Audio By Carbonatix
Mrs Esther Annor, the Deputy Director of Administrative Justice, Commission for Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), has encouraged women and girls to report any form of violence against them.
She said violence against women and girls, which was becoming prevalent in almost every home in the country, was a violation of human rights and must not be condoned.
Mrs Annor was speaking at a media training on issues relating to violence against women and girls in Ghana.
The workshop was organised by Inrela Ghana, an association of religious leaders living with HIV and AIDS, with funding from the United Nations (UN) WomenTrustFund.
It exposed journalists to the ethical ways to report on women’s rights and stories of survivors of violence.
Mrs Annor said every human being, irrespective of sex, was entitled to human rights and charged women and girls to always fight for their rights.
She stressed the need for society to support those facing some sort of abuse to ensure their protection and wellbeing, saying such abuses came in different forms.
"In Ghana violence against women and girls takes different forms in many aspects embedded in social, cultural and economic cultures, from the work place to homes,” Mrs Annor said, and called for concerted efforts to halt them.
Mrs Mercy Acquah-Hayford, the Country Coordinator for Inrela Ghana, said the workshop was part of a three-year project, which started in 2010, to create awareness on the need to end and reduce stigma against abused persons.
The project, she said, was being implemented in three communities in Accra - Chorkor, James Town, and Nima, Acquah-Hayford said the project would engage men in the selected communities and enlighten them on the need to protect women and girls and desist abusing them.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) said violence against women, particularly intimate partner violence and sexual violence, is a major public health problem and a violation of women's human rights.
Estimates published by WHO indicate that globally, about one in three (30 per cent) of women have been subjected to either physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or non-partner sexual violence in their lifetime.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana to seek review of Canada’s visa decision on Thomas Partey
2 hours -
KGL Foundation renovates Accra Psychiatric Hospital OPD
3 hours -
Zoomlion, NADMO deploy officers across Greater Accra to sustain anti-flood campaign
3 hours -
AG challenges Appiah-Kubi’s bid to withdraw from Wontumi case
3 hours -
The studio and one-bedroom advantage: Why smaller units are outperforming villas in Accra in 2026
4 hours -
How to buy off-plan in Accra without losing your money: A diaspora due diligence guide for 2026
4 hours -
Immigration law that may have kept Partey out of Canada, as England clash looms
4 hours -
NPP Sweden Chair declares bid for national first vice chairman position
5 hours -
NRSA warns motorists and pedestrians of increased road hazards amid heavy rainfall
5 hours -
One dead and at least 10 others wounded in Texas shooting
5 hours -
Storm chaser digs man out of rubble after tornadoes rip through US Midwest
5 hours -
Mother finds body of missing son two days after Kenya’s Ebola quarantine centre protests
5 hours -
IShowSpeed called Ghana home. Now the world is watching. Here is how to own a piece of it
5 hours -
SpaceX IPO makes Elon Musk the world’s first trillionaire
5 hours -
Assin Adubiase Methodist Basic School marks 120 years of educational excellence
5 hours