Child marriage is driven by gender inequality and the belief that women and girls are somehow inferior to men and boys.
In Myanmar, child marriage is also driven by:
● Gender norms: There are restrictive gender roles and limited autonomy for women and girls, who are generally expected to be wives and mothers. Some girls have reported that boys become less interested in them if they pursue education or work.
● Adolescent pregnancy: Unintended adolescent pregnancy, from both consensual and forced sex, has been reported as a factor contributing to child marriage. Frequently, girls and women who are raped are forced to marry the perpetrator in so-called “reparation marriages” to avoid bringing further shame to communities.
● Trafficking: A 2019 Human Rights Watch report revealed cases of trafficking of girls from the states of Kachin and Shan into China, where they are married to Chinese men.
Humanitarian settings can encompass a wide range of situations before, during, and after natural disasters, conflicts, and epidemics. They exacerbate poverty, insecurity, and lack of access to services such as education, factors which all drive child marriage. In times of crisis, families see child marriage as a way to cope with greater economic hardship and to protect girls from increased violence.
In August 2017, armed attacks and violence forced thousands of Rohingya to flee their homes in Rakhine state, Myanmar. Once violence broke out, 742,000 Rohingya, of which more than half were children, sought safety in Cox’s Bazar region of Bangladesh.
In February 2021, Myanmar’s army overthrew the government in a military coup. Following this, the country experienced political and economic turmoil. By October 2023, the fighting intensified, causing 628,000 people to flee their homes in order to escape executions, killings, persecution and torture. Approximately 18.6 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance. Myanmar is currently divided by active ethnic armed conflicts.
Myanmar is also one of the countries at highest risk of natural disasters in Southeast Asia. In May 2023, Cyclone Mocha caused one of the most severe storms, affecting more than 2.3 million people and 930,000 Rohingya refugees.
● 2021 coup and COVID-19: The military in Myanmar seized control on 1 February 2021 after a general election during which Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD) party won by a landslide. The coup and the COVID-19 pandemic have created a situation where women’s rights are being curtailed in Myanmar. A survey in December 2021 found that one-third of women are afraid of walking in their neighbourhoods, even during the day – a sharp comparison to the only 3.5 percent who reported feeling unsafe in their communities in 2019. The compounding effects of COVID-19 and political unrest has negative impacts on women’s security, finances, health and rights, including by increasing the risk of the most vulnerable girls to child marriage.
● Armed conflict and displacement: Ongoing ethnic conflict has resulted in significant rates of forced displacement, placing girls at heightened risk of being married. There have been a number of reports about families resorting to child marriage as a coping mechanism. For example, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), Rohingya girls as young as 11 years old are being forced into marriage by their families in order to reduce the number of children to feed. The UN has reported that high numbers of unaccompanied children and shortages of food are forcing children into marriage. In addition, displacement in camps makes women and girls more accessible to traffickers.
● Violence against women and girls: Myanmar has a documented longstanding history of military-perpetrated sexual violence, particularly in eastern Myanmar. This has increased the number of “reparation marriages”. In some cases, families see child marriage as a form of protection and security from rape. However, child marriage makes girls more vulnerable to rape and other forms of violence in the home. The COVID-19 pandemic and 2021 coup have increased insecurity for women overall, and likely increased domestic violence rates for women, who now have to stay at home more due to the increased fear for their safety in the external environment.