Her grandmother was so weakened by the multiple pregnancies and grief from losing so many babies that she died herself at the age of 33 of tuberculosis, said Gupta, who is deputy executive director of the United Nations Children's Fund.
Gupta was on hand yesterday to kick off a program run by UNICEF and the UN Population Fund aimed at ending child marriages around the world by 2013.
"Here we are 85 years later and we are still talking about girls getting married as children," she said.
The program targets girls age 10 to 19 who are at risk of being married off or who are already married in 12 countries, including Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nepal and Yemen. The countries were chosen based on several criteria, including a high rate of child marriage.
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Officials say the issue is urgent. If current trends persist, up to 280 million girls alive today could become child brides before they turn 18 years old, according to the UN agencies.
"Just think where those women and girls would be today if they were allowed to have a childhood," Gupta said.
Agency officials say the program will work to help girls at risk of child marriage to make their own decisions about their futures, strengthen programs that deliver services to adolescent girls, and put into place laws and policies that protect adolescent girls' rights.
Ending child marriage is part of the UN Commission on the Status of Women's efforts to achieve gender equality by 2013.