
Archive image of an actress appearing in an Amnesty International event to denounce child marriage
A tug-of-war between the ruling Social Democrat-Green Party coalition and the opposition over the government's role in managing or eradicating the practice - which predominantly affects young girls, and in some cases boys, from immigrant backgrounds - is emblematic of a broader struggle to find a balance between efforts to integrate a large number of new immigrants and preserve a Swedish way of life.
"Sweden has been bad at providing people who come here with clear information about how our system works, about this society's views on children's rights, gender equality, family policies, and parents' and guardians' responsibilities," said Juno Blom, who is running for parliament on behalf of the opposition Liberal Party.
"While we insist that Sweden protects children's rights and that we promote a child-centered approach to children's welfare, we have allowed children of foreign backgrounds to live as married women with older men," said Blom, who also acts as Sweden's national coordinator to counter honor-based violence and oppression.
Although Sweden is known for its commitment to child welfare, it is failing to extend those same protections to its immigrant population, activists and lawmakers say. Opponents accuse the government of being overly cautious in order to avoid being seen as culturally insensitive.














Comment: That's multiculturalism for you. As Ernest Gellner pointed out years ago, the problem with postmodernism is that its tolerance is its undoing: it treats barbarism with kindness, while the same barbarism proceeds to destroy it. Whether it's in the most obvious forms of terrorism, honor killings, or genital mutilation, it's the same with 'cultural practices' like child marriage. Can local practices and values keep their integrity and utility when foreign practices are given equal weight?