The decision by the Islamic religious council in Malacca has been billed as an attempt to curb premarital sex and baby dumping, after a string of cases of newborns being abandoned.
"Child marriage amounts to paedophilia. We should not condone child marriages," said Ivy Josiah (left), executive director of leading activist group Women's Aid Organisation.
Malacca Chief Minister Mohamad Ali Rustam reportedly said that marriages for Muslims below the current minimum age of 16 years for females and 18 for males would be allowed with the permission of parents and religious courts.
Ali Rustam (left), who is the chairman of the influential state Islamic council, said the plan would reduce the number of cases of babies born out of wedlock and cut incidents of adultery.
"It is a practical move in preventing cases of unwed teenage mothers and other social problems," he was was quoted as saying by the New Straits Times newspaper Wednesday.
The report said that in the first six months of the year, 174 Muslim women gave birth outside wedlock in the state. All were below 20 years old.
'Morally and socially unacceptable'
In Malaysia, Muslims make up about 60 percent of the 28 million population and are subject to religious syariah law which operates in parallel with the civil legal system.
Malacca earlier announced that the state would open a special school for Muslim girls who become pregnant out of wedlock, a move that also came under fire from rights groups.
"This is a knee-jerk reaction, and such policies should not be carved out by state religious authorities but the federal Ministries of Women, Education, and Health," said Josiah.
Josiah said that Malaysia recognises those aged under 18 years as children, and that allowing them to marry early would deprive them of an education and the right to choose a partner.
"It is really a regressive move. It is turning back the clock. This man (the chief minister) should resign," she said.
Shahrizat Abdul Jalil (right), the minister for women, family and community development, said that underage marriage was "morally and socially unacceptable".
"Placing the heavy burden and responsibility of parenthood on children can deprive them of their rights to a full and harmonious development," she said.
The number of underage pregnancies in Malaysia rose to 111 in the first four months of this year from 107 in 2008, according to government numbers.
Recent cases of babies being abandoned by their unwed mothers have led the Malaysian government to set up its first baby "hatch", where mothers can drop off unwanted children anonymously.
- Agencies
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