Government targets forced marriages

Increased punishment and the expulsion of imams among the efforts aimed at curbing forced religious marriages

Updated: 28/11/2012, 13:16. After government's final announcement some of the facts have been changed. The headline was also changed to reflect that the government was targeting forced marriages, not simply religious Muslim marriages.

TV2 News reported this evening that the government will announce a package tomorrow aimed at curbing forced Muslim marriages.

The legislation will make it easier to expel imams who carry out forced religious marriages, and increase the maximum sentence to four years for those found guilty of forcing others to marry.

TV2 News interviewed a Danish citizen of Moroccan decent, 'Sarah', who revealed how she had been taken to Morocco at the age of 15 and forced to marry her cousin.

"I was totally dead during that period; I wasn't myself," Sarah told TV2, adding that she was forced to engage in intercourse with her new husband on their wedding night. "My aunt told me that the guests would not go home until they saw blood on the sheets." 

Sarah, however, warned against associating forced marriages with Islam, saying: "In Islam, it says in black and white that one must not force a person to marry another."

Still, her experience is one of the reasons the government is pushing for tougher legislation. 

"Everyone should have the same rights when they live in Denmark, regardless of whether they have Muslim parents," the social affairs and integration minister, Karen Hækkerup (Socialdemokraterne), told TV2 News. "Everyone should have the same rights to freedom, and that is what we want to help people achieve."

PM Helle Thorning-Schmidt foreshadowed the proposal during her opening speech to parliament in October, saying that the government would increase punishments for forced marriages to "show young people that we are on their side". 

Although it was reported earlier this year that there had not been a single conviction for forced marriages since the former Venstre-Konservative government increased the punishment in 2008, LOKK, the association of women’s crisis centres, said that the number of women seeking help – either because of a pending forced marriage or the threat of one – rose six-fold between 2005 and 2010 from 101 women to 660.

A representative for the Dansk Islamisk Center told TV2 that his organisation welcomed the government's proposal. 




Connect Club is your gateway to a vibrant programme of events and an international community in Denmark.


  • “It’s possible to lead even though you don’t fit the traditional leadership mold”

    “It’s possible to lead even though you don’t fit the traditional leadership mold”

    Describing herself as a “DEI poster child,” being queer, neurodivergent and an international in Denmark didn’t stop Laurence Paquette from climbing the infamous corporate ladder to become Marketing Vice President (VP) at Vestas. Arrived in 2006 from Quebec, Laurence Paquette unpacks the implications of exposing your true self at work, in a country that lets little leeway for individuality

  • Deal reached to bring more foreign workers to Denmark

    Deal reached to bring more foreign workers to Denmark

    Agreement between unions and employers allows more foreign workers in Denmark under lower salary requirements, with new ID card rules and oversight to prevent social dumping and ensure fair conditions.

  • New association helps international nurses and doctors Denmark

    New association helps international nurses and doctors Denmark

    Kadre Darman was founded this year to support foreign-trained healthcare professionals facing challenges with difficult authorisation processes, visa procedures, and language barriers, aiming to help them find jobs and contribute to Denmark’s healthcare system