Heng: Divorce a major contributor to child abuse

0

KUALA LUMPUR: Divorce is becoming a major contributor to child abuse, which is on the uptrend in the country, said Deputy Women, Family and Community Development Minister Senator Heng Seai Kie.

CARING HEARTS: Heng (centre) with organising chairman, Dr. Susan Cheah (second left) taking a closer look at the ‘1 Caring Heart Malaysian’ book after its launch . — Bernama photo

She said parents who go through messy divorces face undue stress and tend to take it out on their children, leading to neglect and abuse.

Apart from this, children become victims of custody battles between parents with the situation worsening when families of both parties decide to interfere as well, she told reporters after launching the Children’s Forum 2011 themed ‘Voices for Judicial Change’, here yesterday.

She said the number of child abuse cases reported to the Ministry of Welfare (JKM) increased to 2,961 cases last year compared to 2,789 in 2009.

The higher divorce rate among Muslim couples was also worrying, she said, adding that there were 27,116 cases involving non-Muslim couples in 2009 compared to 22,289 the previous year.

The non-Muslim divorce rate, however, decreased to 2,938 cases in 2009 as opposed to 3,633 cases in 2008,  she added This was the official figure and did not include non-registered separations or divorce.

Heng also said the government formulated the National Family Policy (DKN) this March to strengthen the family institution.

According to her, the DKN would be the main guideline for all parties to include the family perspective in legislation, policies, procedures, rules and development programmes. — Bernama

The Children’s Forum held in conjunction with International Family Day was organised by the National Population and Family Development Board (LPPKN) and United National Children’s Organisation Malaysia (UNCOM) The forum covered factors contributing to child abuse, ways of understanding families going through divorce and the role and services of government and private sector agencies in child protection. — Bernama