POLITICAL CORRECTNESS ensures that our leaders and governments permit child rape and paedophilia within our civilised societies - now - today. So instead of upholding decent, civilised values and laws which we have developed in The West, our traitorous leaders are once again kow-towing to barbaric islamic sharia and multiculturalism - cultural relativism - the false narrative that all cultures are equal.
View the pictures of the muslim (mass) child marriages. In the islam it is common that the girls between the ages 1 year old and 13 years old are forced to get married with the men between the ages 20 and 60.
Pakistani Family Pleads To Keep 6-Year-Old Girl Out Of Forced Marriage
The parents of a 6-year-old girl in Pakistan's Swat Valley say tribal authorities are forcing them to marry off their daughter to resolve a family feud. The parents and uncle of the girl, Bibi Roza, told RFE/RL's Radio Mashaal that they have been pleading with local authorities to allow them to keep her at home. Produced by Niaz Ahmad Khan, RFE/RL's Radio Mashaal
Too Young to Wed: The Secret World of Child Brides
Every year, throughout the world, millions of young girls are forced into marriage. Child marriage is outlawed in many countries and international agreements forbid the practice yet this tradition still spans continents, language, religion and caste.
Over an eight-year period, photographer Stephanie Sinclair has investigated the phenomenon of child marriage in India, Yemen, Afghanistan, Nepal and Ethiopia. Her multimedia presentation, produced in association with National Geographic, synthesizes this body of work into a call to action.
Stephanie Sinclair's images are featured in a story on child marriage in the June 2011 issue of National Geographic magazine.
How to help: National Geographic has compiled a list of organizations that encourage families to delay marriage and give girls an opportunity to reach their full potential.
In a related post Stephanie Sinclair shares the difficult experiences child brides face. She discusses the need for their voices to be heard and the challenges she faced as a journalist who witnessed their struggles and abuse.
All comments are moderated. The Pulitzer Center does not delete comments on this site based on differences in point of view or disagreements. The Pulitzer Center deletes comments that are racist, sexist, homophobic, and otherwise intolerant. The Pulitzer Center staff reserves the right to delete comments that advocate or support unlawful violence or hatred. The Pulitzer Center also does not allow hate speech of any kind, ad hominem attacks, or the use of superfluous profanity.