Khan Mohammad Mallah, Sindh, Pakistan – Asifa* was sitting on the cool earthen flooring of her household’s dwelling when her mother and father entered the room. The solar had begun to set over the small village of 250 households nestled within the coronary heart of Pakistan’s southeastern Sindh province, casting a heat glow over the encompassing arid panorama. Asifa remembers distinctly the scent of dried grass carried by the wind.
Her mom’s face was laborious to learn, however Asifa might inform one thing was completely different at the moment. Her mother and father checked out one another briefly earlier than turning to her. “Your marriage has been organized,” her father advised her.
Asifa was simply 13 years previous.
At first, she didn’t absolutely grasp the state of affairs. Her thoughts went to ideas of latest garments, shiny jewelry, and the celebrations she had heard about from older women within the village. A marriage meant presents, make-up and new outfits.
“I assumed it will be an enormous celebration,” Asifa recollects, her voice heavy as she sits exterior her husband’s dwelling on a vibrant charpai, a woven daybed, and appears out over the cracked earth of the village the place she grew up. She is wrapped in a pale pink dupatta, her younger face framed by darkish hair. Now 15, she is the mom of a child, just a few months previous, whom she holds tenderly in her arms.
Her home of mud and straw stands behind her, its roof thatched and weathered by years of harsh winds, rains and scorching solar.
“I by no means actually understood what marriage would contain,” she says. “I by no means realised that it will indicate being with a person older than me, somebody I didn’t know or select.”
Moreover, she says, her husband is in debt having taken out a mortgage of 300,000 Pakistani rupees ($1,070) to provide to her household once they agreed to the wedding. “He can not pay it again.”
The household’s resolution to marry their 13-year-old daughter off was not one constituted of custom however out of sheer desperation.
Asifa’s mother and father had been laborious hit by the catastrophic floods that ravaged Pakistan in 2022. For generations, her household cultivated rice and greens comparable to okra, chilies, tomatoes and onions within the once-rich panorama of the Foremost Nara Valley, however the rising waters left their fields unrecognisable, swamped and sterile.
The cash the household had hoped to make from their harvests and the small financial savings that they had put aside for his or her daughter’s future all vanished. For months, her mother and father tried to rebuild what that they had misplaced, salvaging what little they may from the remnants of their land, borrowing from kinfolk in an try and make ends meet. However the devastating lack of their crops, together with rising costs of necessities and an absence of entry to wash water, made it inconceivable to remain afloat.
With three different youthful youngsters at dwelling, the couple concluded they may not afford to maintain Asifa, not to mention give her the schooling that they had as soon as hoped for her.
“That they had no different selection,” Asifa says sadly.
Within the village of Khan Mohammad Mallah, the place farming, fishing and livestock rearing are the primary sources of revenue, Asifa’s expertise shouldn’t be uncommon. The floods of 2022 have left deep scars on the group, plunging households, now residing on the mercy of the vagaries of the climate, into excessive poverty.
With properties destroyed, crops washed away and livelihoods shattered, the follow of kid marriage, the place males pay an agreed sum to households in change for marriage to ladies as younger as 9, is on the rise.
Final 12 months, there have been 45 recorded circumstances of youngsters – principally women, however some boys as effectively – beneath the age of 18 being married on this one village alone, in keeping with Sujag Sansar, an NGO working to fight youngster marriage within the area.
This isn’t a easy matter of custom, says Mashooque Birhmani, founding father of Sujag Sansar. Pakistan’s Baby Marriage Restraint Act of 1929 set the authorized age of marriage for boys at 18 and 16 for ladies. In April 2014, the Sindh Meeting adopted the Sindh Baby Marriage Restraint Act, which modified the minimal age to 18 for each women and boys.
Birhmani believes the rise of kid marriage is straight linked to the floods. Crucially, one-third of those underage marriages occurred in Could and June – simply earlier than the monsoon rains start – indicating that they happened in anticipation of the injury that was anticipated from the torrential downpours.
“Earlier than the 2022 rains, women wouldn’t get married so younger on this space,” says Birhmani. “Such circumstances remained uncommon. Younger women had been serving to their mother and father make rope for picket beds or work on the land.”
For a lot of households, the choice to marry off younger women has turn out to be a method of survival, however it is usually at the price of the women’ schooling, well being and futures.
Lately, the consequences of local weather change have turn out to be more and more seen. Monsoon rains, as soon as a lifeline for hundreds of thousands of Pakistan’s farmers and essential within the regular cycle of meals manufacturing, have grown more and more erratic and extreme, wreaking havoc on agricultural lands and exacerbating meals shortages. As well as, rising temperatures are accelerating glacier soften within the north of the nation, contributing to river swelling and overwhelming flood defences.
The local weather disaster has triggered the phenomenon which has come to be often called “monsoon brides”. No formal research of kid marriage have been undertaken, however nongovernmental organisations comparable to Sujag Sansar say anecdotal proof suggests the follow is changing into extra widespread throughout the nation as an entire. Within the Sindh area, almost 1 / 4 of women are believed to be married earlier than the age of 18.
“There was a notable uptick in compelled marriages, significantly throughout essentially the most catastrophic floods within the nation’s historical past – these of 2007, 2010 and 2022,” says Gulsher Panhwer, mission supervisor at Sujag Sansar.

