'What choice do I have?": coronavirus fallout sending Afghan children into work or marriage

Thank you for your reading and interest in the news 'What choice do I have?": coronavirus fallout sending Afghan children into work or marriage and now with details

Hind Al Soulia - Riyadh - The economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic is pushing Afghan children into early marriage or labour work and away from education.

Few children in Afghanistan have suffered severe coronavirus-related health issues, but pandemic-induced economic hardships see families exposed to inequalities that many richer countries don’t face.

Just over half of the young nation - about 64 per cent are under the age of 25 - live below the poverty line, according to United Nations figures; and while many have managed to get by pre-pandemic, they have now either exhausted their savings or lost opportunities for a daily income.

Halime has experienced just that: at twelve years old, her parents decided that marrying off their daughter would be the only way to financially survive. Now engaged, Halime is due to move in with her husband within the next year. Her price? About $2,600 - or two lakh in the local currency.

She doesn’t quite have a concept of what marriage means. “I will make tea and cook for my husband,” she said shyly from her small house in a camp for internally displaced people in the country’s Herat province.

Halime, 12, is engaged. Stefanie Glinski/ The National
Halime, 12, is engaged. Stefanie Glinski/ The National

Her parents have lived here for the past three years, initially fleeing conflict in the neighbouring Ghor province, barely surviving on a daily labourer wage.

“Work has now dried up,” her father Juma Gul, 47, explained, blaming the pandemic for his current dilemma.

“It’s not that I want to marry her off, but what choice do I have?” he asked.

Sadly, Halime’s situation isn’t an exception. Throughout Afghanistan, children have suffered tough consequences when it comes to Covid-19.

Abdul, a nine-year-old who attended school in Kabul prior to the lockdown, says he now spends most of his days in the market, trying to sell ‘bolani’, a type of vegetable-filled bread common in Afghanistan.

“On my first day of work, I was yelled at constantly. “Go away boy,” they tell me. Sometimes people even hit me,” he said.

While he doesn’t mind the work so much, it’s the harassment that scares him. “My mother always tells me to be careful, to stay in the market and to not go home with people,” he explained.

Afghan policemen stand guard at a check point during Eid Al Fitr, a Muslim festival marking the end of Ramadan. REUTERS

Children play during Eid Al Fitr. Reuters

A religious scholar speaks as Muslim devotees offer prayers at the start of the Eid Al Fitr. AFP

A religious scholar speaks as Muslim devotees offer prayers at the start of the Eid Al Fitr. AFP

Afghans leave after prayers during Eid Al Fitr at a mosque in Kabul. REUTERS

An Afghan man leaves after prayers during Eid Al-Fitr at a mosque in Kabul, Afghanistan. REUTERS

An Afghan man gestures after the prayers during Eid Al Fitr at a mosque in Kabul, Afghanistan. REUTERS

A man sits outside the Pul-e Khishti mosque at the start of the Eid Al Fitr festival in Kabul on May 24, 2020. AFP

A health worker checks the body temperature of a Muslim devotee as a preventive measure against the Covid-19 coronavirus at the start of the Eid Al Fitr at Wazir Akbar Khan mosque in Kabul. AFP

Afghan men take part in prayers during Eid Al Fitr at a mosque. REUTERS

Afghans leave after prayers during Eid Al Fitr at a mosque in Kabul. REUTERS

A security officer stops motorists at a checkpoint on a road at the start of the Eid Al Fitr festival. AFP

Muslims offer prayers at the start of the Eid Al Fitr at the Wazir Akbar Khan mosque in Kabul on May 24, 2020. AFP

An Afghan man wearing a protective face mask takes part in prayers during Eid Al Fitr. Reuters

Afghan policemen take part in prayers during Eid Al Fitr in Kabul, Afghanistan May 24, 2020. REUTERS

Men offer Eid Al Fitr prayers outside a mosque in Kabul. AP

An Afghan boy prepares sweets at a traditional bakery for Eid Al Fitr holiday to mark the end of Ramadan. AP

Afghan men prepare sweets at a traditional bakery for Eid Al Fitr holiday to mark the end of Ramadan. AP

Afghan men prepare sweets at a traditional bakery for Eid Al Fitr holiday to mark the end of Ramadan. AP

1a837b53ef.jpg

Even before the spread of the coronavirus, about a quarter of Afghan children between the ages of five and 14 already worked, with half of them not attending school. These numbers have now peaked.

“There are many dangers on the streets and since the pandemic, children have faced an increasingly tough time as many more families send their kids out to make an income,” Sonia Nezami, education director at Action for Development told The National.

“In the markets and on the streets, children are considered cheap labour and Covid-19 has increased the abuse and hardships they face.”

Afghanistan has seen over 30,000 Covid-19 infections, but with few testing centres and a backlog in sample evaluation, official numbers are likely far larger. The International Rescue Committee estimates 40 per cent of all tests for the virus have come back positive in a report released in June.

The spread of the virus has hindered other essential health work, including vaccination programmes to guard against other dangerous diseases. When it comes to polio, the virus couldn’t have come at a worse time.

“Since the beginning of the year, we have given out more than 20,000 vaccines. We had just five days left to finish vaccinating the entire province of Herat when Covid19 hit,” explained Unicef’s polio vaccination officer Dr Ahmad Shah Ahmadi, who says vaccinations have been put on hold due to the pandemic.

Nargis, a one-year-old girl, has missed several of her vaccinations, but her mother Nadaf, 35, is now trying to have her catch up. “We didn’t think about vaccinations or even visiting the doctor. Everywhere we went, we feared contracting the virus,” Nadaf said.

Polio has almost been eradicated in Afghanistan but sees sporadic surges. It continues to threaten children’s lives and can cause paralysis.

In another part of Afghanistan, high up in Badakhshan’s mountains, Nasima, 10, is struggling with yet another reality of the pandemic: her school has been closed for months.

Afghanistan’s schools were in crisis before the pandemic and the number of children studying is falling as conflict escalates and donor funding ends, Heather Barr, Human Rights Watch’s Co-Director for the Women’s Rights Division said.

“Thirty-five per cent of Afghan girls marry as children, and being out of school is associated with child marriage. Afghan girls who did not study are three times as likely to marry before age 18 as girls who completed secondary education,” she wrote.

Nasima’s mother Dona Gul, 30, said it is unlikely that her daughter will return to education, even if school reopen. A widow, Ms Gul mainly relied on her sons working as farmers or labourers in a nearby town, but the pandemic has dried up work and pushed salaries down.

“Nasima is the first one in the family to attend school. I wanted her to continue her schooling, but I have few options: she will either have to work or if there is a suitable match, she might get married,” shesaid, adding that a bride’s dowry would be enough cash to get the family through the coronavirus crisis and further.

She admits that it’s not the perfect option. Having been married at age 14 herself, she hoped to offer her daughter a better future - until Covid-19 hit Afghanistan.

“It is simply about survival,” she said.

“Our family hasn’t been sick, but we’re struggling to cope. Sending my boys to work and debating marrying off my daughter - these are the consequences of the coronavirus - and we have little alternative.”

Updated: July 7, 2020 12:53 PM

These were the details of the news 'What choice do I have?": coronavirus fallout sending Afghan children into work or marriage for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you with all that is new.

It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at The National and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.

PREV US House to vote on long-awaited $95 billion Ukraine, Israel aid package
NEXT Barrage of Russian attacks aims to cut Ukraine's lights