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The parents of a 14-year-old Pakistani Christian girl, who was abducted, forcibly converted to Islam and married off to her abductor, have moved the Supreme Court after a lower court ruled that marriage with an underage girl is valid as per the Sharia law if she has had her first menstrual cycle.
Their counsel Tabassum Yousuf on Friday, 7 February, said they would seek justice from the Supreme Court after the Sindh High Court, as per the Sharia law, said earlier this week that even if the girl, Huma, was found to be underage, the marriage between her and her alleged abductor, Jabbar, would be valid as she has already had her first menstrual cycle.
After the parents approached the Sindh High Court to see their daughter, the court, in a hearing on 3 February, ordered the police to oversee the tests to confirm her age.
However, Judges Muhammad Iqbal Kalhoro and Irshad Ali observed that under the Sharia law, the marriage would be valid even if Huma was underage.
Tabbasum said that the ruling was not in accordance with the Sindh Child Marriage Restraint Act passed in 2014 which outlawed marriages of girls under 18 years, in a bid to stop forced marriages of minors in the province, primarily of Hindu and Christian community.
The parents had requested to keep Huma at a women's shelter away from her alleged husband until her age was determined.
Tabassum said the parents produced documents including church, school documents confirming Huma's age to be 14.
On the website of the Independent Catholic News, the girl's mother has appealed to the international community to support them.
The latest case has emerged amidst an increasing number of forcible conversions of girls belonging to the minority communities in Muslim-majority Pakistan. In the last one month, at least two cases of forced conversion and marriage of Hindu girls after abduction have emerged in the province.
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