Audio By Carbonatix
A report released by the National African Peer Review Mechanism (NAPRM), has revealed an increasing rate of child prostitution in the Tamale Metropolis, which is said to be very worrying to the moral fabric of the people.
The report, which was conducted in 20 communities with 200 people responding to questionnaires, revealed 13.5 per cent rate of child prostitution in the area.
Dr. Francis Appiah, Executive Secretary of the NAPRM, has therefore expressed concern about the growing incidents of child prostitution.
"It is worrying for Tamale metropolis to be engaging in the act, which would put the future of the youth at risk and danger".
Dr. Appiah was addressing about 75 Assembly Members in the Tamale Metropolis to seek their views and inputs into the report for onward submission to the President of the Republic.
The report is also part of a nationwide survey, which is currently on going in two districts in the Northern Region, the Tamale Metropolis and Walawale Municipality.
The survey would form part of the national report to be presented to the Africa Union (AU) for review.
An Assembly Member for Pagazaa Electoral Area, Iddrisu Hardi, who also confirmed the child prostitution report, told the GNA that the situation was more serious than the report captures.
He said it was very common to see young girls in some hotels and night clubs between the hours of 2300 hours to 0200 hours parading as sex workers.
"They disguise themselves before going out making it difficult to identify them after their business hours."
The NAPRM also cited corruption and unemployment in the Tamale Metropolis as endemic, while the police and CEPS topped the list of corrupt institutions in the area.
Mr Alhassan Imoro, an Assembly Member for Datoyili Electoral Area expressed worry and concern about the sample size of 200 respondents from only 20 communities', which he thinks is too small to be generalized because it is not representative enough.
On democracy, the respondents commended the country for championing democratic governance and urged the government to continue giving more freedom to the people to express their views.
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
-
Is the IMF Complicit in Bank of Ghana’s Massive 2025 Losses? – IERPP
42 minutes -
Scaling Together: Prudential Bank MD’s advice on fintech‑bank partnerships in Africa
1 hour -
Joe Mettle inspires hope with new song ‘This Year’
1 hour -
Antisemitism ‘allowed to come into the open’ says Bondi victim’s daughter
2 hours -
What Is Wrong with Us? Why do we Reject Colonialism yet Cling to its Titles?
2 hours -
World Bank pushes regional health strategy to close financing gaps in West and Central Africa
2 hours -
Britney Spears pleads guilty to reckless driving after arrest
2 hours -
Parentage, not paternity: Ghana’s proposed compulsory paternity testing bill sparks fears of discrimination against mothers
2 hours -
Samsung family pays off record $8bn inheritance tax bill
3 hours -
Spain seizes record amount of cocaine in Atlantic Ocean, authorities say
3 hours -
Two killed and many injured after car driven into crowd in German city of Leipzig
3 hours -
KiDi drops ‘Signature’ with Lasmid ahead of album release
3 hours -
UAE accuses Iran of renewed drone and missile attacks
3 hours -
Giuliani recovering from pneumonia and ‘now breathing on his own’
3 hours -
Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni settle lawsuit over It Ends With Us film
3 hours