but I am blamed for not having a son."
One in every five girls
(about 19%) gives birth before she turns 18 in developing countries,
according to the report. Of the 7.3 million girls who give birth every
year, 2 million of them are under the age of 14.
The report states that
pregnancies -- especially for these girls -- "are not the result of a
deliberate choice" but rather "the result of an absence of choices and
of circumstances beyond a girl's control," affecting their health,
education and future job opportunities.
"For these very young
adolescents who do not have a say in whether or when they will become
pregnant, their futures are destroyed, and their basic human rights are
violated," said Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, the executive director of the
United Nations Population Fund in an e-mail.
Countries with the
highest percentage of reported births before age 18 were mostly in West
Africa, in countries such as Niger (51%), Chad (48%), Mali (46%) and
Guinea (44%).
Globally, adolescent
births are declining. But they are increasing in three regions -- South
Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America.Source: CNN
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