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SocietyPakistan

Stolen childhood: A Pakistani child bride speaks out

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Ali Kaifee in Islamabad
February 8, 2026

The childhood of 17-year-old Humaira ended in a forced marriage she was too young to understand. She is now trapped by grueling domestic labor and haunted by a lost pregnancy — one of many girls left behind in Pakistan.

Child marriage remains a widespread and deeply rooted problem in Pakistan, where millions of girls are married before they turn 18 despite legal restrictions. Poverty, entrenched traditions and social pressure continue to drive the practice, cutting short girls' education and exposing them to health risks and lifelong hardship.

Experts stress that early marriage also harms girls' development, limits their future opportunities and reinforces cycles of poverty. Growing calls for reform urge families to delay marriage and allow girls to stay in school, build independence and choose their own futures.

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