A BBC report, citing Seyaj Organization for Childhood Protection, covered the death of twelve-year-old Fawzia Abdullah Yusuf and her fetus in Yemen after obstructed labor caused fatal complications.
According to Seyaj, the girl had been forced into marriage at the age of eleven in the context of poverty and social pressure, then became pregnant the following year. The organization said the absence of a clear legal minimum age for marriage makes it difficult for local authorities to prevent child marriage or hold parents and husbands accountable for its devastating consequences.
The report also linked the case to broader patterns of poverty, illiteracy, and weak protection for girls in rural Yemen. It highlighted the continuing public debate around child marriage and referred to well-known legal cases that exposed the suffering of young girls forced into marriage.
Seyaj argued that Fawzia’s death was not an isolated incident but part of a wider tragedy affecting girls who are deprived of childhood, education, health, and the right to choose their future.
