Showing posts with label CHRAJ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHRAJ. Show all posts

Wednesday, 16 March 2016

‘Don’t Use Poverty As Excuse To Engage In Early Sex’




The Volta Regional Director of the Department of Gender, Ms Comfort Ablometi, has advised teenage girls not to use poverty as an excuse to engage in sexual activities.


She said some girls, who indulged in sex at early ages, attributed their behaviour to poverty to elicit sympathy, forgetting that they were destroying their own future by engaging in early sex.


Ms Ablometi, who gave the advice when she addressed about 600 pupils in the Ho municipality, urged them to focus on their studies and explore all opportunities to make their lives better in future.


She was addressing the teenage girls from 12 basic schools drawn from Taviefe and Sokode in the Ho municipality at a sensitisation programme on gender-based violence (GBV), domestic violence (DV), harmful traditional practices, women and adolescent reproductive health and their rights.



Role models


“Many young ladies have been through hardships but in spite of all their difficulties which included financial problems, they have been able to achieve greater heights and have become role models” she stated.


Ms Ablometi said the sensitisation of the girls was necessary because the Volta Region, according to records, was leading in cases of teenage pregnancy; a situation that had become problematic and needed to be addressed by all stakeholders.


Reports from the Ghana Education Service (GES), she said, revealed that every year some pregnant girls registered for the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) but were unable to do so because their pregnancies had reached advanced stages.


She stated that most victims, when interviewed, had attributed their woes to poverty, but in her view, that was not a good reason for the young girls to find themselves in such unfortunate situations.



Abstain from sex


She asked the teenage girls to abstain from sex to be able to complete their education and advance to higher levels, adding, “With a little discipline and determination, you can still go up.”


The director advised them to report persons who sexually harassed or abused them to their parents or the police for them to be punished.


The sensitisation programme was organised by the Department of Gender with funding from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), and aimed at educating the young girls on the effects of and prevention of teenage pregnancy, sexual and gender-based violence, early marriage and self-protection.


Implications of teenage pregnancy


A Principal Nursing Officer of Public Health at the Ho Municipal Health Directorate, Madam Vivian Tettevi, took the teenagers through topics such as the implications of GBV, DV and adolescent reproductive and sexual health.


She educated them on the consequences of teenage pregnancy, which includes development of complications during childbirth, early motherhood, and, sometimes, death, indicating that teenage girls mostly suffered fistula and some childbirth complications during delivery.


A session was also conducted by the Volta Regional Principal Investigator of the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), Mr Daniel Carlos Mensah, who spoke on the situation in the Volta Region and also showed a video clip on teenage pregnancy



‘Don’t Use Poverty As Excuse To Engage In Early Sex’

Sunday, 13 March 2016

School Girls Vow To Abstain From Premarital Sex




A group of adolescent girls in the Ho Municipal area has pledged to abstain from premarital sex to avoid writing the Basic Education Certificate Examinations (BECE) with pregnancies.


The more than 600 basic school pupils made the promise at a two-day capacity building engagement on Adolescent Reproductive Health, Gender-based Violence, Domestic Violence and harmful traditional practices, in Ho.


The event, held under the auspices of the Department of Gender, was funded by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).


Every year, a number of girls in the area either drop out of school due to teenage pregnancies or write their BECEs carrying pregnancies.


A few also take their babies to the examination halls and breastfeed them intermittently with writing the examinations.


Ms Comfort Ablometi, the Volta Regional Director of the Department of Gender, said the Region was leading in teenage pregnancies and urged the girls to keep their promise and become role models.


Madam Vivian Tettevi, the Ho Municipal Public Nursing Officer, said teenage pregnancies exerted social, economic and academic pressures on pupils and students and advised them to abstain from sex.


She said negative traditional practices such as widowhood rites made women psychologically unstable, and so they must cease.


Mr Daniel Carlos Mensah, the Principal Investigator, the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), Volta Region, advised the girls to report those who attempt to force them to enter into early marriages to their teachers, the Police and assembly members.


He also tasked them to report the culprits of defilement, sexual abuse and violence against them to appropriate authorities.




-GNA



School Girls Vow To Abstain From Premarital Sex