A new date from UNICEF has revealed that about 12 million girls under the age of 18 are getting married every year globally.
The data which was released on Tuesday revealed that the newly collated figures signal a 15 per cent drop in the last decade, from one in four to approximately one in five girls.
UNICEF warned that if child marriage continues at the current rate, more than 150 million girls across the world will marry before their 18th birthdays by 2030.
“When a girl is forced to marry as a child, she faces immediate and lifelong consequences.
“Her odds of finishing school decrease while her odds of being abused by her husband and suffering complications during pregnancy increase,” Anju Malhotra, UNICEF’s principal gender adviser, said in a statement.
In South Asia, there has been a decrease in the prevalence of child brides from 50 per cent ten years ago to 30 per cent today.
In sub-Saharan Africa there has also been a decline, with 43 per cent of women married in childhood ten years ago compared to 38 per cent today.
UNICEF said there has also been a shift in where the highest number of child brides are located, with close to one-third of all the most recently married child brides globally now in sub-Saharan Africa, compared to one in five a decade ago.
According to UNICEF, an estimated 650 million women alive today were married as children.
The UN Sustainable Development Goals sets out plans to end child marriage by 2030.
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