Excerpt:
Rotterdam council has started a trial to prevent girls being forced into arranged marriages during the holidays. Every year, dozens of girls with a Moroccan, Turkish and Pakistani background fail to return to the Netherlands after the holidays. In the pilot, pupils will be asked to sign a declaration in which they indicate they do not want to enter an arranged marriage. If a pupil is then forced into an arranged marriage, the school can call in the police.
The idea comes from Great Britain, where it has been practice for years. If a girl is forced into an arranged marriage immediate action is taken. The British embassy employs special staff who try to get the girls back to Britain. The Netherlands doesn't yet have such specialised staff. It is not clear how big the problem in Rotterdam is. In an interview with the Dutch station Radio 1, Rotterdam executive councillor Jantine Kriens says that there are dozens of girls affected. Ms Kriens explains that forced arranged marriages often lead to violence connected to family honour.
"We have been working on honour-related violence for some time now. In other words: the threat of violence against girls in the family. You often see that a forced arranged marriage leads to honour-related violence. So we want to take action first by preventing forced arranged marriages."