CRY said recognising Mother's Day is a welcome step but raised concern about the young girls who are experiencing motherhood due to coercion, trafficking and in economic and social deprivation.
"Our country today has the highest rate of child marriage with globally the highest number of child brides. Over 50 per cent of them are in Rajasthan, Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal," CRY said in a statement.
In Maharashtra, as per census report (2011), there were 2,12,993 married girls under 15 years of age, out of which 21 per cent have become mothers. Fifteen per cent of them have two children while 6 per cent have one child, it said.
In Mumbai, 20,988 girls were married before 15 years, of which 5,035 (24 per cent) have attained motherhood.
The NGO further said various age-old socio-cultural, religious practices and beliefs were the reasons behind the social evil.
On the law enforcement front, it said, "Our very own law Protection of Children from Sexual Offences, Act 2012 does not recognise sexual autonomy in children in any form below 18 years of age, which is considered the official legal age for matrimony."
"Interestingly, the Indian Penal Code contradicts the above Act especially where marital rape is considered. An IPC provision states 'sexual intercourse or sexual acts by a man with his own wife, the wife not being under fifteen years of age, is not rape', which leaves one wondering how serious are our laws," it said.
