Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana is a major source, transit and destination country for children and women trafficked for the purposes of forced labour and commercial sexual exploitation, according to a US Department of State report.
The 2008 Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report, officially presented by the US Embassy on Monday in Accra, said women and children were trafficked for sexual exploitation from Ghana to Western Europe, from Nigeria through Ghana to Western Europe, and from Burkina Faso through Ghana to Cote d’Ivoire.
Children are trafficked to and from other West African countries like The Gambia, Togo, Nigeria and Cote d’Ivoire for the same purposes.
The report, however, noted that trafficking within Ghana was more prevalent than trans-national trafficking, with the majority of the victims being children.
It said both boys and girls were trafficked within Ghana for forced labour, domestic servitude, sexual exploitation, in agriculture and the fishing industry, as porters and for street hawking.
Additionally, the country is also becoming a destination for sex tourists.
The report said even though the government of Ghana had not fully complied with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficked persons, it was making “significant efforts to do so”.
“While Ghana took some law enforcement steps to address sex trafficking through police raids in the last year, there were limited investigations and prosecutions and no convictions of perpetrators of this crime,” it said.
The report also cited corruption among law enforcement officials as an obstacle to effective anti-trafficking measures in Ghana.
Ghana prohibits any form of trafficking and the law prescribes a minimum penalty of five years imprisonment for all forms of trafficking.
The report recommended that Ghana strengthened its overall efforts to prosecute and convict traffickers, investigate and close down brothels selling children into prostitution and to prosecute brothel operators.
It also recommended the suspension of government officials accused of complicity in their official duties in any case of trafficking until such official be prosecuted or cleared of such allegations.
The report recommended the development of a system for providing secure care for rescued sex trafficked victims, the creation of increased shelter space for victims, training of government social workers in identifying trafficked victims among girls and women in prostitution.
The report also prescribed increased coordination between the police and government social workers in conducting trafficking raids and rescues.
Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Shatta Wale pushes me to sing more on my songs – Sarkodie
6 minutes -
The Wire actor James Ransone dies aged 46
6 minutes -
OSP exists largely on paper – Majority Chief Whip Rockson Dafeamekpor
6 minutes -
This is how Wontumi Farms planned to spend GH¢18.7m Exim Bank loan
20 minutes -
AG vs Wontumi Farms: Full investigation outlined by the Attorney-General
25 minutes -
Major incident declared over canal ‘sinkhole’
30 minutes -
Obrafour collaboration gave me my industry stamp – Sarkodie
31 minutes -
Gold price climbs above $4,400 to hit record high
32 minutes -
PwC nears completion of forensic audit on National Cathedral Project – AG
46 minutes -
PMI Ghana honours long-standing members at 2025 Loyalty Awards
51 minutes -
Wontumi allegedly used forged receipt to mislead Exim Bank on GH₵4m equipment purchase – AG
53 minutes -
Chairman Wontumi pressured Exim Bank to release cash for ‘non-existent’ workers – AG
1 hour -
LPG’s Kofi Akpalu and others to be charged for alleged forgery and related offences – AG
1 hour -
Karpowership engages reporters, reaffirms commitment to power supply and community impact
1 hour -
From fear to empowerment: Dzifa Gunu’s mission to transform Ghana’s digital future
1 hour
