
Audio By Carbonatix
Media personality and Gender advocate, Josephine Oppong-Yeboah, has urged the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection, to engage traditional authorities in the country to abolish traditional and cultural practices that undermine the fundamental human rights and development of children.
According to her, since cultures must be respected by all, cultures that are detrimental to the well-being of children cannot be tolerated and accepted in modern times.
“We should not hide under the umbrella of culture to engage in practices that are detrimental to the development and growth of our children,” she said.
Ms Oppong-Yeboah commenting on the supposed traditional marriage between the Gborbu Wulomo, Nuumo Borketey Laweh XXXIII and a 12-year-old girl in Accra last Saturday, March 30, 2024, said the Children’s Act, 1998 (Act 560) frowns on such marriages.
Read also: Girl married to priest is not 12, she turns 16 in July - Chieftaincy Minister
The alleged marriage has attracted a lot of condemnation from many Ghanaians and organisations.
For Ms Oppong-Yeboah, it is time the Gender Ministry advocates for the rights of children, particularly girls that are given in for marriage at early ages of their lives.
"We cannot sit down and keep quiet for people to use culture to destroy the future of children, particularly young girls," she said, adding "The effect of what has happened is that it will serve as a motivation for people who desire to marry teenagers to do so."
Ms Oppong-Yeboah was of the view that opinion leaders and highly respected elders of society must serve as role models for people in positive light as many people look up to them.
"Our culture is beautiful and nobody is interested in looking down on anybody's culture, but we cannot appreciate things that are detrimental to any child’s right," she said, adding “such a culture cannot find space in our time.”
For her, teenage girls must not be pressured into contracted marriages, saying “there is no way a child of 12 years old will understand the import of marriage or consent to it."
Ms Oppong-Yeboah added that, “What happened is a breach against the girl's fundamental human rights and must be condemned by all well-meaning Ghanaians.”
Latest Stories
-
South African government disputes Ghana’s claim on fatal shooting of Ghanaian national
10 minutes -
JoyNews partners NADMO to mobilise relief for flood victims
20 minutes -
Kwasi Pratt questions President’s helicopter tour of flood-hit areas, urges stronger ground engagement
34 minutes -
Flood victims to receive free psychological counselling as experts call for flexible work policies
45 minutes -
NADMO says it warned of heavy rains and took steps to reduce flooding in Accra
52 minutes -
Henry Quartey blames weak enforcement for worsening Accra floods
55 minutes -
India asks WhatsApp to pause username feature rollout over fraud concerns
58 minutes -
South African state complicit in xenophobic violence – Fiifi Boafo
1 hour -
NPP North East Regional Secretary declares bid for chairman position, says he’s tried and tested
1 hour -
Bus fares, rent, and school fees push Ghana’s inflation to 5.3% in June
1 hour -
WANEP urges stronger youth inclusion in West Africa’s political decision-making
1 hour -
GES debunks viral claim that floodwaters destroyed WASSCE papers
1 hour -
Mindful Governance brings Karl George MBE’s AI Wake-Up Call to Ghana’s boards
1 hour -
Solomon Owusu accuses South African government of backing attacks on Ghanaians
2 hours -
Henry Quartey calls for broader representation on government’s Anti-Flood Taskforce
2 hours