Audio By Carbonatix
The CEO of Stratcomm Africa, Esther Cobbah, has cautioned women against making assertions that reinforce gender stereotypes, particularly the claim that 'women are their own enemies.'
Her statement was in reaction to a concern raised by a caller on the Super Morning Show, Tuesday. The listener (Abena) called in to share a story of how she feels sabotaged by some actions of one of her female bosses.
The lady said her boss is seeking her dismissal because she (the boss) feels threatened that Abena would soon assume her position if she upgrades her capacity.
"I'm working with a company and I have two bosses. I was sent there to learn and receive training but one of them said she's not ready to train me, so that I take her position though that's not my intention."
According to Abena, her initial reaction to the comment was 'surprise. "All the enthusiasm left me," she said. "The lady has since been pushing for me to be sacked," she added.
Responding to this, the two panelists of the International Women's Day edition of the show, contended that this is not only a trait associated with women.
Executive Director for the Ghana Stock Exchange, Abena Amoah said "I look at these things as human and this is one of the unconscious biases - that we assume someone has done something only because she's a woman. The scenario is just a human being having a problem with another human being and not because she's a woman."
The CEO of Stratcomm Africa shared a similar view.
"I would say this. We have to be careful about making it look like it's because the boss is a woman and the subordinate is also a woman. This happens with male-male situations and male-female situations."
She, thus, entreated the lady to seek redress from the appropriate authorities in the office.
"I'll encourage her to pursue this with the Human Resource Department for them to come up with the underlying issues and get it addressed," she said.
Another bias she challenged was that women tend to gossip about each other. On the contrary, "men gossip, and sometimes the subject of their gossip is women."
"Gossip is not good, and it should be stopped by both men and women, and not just women," Ms. Cobbah added.
Latest Stories
-
Today’s Front pages: Thursday, December 18, 2025
50 minutes -
Let’s rally behind Bawumia to rebuild and reclaim power in 2028 – Opoku Prempeh to NPP faithful
1 hour -
UK and Ghana co-host African Development Fund 17 Pledging Conference in London
1 hour -
Work yourself out of a job: The fearless path to leadership legacy
1 hour -
Empower institutions, not politicians, to win the galamsey fight – Kokofu
1 hour -
Mankessim Omanhen declares lithium lands ‘Artificial Disaster Zones’
1 hour -
Funerals, family visits drive GH¢6.6bn in domestic tourism
2 hours -
Christmas fever in Mother Ghana
2 hours -
At 90, Uncle Ray still punches above his weight – Enduring legacy of Ambassador Ray Quarcoo
2 hours -
GRA targets revenue growth and public trust through intensive staff training
2 hours -
People were leaking information to fraud suspects – Sam George on past failed cybercrime arrests
2 hours -
Ghana’s foreign policy anchored in humanitarian tradition – Ablakwa
2 hours -
Leadership is about lifting lives, not status – Adutwum
2 hours -
Accra–Kumasi Expressway to offer alternative route, not replace existing highway – Roads Minister
2 hours -
Mahama’s first term galamsey crackdown failed due to political leadership – Dr Kokofu
2 hours
