Audio By Carbonatix
The wife of Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II has charged traditional authorities to use their positions to help tackle the issue of child marriages.
She said nananom are the appropriate group of people to help stem that practice in the bud because those alliances are always contracted in communities where the traditional rulers are supposed to be safeguarding.
Lady Julia Osei Tutu, speaking during the occasion of the first ever International Day of The Girl Child Thursday, stated that investing in the girl child is one of the smartest investments any nation can make.
It was on the theme: Too Young to Marry: End Child Marriage Now. The programme was attended by Queenmothers, Chiefs, Representatives from the United Nations, Ministers of State, representatives of Ministries, Departments and Agencies among others.
The Asantehene’s wife explained that a “good education plus health, plus a caring, supportive and protective environment equals enriched potential and opportunities for young girls.”
She was convinced that when a girl delays marriage everyone benefits – for example, she said a girl who marries later is more likely to stay in school, work and reinvest her income in the family and eventually lead her family and community out of poverty.
“Crucially, a girl who marries later is more empowered to choose whether, when, and how many children to have, she and her family are more educated and healthier,” she maintained.
When every member of the population, including the girl child, has access to health, education and economic opportunities, Lady Julia highlighted the potential for development doubles and the cycle of poverty gets broken.
Since women and children look up to traditional authorities as role models, she observed, “Who else can take up this mantle to end child marriages if not traditional rulers?”
“If we become real advocates, if we stand up for and with our young girls, and on daily basis we educate our communities, I am sure that we will make an impact.”
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
-
GEA empowers 150 young women in Walewale with start-up kits under HAPPY project
4 minutes -
2.6m Ghanaians still food insecure despite strong national consumption levels
7 minutes -
Kantanka supports Interior Ministry with motorbikes and TV sets to boost operations
11 minutes -
We’ll support fintech innovation, but regulation will not be compromised – BoG Governor Asiama
15 minutes -
Germany reaffirms security and development partnership with Ghana
21 minutes -
Mahama reaffirms support for Immigration modernisation, lauds ‘Secure Our Border’ drive
24 minutes -
Sam George meets Chinese envoy to deepen tech cooperation
28 minutes -
Being arrogant is good – Burna Boy’s mom defends son amid backlash
28 minutes -
Mahama promises relief for commuters as Kasoa–Winneba road works progress
31 minutes -
Jamaica started Afrobeats – Fat Joe claims
33 minutes -
GHA urged to ensure fair access to Tourism Fund as new executives take office
35 minutes -
Ghana High Commissioner urges calm among nationals in South Africa amid rising tensions
38 minutes -
TMPC shuts down unlicensed facilities in Accra crackdown
42 minutes -
Teacher trainees set for nationwide protest today over recruitment backlog
46 minutes -
Gov’t defends Publican AI rollout at ports amid trader backlash
49 minutes