Audio By Carbonatix
The Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) has urged parents and guardians, particularly fathers, to assume grater responsibility for the nurturing of their families.
A statement signed by Mr. Richard Quayson, Deputy Commissioner of CHRAJ, to mark International Day of Families which falls on Thursday, reminded parents that under the Children’s Act, they had the primary responsibility to care and support their children by giving them parental love, affection and emotional attachment for their development.
May 15 every year is the United Nations (UN) International Day of Families. The day was set aside by the UN General Assembly in 1993 to reflect the importance the world community attaches to family.
The theme for this year’s celebration is “Fathers and Families: Responsibilities and challenges.”
The Commission called on the government to strengthen social and economic policies designed to meet the needs of families and their individual members especially the most disadvantaged and vulnerable members, with particular attention to the care of children.
The Commission urged civil society, especially educational institutions, faith-based organizations and individuals to strengthen their support of families in the face of enormous challenges of disease, poverty, homelessness, crime and abuse by advancing a better understanding of the strengths, needs and responsibility of families, particularly the role of fathers in promoting economic, cultural and social development of the family.
It also said it had recorded a significant rise in family-related cases, more specifically cases on child and spousal maintenance.
It said the trend suggested that many fathers were neglecting their responsibility to maintain their families resulting in the denial of basic socio-economic rights such as the right to food, shelter, health, clothing and education.
The statement said the trend also showed that while mothers worked longer to support families, many fathers were disengaging themselves from basic parental roles.
The result was that children were getting less parental support and attention and leaving more families distressed.
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
-
Mahamud Iddi wins TCL Electronics worth GH¢100,000 in EGL’s Akye3de3 Kese3 Promotion
2 hours -
Lands Minister, NAIMOS mourn fallen soldier killed during anti-galamsey operation in Obuasi
3 hours -
Ghana Impact Project donates $20k to restore mobility for children
3 hours -
JoyNews’ Kwaku Asante named Best Radio and TV Journalist in Parliamentary Reporting
4 hours -
Education Ministry updates EMIS indicators to strengthen ICT integration in schools
4 hours -
Interior Ministry declares Christmas, Boxing Day and New Year’s Day public holidays
4 hours -
President Mahama directs Finance Ministry to disburse $78m for completion of Takoradi–Agona-Nkwanta road
5 hours -
Interior Minister lauds NIA staff for dedication, pledges continued government support
5 hours -
First Atlantic Bank will run a “proper and decent business” to protect shareholder value – CEO
5 hours -
First Atlantic Bank targets African expansion as IPO strengthens capital, governance
5 hours -
First Atlantic Bank CEO attributes IPO and GSE listing decision to renewed confidence in Ghana’s economy
6 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Bechem United end All Blacks 6-game unbeaten run
6 hours -
Eggs fly off shelves as shoppers throng The Multimedia Group’s X’mas Egg Market on final day
7 hours -
Bankable energy: Why Africa’s downstream sector is the next global investment frontier
7 hours -
Working Capital Management: Do’s and don’ts to consider for 2026
8 hours
