Audio By Carbonatix
A survey conducted by the National Service Personnel Association (NASPA) in the Central Region has exposed some male students of the University of Cape Coast (UCC) in illegal sexual practices.
The survey accused the male students of UCC of engaging young girls in the university community in “sex for money” activities, thereby contributing to the rise of teenage pregnancy and child prostitution in Cape Coast and its adjoining communities.
In a house-to-house interaction with some youth by personnel of NASPA to ascertain why the children engage in prostitution and the measures to curb the act, some teenagers located in Apewosika and Amamoma blamed the male students of UCC for going round and sleeping with girls in the community in exchange for money, hence the rampant teenage pregnancy and prostitution in the area.
They also mentioned that some parents who demand money from their wards force them into prostitution. This came to light when personnel of NASPA in Cape Coast visited the university communities to embark on teenage pregnancy awareness campaign.
The campaign, which was on the theme: “Our Girls, Our Future,” was aimed at discouraging children from engaging in illicit sex.
Speaking in an interview with Today, Central Regional President of NASPA, Wonder Totor, said the move was to educate girls in the community and reduce child prostitution and teenage pregnancy in the community.
For his part, Vice President of NASPA, Bright Nat Enninson, called on Domestic Violence & Victim Support Unit (DOVVSU) to start the arrest and prosecution of male students who keep impregnating girls in the community.
About 5,106 teenage pregnancies were recorded in the Central Region between July and December 2016. Out of this, 430 were aged between 13 and 15, while the remaining 4,682 pregnancies were recorded among 16 and 19.
Latest Stories
-
Public prophecy can attract legal action if harm is caused—Lawyer
3 seconds -
NPP accuses government of authoritarian tactics
46 seconds -
NPA slashes Fuel Price Floor for April 16 window; petrol now GH¢13.27, diesel at GH¢16.10
1 minute -
COPEC pushes for partial fuel tax cuts to ease burden on Ghanaians
5 minutes -
Guinness Ghana to award GH¢100,000 to winner of 2026 TGMA Album of the Year
14 minutes -
Accra hosts Africa workshop on civilian protection from explosive weapons
17 minutes -
IMF recommends strengthening of BoG’s macroprudential framework
30 minutes -
Banking sector records gradual recovery but NPLs, sovereign exposures remain high – IMF
33 minutes -
When algorithms decide the story: AI and the new struggle for press freedom
40 minutes -
GRA sharpens frontline capacity to drive tax compliance and boost national revenue
43 minutes -
UG Corporate Football League Week 7: Goals, drama and hat-tricks on display
1 hour -
South Africa names apartheid-era politician as new ambassador to the US
1 hour -
Asante Kotoko apologise for ‘disappointing’ form, vow to hire ‘competent’ coach
1 hour -
Tema daycare reopens after microlight aircraft crash
1 hour -
Free Primary Healthcare to remove cost barriers — NHIA CEO
2 hours