‘Once they took her away, she clung to me’
For a lot of, and specifically for girls, these pure disasters are usually not distant nightmares.
The years have handed, however for Salwa, 40, the reminiscence of her daughter’s marriage ceremony day continues to be laborious to bear. As she performs together with her four-year-old granddaughter, her tone turns into solemn as she begins to inform the story of what led to one of many darkest days of her life.
“We as soon as lived off our land, however when the monsoons destroyed all the things in 2010, we had been compelled to depart our dwelling and search refuge in one other province,” she recollects. The household, which moved from Balochistan in southwestern Pakistan, relies on the cultivation of cotton and plush rice, however struggled to make ends meet in Khan Mohammad Mallah and resorted to marrying off their youngest daughter.
In 2010, Salwa married her then-12-year-old daughter to a 20-year-old man in change for 150,000 rupees ($535).
“Once they took her to her new dwelling, she clung to me, and we each wept. I remorse this resolution deeply, however I noticed no different choice on the time,” says Salwa, her voice cracking. She, herself, had been married at 13 as a result of her household didn’t manage to pay for to feed her.
Regardless of her daughter’s marriage, she and her husband returned to stay with Salwa in Khan Mohammad Mallah shortly afterwards. “They didn’t manage to pay for to outlive on their very own. They had been simply youngsters. We now stay in poverty however not less than we’re reunited,” says Salwa, sighing, the wrinkles on her face betraying her exhaustion.

Right this moment, Salwa is grandmother to her daughter’s 4 youngsters. The eldest is 15 and finding out at college, as are her siblings. Salwa says she hopes that the schooling they’re receiving will allow them to marry of their very own free will, breaking the cycle that has trapped the women in her household for generations.
It’s a fragile hope as Pakistan is experiencing extra frequent and extreme climate occasions comparable to floods, droughts and heatwaves.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Local weather Change (IPCC) warns that Pakistan, being one of the vital susceptible international locations, will face worsening results on agriculture, water availability, and meals provision, additional driving poverty and social instability.
The floods of 2022, the deadliest thus far, inundated one-third of Pakistan, killing greater than 1,700 individuals, displacing some 33 million – virtually a 3rd of its inhabitants – and submerging huge tracts of farmland that destroyed the nation’s farming spine.
Agriculture, which contributes 1 / 4 of the nation’s gross home product and sustains one in three jobs, was hit significantly laborious, with enormous numbers of crops misplaced to the floods. Roughly 15 p.c of the nation’s rice crop and 40 p.c of its cotton crop had been affected. The full price of injury to the agriculture sector was roughly $12.97bn, with crops accounting for 82 p.c of this complete.
In Sindh province, whole villages have been left in ruins.

