The Education Minister, Yaw Osei Adutwum has called for calm on issues relating to the ruckus on the admission of dreadlocked first-year students into Achimota Senior High School.
He commended Achimota School for maintaining high education and moral standards and assured Ghanaians that a middle way was being sought with policy by the Ministry of Education, to end the impasse.
Masters Oheneba Kwaku Nkrabea and another Rastafarian student, posted through the Computerized School Placement System, were unable to enrol into the Senior High School because of their dreadlocked hair.
An earlier directive from the Ghana Education Service to the school to enrol the pupils was backtracked, and the pupils were asked to have their Rastafarian haircut to be admitted into the school or seek admission elsewhere.
As the issue rages on, MP for North Tongu, Mr Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, in a statement on the floor of Parliament, said it was time for the House and the Ministry of Education to set minimum standards and clear parameters consistent with national laws on what constitutes acceptable rules in schools.
As he reiterated, discipline in the nation’s educational institutions, the former Deputy Minister for Education, Mr Ablakwa, called for the ‘mess” to be fixed immediately to help “get away with the distraction”.
“Let us not through school rules introduce apartheid regime albeit via the backdoor. This is the reason I will condemn statements to the effect that Rastafarians should build their own schools… Tolerance and accepting unique identities at that age cannot be inimical in any educational system.
“We need to rethink our concept of discipline in our schools. Getting pupils and students to appreciate diversity and beauty of different backgrounds, beliefs and creeds does not undermine discipline by stretch of imagination. Tolerance and accepting unique identities cannot be inimical in any educational system. It is rather an awesome positive quality to imbibe in our children,” he added.
He announced that the Ghana Education Service (GES)”within the shortest possible time is going to lay out specific guidelines for heads of schools as to how we proceed in this environment”.
“Mr Speaker, I can tell you, meetings have been held, others are ongoing, which the Ministry of Education is facilitating, to make sure that our students operate in an environment that they give of their best,” Dr Adutwum said.
First Deputy Speaker and MP for Bekwai Joseph Osei Owusu in a contribution, noted that obeying school rules and regulations does not amount to the denial of education rights.
He cautioned against attempts to rope in Rastafarianism as a religion and was of the position that issues relating to the admission of the students were an individual affair, for which the nation must not waste time.
Former Deputy Minister for Interior James Agalga, Mr Sam Nartey George, MP for Ningo Prampram and Dr Abdul Rashid Pelpuo, MP for Wa Central all called for the students to be admitted on the grounds of non-violation of human rights, religion and non-discrimination against minority groups.
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