Law proposal making marriage compulsory at 18 sparks outrage, mockery in Pakistan

A Pakistani bride looks on at a mass-wedding ceremony in Karachi, Pakistan, on April 13, 2019. (AFP/File)
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Updated 27 May 2021
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Law proposal making marriage compulsory at 18 sparks outrage, mockery in Pakistan

  • Tabled by the Jamaat-e-Islami religious party, the bill seeks to fine parents who fail to wed off their kids
  • In Pakistan, the minimum age requirement for marriage is 16, except for Sindh, where it is 18

KARACHI: A new law proposal making it compulsory for parents in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province to marry off their children once they turn 18 has sparked an outcry and wave of mockery, with lawmakers vowing to trash the bill.
The proposal was submitted to the Sindh provincial assembly on Wednesday by a member of the Jamaat-e-Islami religious party. Called “Sindh Compulsory Marriage Act 2021,” the bill says that if parents fail to present “justified reasons” for delaying their children’s marriage, they would be fined Rs500 ($3). “This will bring wellbeing in the society,” the bill’s reasons section states.
In Sindh, the age requirement for marriage is 18 — higher than in other parts of Pakistan, where it is 16.
Syed Abdul Rasheed, the JI lawmaker who tabled the proposal, told Arab News on Thursday that it was is aimed at eliminating “social and moral evil, including rape.” Being unmarried, he claimed, prompted young people to “commit sins” and made “evil spread in the society.”
The proposal has immediately attracted criticism from both the province’s ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and the opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), who distanced themselves from the bill.
PPP leader Bakhtawar Bhutto Zardari took to Twitter to say the bill had nothing to do with her party and the Sindh government and will be ” bulldozed” by it.

PTI lawmaker Sidra Imran bill "nonsense" and "attention seeking."

Sadia Javed, a member of the Sindh assembly representing PPP, calling the bill “a publicity stunt” and urged Rasheed to review his motion.
“Parents will not wed their daughters to jobless men and no man can get employment at the age of 18 while he is still studying,” she said.
As the JI legislator defended the bill as being in accordance with Islamic teachings, Dr. Aamir Tuaseen, religious scholar and board member of the International Islamic University Islamabad, said Islamic law does not specify any age for marriage.
“Islamic Sharia issues no order to wed in a specific age. It also doesn’t impose any fine,” Tauseen told Arab News.


Pakistan PM invites UAE investment across tech and resource sectors at National Day event

Updated 08 December 2025
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Pakistan PM invites UAE investment across tech and resource sectors at National Day event

  • Shehbaz Sharif says the UAE remains a key economic partner and continues to lend ‘critical support’ to Pakistan
  • UAE envoy says both nations have potential for cooperation in renewable energy, AI and economic diversification

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is ready to welcome investment from the United Arab Emirates across emerging technologies and resource sectors, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Monday, as both countries marked the 54th National Day of the Gulf country in Islamabad.

Speaking at the ceremony attended by senior ministers, diplomats and business leaders, Sharif said the UAE remained a key economic partner for Pakistan and continued to lend “critical support” to the country’s stabilizing economy.

“Pakistan takes great pride in its strategic partnership with the UAE, which continues to deepen across every domain of life,” he said. “With Pakistan’s economy stabilizing, we stand ready to welcome Emirati investment in renewable energy, AI, fintech, agriculture and minerals.”

Sharif praised the UAE’s leadership and recalled his earliest memories of the Gulf nation as “a land that believed in possibilities long before they became realities,” saying the country’s progress under President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan commanded “profound admiration.”

UAE Ambassador Salem Al Bawab Al Zaabi said the Emirates was committed to strengthening ties with Pakistan in areas including the economy, energy and artificial intelligence.

He said the two countries shared a “deep-rooted friendship built on mutual respect, shared values and a common vision for regional peace and development.”

“We see tremendous potential for collaboration in renewable energy, artificial intelligence, sustainability and economic diversification,” the ambassador said, adding that the UAE aimed to broaden the scope of its economic relations with Pakistan.

The UAE hosts around 1.8 million Pakistani expatriates, one of the country’s largest overseas communities, who Sharif said contributed “tirelessly” to the Gulf state’s development.

Sharif and Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar also joined the UAE ambassador in a cake-cutting ceremony to mark the occasion.