‘Vital progress’ undone by the floods
Sindh is especially susceptible to flooding on account of its proximity to the Indus River, which frequently overflows throughout heavy monsoon rains. Poor drainage programs, deforestation and local weather change all exacerbate the danger of floods.
On this area, almost 4.8 million individuals had been affected by the 2022 floods, half of them youngsters.
“With livelihoods destroyed and no dependable revenue, farmers, determined to make ends meet, usually resort to marrying off their daughters for an quantity as modest as the worth of a cow – and even much less,” says Panhwer.
Loads of work has been performed since 2010 to guard younger women from early marriages and folks at the moment are conscious that marrying off their youngsters is against the law, Panhwer says. “However when households are displaced in flood reduction camps, they really feel their daughters face increased threat of sexual assaults since they’re not protected inside their properties. Their hope can be to guard them from the crushing poverty whereas elevating sufficient funds to maintain the remainder of the household.”
Based on the United Nations Kids’s Fund (UNICEF), Pakistan is dwelling to almost 19 million youngster brides. Whereas the organisation reported in 2023 that there was “important progress” in lowering youngster marriages within the nation, it warned that the 2022 monsoon floods might undo a lot of that progress.
“We anticipate an 18 p.c rise in youngster marriages,” the organisation warned in its report final 12 months.

Based on the 2018 Pakistan Demographic and Well being Survey (PDHS), 3.6 p.c of women beneath 15 and 18.3 p.c of these beneath 18 are married. The identical report discovered that 8 p.c of women aged 15 to 19 have both already given beginning or are pregnant with their first youngster. One in six girls in Pakistan had been married as youngsters.
“There may be ongoing debate amongst lawmakers about youngster marriage in Pakistan,” says Syed Murad Ali Shah, a regulation researcher on the College of Azad Jammu and Kashmir. “One facet insists on adhering strictly to the authorized marriage age, whereas the opposite argues that socioeconomic realities have to be taken under consideration and that every case ought to be judged individually.”
A 2023 research by Ohio State College researchers, revealed within the educational journal Worldwide Social Work, additionally highlighted the hyperlink between local weather disasters and elevated charges of kid marriage, significantly in international locations the place such marriages already happen. A 2020 Save the Kids report additionally famous that just about all the 25 international locations with the best charges of early marriage are bothered by conflicts, protracted crises and climate-related disasters.
In response to the rise within the numbers of “monsoon brides” lately, Sujag Sansar has launched a number of community-based initiatives to sort out the basis causes of kid marriage. “We interact with spiritual leaders, academics, mother and father, and younger women to create networks of assist and resistance,” explains founder Birhmani. “By creative and cultural tasks, we foster dialogue and lift consciousness.
“Training is the important thing to breaking the cycle of kid marriage. When women are empowered with expertise, they’re not seen as burdens however as people able to constructing their very own futures.”
Sujag Sansar organises group theatre and music performances which function a platform for dialogue in 5 districts inside Sindh.
The usage of theatre permits completely different members of a group to be introduced collectively to share their tales via artwork. “By inviting each women and men to take part, we create an area for reflection and dialog,” Birhmani explains. The organisation additionally presents skilled coaching to girls and women to assist them discover monetary independence, and psychological well being assist.

‘The toughest was not having my mum’
The Sujag Sansar workplace in Dadu district, positioned alongside the Indus River in southeastern Sindh, is buzzing with vitality as a small group of ladies gathers exterior. They type a circle on the bottom, the gentle sand beneath their ft dotted with scattered roses.
Every lady holds a candle, the flames flickering gently within the night air, casting a heat glow on their faces. Voices echo as the ladies discuss their lives. Some giggle, others converse softly, however all are united of their function – to convey an finish to the follow of kid marriage.
Amongst them is Samina* who has a delicate smile on her face as she cradles her child. Right this moment is a special occasion as she is collaborating in a convention upheld by the organisation since 2005, the place girls and women who’ve been compelled into early marriages gentle candles to lift their voices in opposition to the oppressive follow. This ritual is their means of standing collectively, a defiant present of energy and solidarity.
Throughout the ceremony, Samina, now 28 and a mom of 5, tells her story. In 2011, when she was 13, Samina was advised by her mom that she was to marry a distant cousin, who himself was solely 15. She barely knew him.
“I used to be sitting exterior stitching a bedsheet when my mum got here to me and easily advised me, ‘You’re getting married’. We each remained silent. In our household, girls don’t specific their feelings,” she recollects. Her two older sisters had additionally been married at 13 and 14.
Together with her father unable to work due to psychiatric issues, the household’s revenue relied on her mom, who labored lengthy hours as a housemaid. However the lethal 2010 floods had destroyed the properties the place she was employed and the household’s revenue disappeared.

