DSWD, dev’t partners join hands to curb child marriage

By Zaldy De Layola

April 30, 2024, 6:54 pm

<p><strong>NO CHILD MARRIAGE.</strong> The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) holds a consultation workshop in Surigao City on April 23-26, 2024. The DSWD and development partners joined hands to curb child marriage. <em>(DSWD photo)</em></p>

NO CHILD MARRIAGE. The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) holds a consultation workshop in Surigao City on April 23-26, 2024. The DSWD and development partners joined hands to curb child marriage. (DSWD photo)

MANILA – The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) is working with members of the newly created Committee on Child Early and Forced Marriage and Unions (CEFMU) for a united campaign to prevent early marriages and unions as well as changing the norms that perpetuate the harmful practice of child marriage.

“As part of our efforts to help curb child marriages, the DSWD, through its program development arm -- the Social Technology Bureau – is working with development partners in a series of workshops toward the co-creation and model-building of a Child Protection Systems Strengthening (CPSS) for CEFMU,” DSWD spokesperson Irene Dumlao said in a news release on Tuesday.

These DSWD partners include the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), civil society organizations such as Oxfam Pilipinas, government agencies, and local government units (LGUs).

Dumlao, assistant secretary for Disaster Response and Management Group, said the Department hosted a consultation workshop from April 23 to 26 in Surigao City to facilitate the model-building of a CPSS for CEFMU, a committee under the Council for the Welfare of Children.

The DSWD also held a similar workshop on April 15-18 in Sagada, Mountain Province which involved youth, parents, community leaders, and implementers, in the design thinking process for social technology development.

Dumlao said the workshops are in support of the implementation of Republic Act (RA) 11596, otherwise known as “An Act Prohibiting the Practice of Child Marriage and Imposing Penalties for Violations Thereof.”

“These efforts are also toward the attainment of Sustainable Development Goal No. 5.3. or lowering the proportion of women who were married before 18, and before 15 years of age,” she said.

The result of the workshops will form part of the social technology or model of intervention for CEFMU that will be designed, pilot-tested, and evaluated, together with the outputs from the other areas, specifically in the Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR), Region 8 (Eastern Visayas), and with the learning exchange in Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM).

RA 11596 was signed into law on Dec. 10, 2021. The DSWD is tasked to oversee the implementation of the law and provide different preventive, rehabilitative, and developmental programs and services, including those that address the prevalence of child marriage.

The department also plays an active role in awareness campaigns on the negative effects of child marriage.

Under the law, any person who performs or officiates a child marriage will face imprisonment of up to 12 years and a fine of not less than PHP50,000. The law also provides that any person who causes, fixes, facilitates, or arranges a child marriage will be imprisoned for up to 12 years. (PNA)


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