There are two answers to your question, sir.
One is that I think all of these years we have been addressing issues related to women and girls, but we've really never considered boys and men. We've never believed that they also had reproductive and sexual health problems that needed to be addressed. One answer to your question is that we need to start addressing the sexual and reproductive health problems of men as well. There are many such problems that exist in these communities.
Another is that I think men need to realize that it is to their advantage not to marry young girls, because if they marry them, they also suffer the consequences of this burden of morbidity that I was referring to. They're the ones who would have to address those problems as well.
How does one deal with communities? The way we've gone about it, and it's been most successful, is to adopt two approaches. One is a social norms approach in which you actually deal with entire communities to change social norms, for example, the norm that condones domestic violence. It's men who will be able to change that norm. Young boys in one community started a campaign that said that real men don't marry little girls; they marry women. That changed the entire norm of early marriage in that particular community.
One is the social norms level, the community level, and the other is the perceived level, where norms are perceived at the individual level. Working at the individual level with counselling and with interpersonal communication, one can change individual behaviours.