The 200,000 rupees ($714) that her marriage introduced in was the household’s final lifeline, a method to keep away from complete destitution and to probably defend Samina’s two youthful sisters from the identical destiny.
“Right this moment, households earn a most of 10,000 ($36) to 12,000 rupees ($43) a month,” says Birhmani. That’s about one greenback a day to feed about 10 individuals. “Each mouthful of meals per youngster counts.”
On the day of her marriage ceremony, Samina recollects being overwhelmed with nervousness. “Throughout the ceremony, I didn’t absolutely comprehend that my childhood was slipping away,” she says.
When the ceremony concluded, the truth of separation from her household grew to become painfully clear.
Whereas her mom and youthful sister sobbed, the 13-year-old bride was taken to her new dwelling together with her husband in a unique village.
“The tiny gloves I acquired as a marriage reward did nothing to ease the overwhelming unhappiness,” she recollects. Right this moment, she consoles herself with the truth that her youthful sisters haven’t been married and are pursuing their schooling as an alternative.
“Throughout the first 12 months of my marriage, the toughest factor was not having my mum subsequent to me any extra,” she says. “Within the evening, at bedtime she would stick with me till I’d go to sleep. She would inform me tales and contact my hair. In a single day, I needed to sleep in a mattress with a person I didn’t know. I used to be alone, with out my sisters and my mother and father in an unknown small home. It felt so chilly unexpectedly.”
Two years after her marriage ceremony, Samina grew to become pregnant together with her first youngster. “I didn’t perceive what I used to be alleged to do. I used to be scared and the ache was laborious to bear however I received used to it.”
Whereas her household had hoped she would have a greater life if she received married, Samina’s husband, a labourer, struggles to seek out work within the constructing trade. “Loads of homes are broken due to the floods however individuals don’t manage to pay for to restore them,” she says.
The dearth of employment took a toll on her husband’s psychological well being and Samina was compelled to work at stitching bedsheets to feed and educate her 5 youngsters.

‘My daughters will escape the hell I endured’
In 2024, as information of the 45 circumstances of underage marriage within the village of Khan Mohammad Mallah unfold, Sindh’s minister, Murad Ali Shah, ordered an investigation to find out whether or not these marriages had been straight linked to the floods.
Agha Fakharuddin, the director of the Human Rights Division for the province of Sindh, later concluded that no such circumstances of kid marriage had been reported and that the information had been fabricated. Mukhtiar Ali Abro, the deputy commissioner of Dadu, nevertheless, said that whereas marriages had been organized within the village, they had been merely a part of the native custom reasonably than a consequence of the floods.
Following the go to by authorities officers in October 2024, alongside representatives from civil society organisations, Sujag Sansar says it has noticed a decline within the incidence of kid marriage, attributing it to a concern of authorized repercussions. Nonetheless, it cautions that this discount could solely be short-term, because the underlying drivers of kid marriage – specifically, poverty and the shortage of instructional alternatives for susceptible women – stay largely unaddressed.
Years after being married off in opposition to her will, Samina now smiles with a renewed sense of hope. Though she nonetheless sews bedlinen, simply as she did the day she was advised of her impending marriage, her life has modified past recognition. She is taking crafting programs and hopes to begin her personal enterprise. Sporting a crimson dupatta with tiny white dots, her expression is resolute.
Surrounded by different younger girls who, like her, had been married too early, Samina smiles as she talks about her future. She hopes to proceed her stitching and earn her personal revenue.
Samina has resolved that her daughters won’t ever face the identical destiny. “I’ll make sure that they’re educated, to allow them to escape the hell I endured,” she says.
*Some names have been modified to guard id