Assam's Child Marriage Crisis: How BJP Crackdown Cut Rates by 17%

Assam has seen a major decline in child marriage cases under the current government. The state recorded alarming rates as high as 55% in some districts just a few years ago. Now coordinated crackdowns have led to thousands of arrests and prevented marriages. Community monitoring and digital tracking systems have become key tools in this battle.

Key Points: Assam Child Marriage Cases Drop Under BJP Govt Says CM Sarma

  • Over 8,600 arrests made in coordinated crackdowns under POCSO and PCMA laws
  • District-level task forces led by police superintendents track child marriages
  • Community workers including ASHAs and teachers report suspected cases in real time
  • Digital databases and child-protection tracking mechanisms established across districts
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Assam saw major drop in child marriage cases under BJP govt: CM Sarma

Assam CM reports 17% drop in child marriage cases with 8,600 arrests and 3,000 prevented marriages through strict enforcement and community monitoring systems.

"Beyond arrests, Assam has formed district-level task forces, headed by superintendents of police, to track and intercept impending child marriages. - Himanta Biswa Sarma"

Guwahati, Nov 26

Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Wednesday underscored a "major turnaround" in the state's battle against child marriage, saying a combination of stringent enforcement and systemic reforms has led to significant declines in the underage marriages and boosted legal accountability.

CM Sarma claimed that according to NFHS‑4 (2015-16) data, 31.8 per cent of women in Assam aged 20–24 were married before turning 18 - a rate that exceeded the national average.

Moreover, district-level fact sheets had recorded alarming prevalence in districts such as Dhubri, South Salmara, Barpeta and Nagaon, as high as 40–55 per cent.

However, the state now claims a decisive shift. Between 2023 and 2024 alone, more than 8,600 arrests were made in coordinated crackdowns under both the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act (POCSO) and the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act (PCMA).

According to the Chief Minister, in 2022 the number of cases registered stood at 224, sharply up from just 149 in 2021, indicating a steep rise in enforcement.

CM Sarma said, "Beyond arrests, Assam has formed district-level task forces, headed by superintendents of police, to track and intercept impending child marriages. Community-level workers - including ASHAs, Anganwadi staff and schoolteachers - are now required to report suspected cases in real time."

"Several districts have also reportedly established digital databases and child-protection tracking mechanisms," he added.

The CM claimed that these measures have borne fruit: In hotspot districts, the incidence of child marriage fell by 8–17 per cent within a year, and more than 3,000 planned child marriages were prevented in 2023–24 alone.

Notably, the Assam government's recent actions - from sustained crackdowns to setting up institutional safeguards - reflect a far more aggressive stance on child marriage than seen in earlier years, when the practice was largely treated as a social issue rather than a crime.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While I appreciate the efforts, I'm concerned about the 8,600 arrests. Many poor families might be getting criminalized without proper rehabilitation support. The government should focus more on education and economic empowerment rather than just punitive measures.
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Arjun K
The statistics from Dhubri and other districts were shocking - 55% child marriage rate is unacceptable in modern India. Glad to see concrete action being taken. The digital tracking system sounds promising for long-term monitoring.
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Sarah B
As someone who has worked in rural development, I can say this multi-pronged approach - police, community workers, digital systems - is exactly what's needed. Preventing 3000 marriages shows the system is working on the ground level.
M
Michael C
The shift from treating child marriage as a "social issue" to a "crime" is crucial. This changes the entire narrative and sends a strong message that this practice won't be tolerated anymore. Hope other states follow Assam's lead.
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Nisha Z
Good initiative but we need to ensure this doesn't become just another statistic for political mileage. The real test will be whether these changes are sustainable and whether girls actually get better education and opportunities as a result.

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