Did You Know?
- Hundreds of young people, particularly girls and young women – some as young as 13 year olds – are forced into marriage each year in Britain. Some are taken overseas to marry whilst others may be forced to marry in the UK.
- The Forced Marriage Unit (FMU) deals with about 400 cases every year – many of them involving minors.
- Boys and young men are also victims of forced marriage. About 15 per cent of the FMU’s cases involve boys and/or young men being forced to marry against their wishes.
- Forced marriage is not the same as an arranged marriage in which both spouses can choose whether or not to accept the arrangement. In a forced marriage, one or both spouses do not consent to the marriage or consent is extracted under duress, including physical and emotional pressure.
- Forced marriage can involve child abuse, including abduction, violence, rape, enforced pregnancy and enforced abortion.
- Refusing to marry can place a young person at risk of murder, sometimes also known as ‘honour killing’.
- Forced marriage is not sanctioned within any culture or religion.
- The majority of cases in the UK involve South Asian families, but also families from East Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Africa.