Malaysian minister: Probe child marriage claims
By JULIA ZAPPEI, Associated Press
Mar 15, 2010 1:14 AM CDT

An 11-year-old Malaysian girl was hospitalized in a state of shock after allegedly being abducted by a man who persuaded her parents to let him marry her, an official said Monday.

She is one of two recent cases of suspected child marriages in Malaysia, a majority Muslim country where girls under the age of 16 need special permission from Islamic courts to marry.

But approval is not commonly granted and recent reports of young girls being married off to men in northern Kelantan state have made headlines.

On Sunday, Women's Minister Shahrizat Abdul Jalil said action should be taken against the 41-year-old who allegedly wanted to marry the 11-year-old without getting special court permission. She called it a "reckless and irresponsible act."

The girl was found abandoned near a mosque on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur late last week. She was in a state of shock and has been hospitalized for a medical checkup, said a ministry official, who declined to be named citing protocol.

Kelantan police chief Abdul Rahim Hanafi said he could not immediately comment and Kuala Lumpur police in charge of the case could not immediately be reached for further details. It is not clear what happened to the girl.

The girl's mother was quoted by local newspapers Monday as saying that the family decided to marry off the girl last month after the man, allegedly a religious group leader, persuaded them.

He and nine others picked up the girl from her home on Feb. 20, claiming they would get the marriage registered. The family lodged a police report the next day after the man failed to return with the child as promised, The Star quoted the mother as saying.

Shahrizat has also asked authorities to probe another reported case _ of a 10-year-old marrying a 40-year-old man. No details are known, the ministry official said.

Sisters in Islam, a group of Muslim women activists, has called for an end to child marriages, calling them an "unacceptable practice" that endangers children.

Statistics on how many child marriages have been sanctioned in Malaysia were not immediately available, but activists say marriages to children in their early teens are unheard of in recent years.