Yes. I think it's a rather different situation in Bangladesh. We don't really have the same kind of situation in relation to conversions or forced conversions en masse.
In relation to child early and forced marriage, I think that is a very serious problem in Bangladesh. However, we have recent legislation, the Child Marriage Restraint Act, which provides a number of preventive measures, including setting up district committees to combat the practice. It also provides protective measures. For example, it specifies that marriage registrars have to check birth registration or ID documents, before they actually register a marriage.
There is a problem with that legislation, which I think is very much due to an accommodation by the state, actually and unfortunately, with religious and fundamentalist groups. There's an exception in the law, which says that, in certain cases, a marriage won't be treated as a child marriage even when it involves underage parties, which is a girl under 18 or boy under 21, if the parents agree that it should be treated in that way and if the court orders that. The arguments for why that exception was brought in were, presumably and implicitly, that under religious or personal law, and under Muslim personal law, in particular, a girl can marry once she's reached puberty. It seems that it's to cover that situation.
Also, there's a similar situation to what the previous speaker was saying. There are situations where there are intercommunity marriages, where an adolescent girl, aged 16 or 17, chooses to marry somebody from a different community, exercising her own consent, and her parents then come in to try to stop that marriage and that relationship. Actually, in those situations, I think there is an issue of a conflict of rights. The girl is trying to exercise her right to marry whomever she chooses and the parents are coming in and invoking the criminal law, often making false claims about forced conversion and also rape, trafficking or other allegations, to try to prevent that girl's exercise of consent taking place. I think that it's a more complicated scenario and it's also an issue of a conflict of rights.