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Nelson teen on TV documentary on cousin marriages


A TEENAGER from Pendle who has an incurable liver disorder appeared in a TV documentary last night to highlight the health risks involved when cousins marry and have children together.

Seventeen-year-old student Azmat Mahmood and his mother Perveen, who live in Nelson, are featured in Channel 4’s Dispatches programme called ‘When Cousins Marry’.

The programme looks at whether a child is more likely to suffer from genetic abnormalities if their parents are first cousins.

Azmat was diagnosed with propionic acidemia when he was 15-months-old and was one of the youngest children to undergo a liver transplant.

In the documentary he spoke to presenter Tazeen Ahmad about how the illness has effected him.

The teenager was seen taking up to 11 different types of medication at once.

And he described how it causes severe pains throughout his body and restricts how active he can be.

His mother, who owns a baby and school uniform shop, in Scotland Road, spoke of her sorrow at having to see her son suffer, but refused to condemn first cousins who have children together.

She said: “I am protective over Azmat. He is more like, I would say, a 14-year-old than an 18-year-old, mentally you know.

"He comes with me to work so I can keep and eye on him.

“I don’t think there’s anything wrong with first cousin marriages because it’s part of our culture and the norm really.

"Having said that it did put me off having more to my ex-husband because I could not go through it again - having another child with the same problem.

“The thing is it isn’t guaranteed to happen. It’s high risk - about one-in-four. But three could be ok - my daughter is fine.”

The documentary shows Azmat and his mother travel to Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital for an appointment, where they are told there is no obvious cure for the teenager’s condition.

At the end of the programme, Azmat describes his hopes for the future.

He said: “My dream is to get a good job and build something of myself, get married and have a family of my own.

“It’s important to think about who you are going to marry. Marrying in the family is not always a good idea.”

The programme can be viewed on Channel 4’s website - click on the link below.


Comments(10)

Graham Hartley says...
10:06pm Tue 24 Aug 10

Marrying in the family may indeed be a good idea from the perspective of those who marry. The fact that I share grandparents with a woman did not and still does not inhibit me from the fancy. I use my own name here so I won't name which of my female cousins in Burnley I so fancy, save that they're two Ps - so that that's Patricia and Patsy left to wonder or care less.

swizz says...
11:35pm Tue 24 Aug 10

From the Times in 2008: “If you go into a paediatric ward in Bradford or Keighley you will find more than half of the kids there are from the Asian community. Since Asians only represent 20%-30% of the population, you can see that they are over represented.

“I have encountered cases of blindness and deafness. There was one poor girl who had to have an oxygen tank on her back and breathe from a hole in the front of her neck.

“The parents were warned they should not have any more children. But when the husband returned again from Pakistan, within months they had another child with exactly the same condition.”

icannotrace says...
3:29am Wed 25 Aug 10

useyourhead wrote:
As this is going to be a contraversial subject any way, I would like to know what happens to the ones produced from such liasons in the countries of origin in which this is commonplace, where there is no free healthcare or benefit system?
Without wanting to sound callous, they die

wrinkles says...
3:36pm Wed 25 Aug 10

Condolences to Azmat for his unfortunate plight. After being upset at seeing the trailer I made sure I didn't watch the documentary. My hobby is genealogy and it's quite common to see ancient documentation which shows that inter family relationships were examined before consent was given to cousins who wished to marry. Notwithstanding the suffering of these unfortunate babies, our purse is not a bottomless pit and the British government should insist on medical health checks prior to inter family marriages. If no independent certificate is forthcoming then British citizenship should not be given. Personally I'd go further - I'd charge the parents and grandparents with conspiring and assisting in bodily harm to a child.

Chris P Bacon says...
3:57pm Wed 25 Aug 10

Inter-marriage like this should be made illegal. The risk of cousins having a child (or several in their family) with a genetic abnormality is 1 in 4! Now that is FAR too high. This is caused by generations of inter-marriages statistically increasing the risk of abnormality by the reduction of variety in the gene pool available.

