Sunday, December 1, 2013
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Much ado about six packs
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Much ado about six packs: I am not about embarking on the tortuous journey nor the strict discipline to carving those nice looking and enticing abs seen as the symb...
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Win free Professional photo session
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Win free Professional photo session: Sholacreatives Photo is giving out some free sessions this yuletide. Simply tell us the year it was established and you might be the winner ...
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: 10 habits that steal your happiness
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: 10 habits that steal your happiness: You ultimately become what you repeatedly do. If your habits aren’t helping you, they’re hurting you. Here are a few examples of the latte...
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Zuma under Fire
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Zuma under Fire: The improvements at Nkandla included a swimming pool and cattle enclosure South Africa's top corruption fighter has condemned a newspa...
Win free Professional photo session
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Win free Professional photo session: Sholacreatives Photo is giving out some free sessions this yuletide. Simply tell us the year it was established and you might be the winner ...
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Metro open mic 2.0
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Metro open mic 2.0: First edition was a success while this second edtion promises a better presentation and atmosphere. It takes place at Broadcasting House, i...
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Has Oshiomole's Khaki lost its fittings?
Welcome to Chris Ilems' Blog: Has Oshiomole's Khaki lost its fittings?: The one time labour leader became very famous for his stance and unequivocal support and leanings towards the masses. There were cases where...
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Haba, We men and women
Women Can Now Lockup Their Men’s ‘man-hood’ In Willy Jail With Padlocks.
Hehehehehehe…..Men are in serious trouble! In case you are yet to fathom the image in the pictures, it’s ehmm p*nis jail. lol! The device serves/help women in padlocking their husbands/boyfriends organs. It’s called ‘Male Chastity’ and it gives the keyholder absolute control over the joystick.Here is how it’s been advertised:“Male chastity devices restrict a man from touching his génitals for séxual pleasure. The male chastity device gives the keyholder control over the séxual fulfillment of both partners by denying the wearer the touch he has had all of his life.His focus is now on when he can experience s*xual gratification, and the keyholder has complete control over the wearer’s pleasure.This denied access means the wearer must please the keyholder in order to receive the pleasure he craves.”Although, it’s harsh but i hear it’s very effective and comes in different sizes. lolllzzz. You can get the willy jail at CB-X.com for $150. Except the men that like kinky stuff, i’m sure no normal man who can’t control his willy will agree to this. lol. See Gombe! No more excuse!!!!!!!! lmaoHow many of you will like to experiment this? lol
Hehehehehehe…..Men are in serious trouble! In case you are yet to fathom the image in the pictures, it’s ehmm p*nis jail. lol! The device serves/help women in padlocking their husbands/boyfriends organs. It’s called ‘Male Chastity’ and it gives the keyholder absolute control over the joystick.Here is how it’s been advertised:“Male chastity devices restrict a man from touching his génitals for séxual pleasure. The male chastity device gives the keyholder control over the séxual fulfillment of both partners by denying the wearer the touch he has had all of his life.His focus is now on when he can experience s*xual gratification, and the keyholder has complete control over the wearer’s pleasure.This denied access means the wearer must please the keyholder in order to receive the pleasure he craves.”Although, it’s harsh but i hear it’s very effective and comes in different sizes. lolllzzz. You can get the willy jail at CB-X.com for $150. Except the men that like kinky stuff, i’m sure no normal man who can’t control his willy will agree to this. lol. See Gombe! No more excuse!!!!!!!! lmaoHow many of you will like to experiment this? lol
Saturday, November 23, 2013
MARRIED AT FOUR DIVORCED AT EIGHT
An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident.Check out all the latest News, Sport & An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident
MARRIED AT FOUR DIVORCED AT EIGHT
An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident.Check out all the latest News, Sport & An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident
MARRIED AT FOUR DIVORCED AT EIGHT
An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident.Check out all the latest News, Sport & An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident
MARRIED AT FOUR DIVORCED AT EIGHT
An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident.Check out all the latest News, Sport & An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident
MARRIED AT FOUR DIVORCED AT EIGHT
An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident.Check out all the latest News, Sport & An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident
An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident.Check out all the latest News, Sport & An Indian girl of eight is believed to have become the world's youngest divorcee after leaving her 14-year-old husband.Fatima Mangre was married off at the age of four by her father in Nakhi village, in the Shravasti district of India's northern state of Uttar Pradesh.But the marriage was annulled four years later after dad Anil said he realised it was wrong to force her to marry at such a young age.When the youngster's in-laws came to collect her to live with them and her teenage husband, Anil told them he wanted his daughter to wait until she was 18.He told local media: "I finally realised that this practice of marrying off daughters so young was wrong and that she should have a childhood, and that it was my duty to provide that."But the decision sparked a huge row with the boy's father, Dipak Bakridi, which resulted in Fatima's father announcing his daughter would divorce.The annulment was arranged the following week.The state government of India's northern Uttar Pradesh state has called for an inquiry into the incident.Officials ordered a probe after Nirmala Samant, a member of the New Delhi-based National Commission for Women, sent a letter demanding details of the divorce and threatening action against the parents of the girl and the boy.Samat said: "This is a scandal, we need more details before taking action."The girl's father must answer why he married her off at 4 years old and the boy's father must answer why he agreed to such a marriage and then went to demand the girl when she is barely 8 years old."This is insensitive, controversial and objectionable," she said.Samat added that the NCW's attention had been drawn to an UNICEF report that found growing cases of child marriages in one of India's most populous states.According to UNICEF, over 32.9 percent of the girls are married against the national average of 22.1 percent below the legally permissible age of 18 in the state.The Shravasti district accounts for the majority of underage weddings in India, where the female literacy is just 19 per cent.Fatima's father has already written to NCW, saying he should be pardoned because he stopped his daughter from being taken away by her in-laws.He wrote: "I have already admitted my mistake. Social pressures are high in our village. But the marriage has been annulled. I have admitted it was wrong to marry her off so early."I now want to make things right. I want to give my daughter a good childhood. I will do everything to protect her."The Bakridi family had no comment to make on the incident
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)