Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell said that the decision by the government to amend the 1966 Marriage Act is to ensure that vulnerable children are not married off at the consent of their parents, and at the same time broaden protection to citizens under the age of 18. “This amendment to the Marriage Act is part of a broader series of legislation, that not only this administration but the prior administration as well, via the Spotlight Initiative sought to embark upon to modernize and to get protection to our children,” he told the Lower House while contributing to the debate of the amended bill which was approved during the 4 November sitting.
Elaborating on his support for the amendment to the marriage legislation, Prime Minister Mitchell, an attorney by profession, said that there is another bill which is not yet before the Parliament, which created all kinds of “whobalawho” in the public and all kinds of noise, but its main aim is to protect children. He was referring to the Amendment to the Age of Civil Responsibility Bill, which will allow for minors as old as 12 to receive sexual and reproductive healthcare and treatment without the consent of their parents. Several civil society groups have raised objections to this amendment, and the bill is yet to be laid in the House for debate and approval.
In Grenada a child is defined as a person between the ages of 1 day and 18 years.
He explained that the amendment to the “Age of Civil Responsibility” Bill is merely seeking to give children access to sexual and reproductive healthcare. “I have not heard the same set of people making all this noise talk about the existing laws on our books, which permits our children to be married off and to engage in sex, the same sex they seem to think that by allowing them to have access to reproductive healthcare that they will engage in.”