Now I disassociate myself completely from the racist loons on here trying to make an issue of this but have to say that the risk of genetic abnormality MUST be looked at and marriage amongst first cousins should be made illegal.

The main political parties seem scared of raising this issue and confronting it as they are scared of where the vote will go if a sensible answer to this great medical disaster is introduced.

The great financial burden of this idiotic selfishness is to be borne by the tax-payer like you and me who will pay for the life of that person for their medical treatment.

It's stupid madness to allow this to go on and something must be done about it NOW!

thevoiceofeducatedreason says...
8:23pm Wed 25 Aug 10

Make it illegal and end of.
When I was in 'one of these types of countries' working recently, I was stunned to hear a technician telling me that his local holiday was ok and he got married.
"Oh, congratulations!" I replied, wondering why he was sounding so glum. (Usually takes longer than a couple of weeks to get sick of your new wife, I thought). Anyway, I followed this up with "I didn't know you had a girlfriend" and was left gob-smacked with his reply that he didn't, he married his cousin.
Maybe I was being a little naive, but lets say it's not known as a fanatical/fundamenta
l Islamic state. Anyway, amazed and shocked I was then told by someone else that it's also legal in the UK.
Bit of research and voilla, I found out it was! Can only think that it is to appease our ethnic friends, as I've never met anyone who has married their cousin or even had a bit of "how's your father with them", but we are close to the border I suppose.
Anyway, back in this fine little country, the other common alternate to these "shut up and marry your cousin, honestly, she's not that bad" arrangements is going to the village to find one. Hilarious! "What are you doing this weekend guys?" "Not sure, might go to the village sir and try and find a wife!".
Oh, and where I am now they can have up to 4 wives and live in tribes with men often being responsible for up to and over 20 kids. Nice!
I see Crispy Bacon is here boring everyone with his "you're all a bunch a racists" garbage (how it must be to live in your world of love and happiness to and from all) so I would just like to offer my fondest Ramadan greetings to him, however I do find his name offensive to Islam.....

RLB says...
8:43pm Wed 25 Aug 10

"Anyway, amazed and shocked I was then told by someone else that it's also legal in the UK.
Bit of research and voilla, I found out it was! Can only think that it is to appease our ethnic friends, as I've never met anyone who has married their cousin"

I dont agree with it at all and its not common in our culture but it once was. Particularly between aristocratic families as a way to retain wealth. Its nothing to do with appeasing our ethnic friends as you put it.

RLB says...
8:43pm Wed 25 Aug 10

"Anyway, amazed and shocked I was then told by someone else that it's also legal in the UK.
Bit of research and voilla, I found out it was! Can only think that it is to appease our ethnic friends, as I've never met anyone who has married their cousin"

I dont agree with it at all and its not common in our culture but it once was. Particularly between aristocratic families as a way to retain wealth. Its nothing to do with appeasing our ethnic friends as you put it.

Meatspin says...
8:50pm Wed 25 Aug 10

RLB wrote:
"Anyway, amazed and shocked I was then told by someone else that it's also legal in the UK. Bit of research and voilla, I found out it was! Can only think that it is to appease our ethnic friends, as I've never met anyone who has married their cousin" I dont agree with it at all and its not common in our culture but it once was. Particularly between aristocratic families as a way to retain wealth. Its nothing to do with appeasing our ethnic friends as you put it.
Yes spot on RLB. I was going to point out the same thing.
.
Isn't it ironic that "thevoiceof uneducatedreason" spouts off at old "crispy" about being a racist and he himself goes on about "appeasing our ethnic friends"

andrewsmith says...
12:49pm Sun 29 Aug 10

After reading all the above comments, only 1 question arises. Asians marry their first cousins and have children with genetic disorders, but why do we ( white people) have disabled children, many of whom have genetic disorders. We don't marry within families, so why is it happening to our children?


INCURABLE: Azmat Mahmood INCURABLE: Azmat Mahmood

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