“Their lives are valued so low that, if you ask men, they’ll be willing to spend money to save their livestock, but not their wives,” said Nabila Malik, director of advocacy at Rahnuma-Family Planning Association of Pakistan. Fortunately, Malik and her colleagues have been working to change that reality, and things seem to be turning around with this recent, unanimously-supported, landmark ruling.
Now that a precedent has been set, some people have hope that Sindh's anti-child-marriage law could be replicated in other provinces and enacted nationally. But, others, like H.E. Khawar Mumtaz, chairperson of the National Commission for the Status of Women, point out that a law isn't enough; it must also be enforced. “Greater awareness among those responsible for implementing [the law] is needed,” Mumtaz told The News. “Greater monitoring and accountability systems are required.”
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