Audio By Carbonatix
The University of Ghana has issued a strong demand for an immediate retraction and public apology from private legal practitioner Moses Foh-Amoaning after he claimed the institution had amended its statutes to “admit LGBT+ activities".
The claims, published by GhanaWeb on November 21 and attributed to comments made during an interview on Onua FM’s Yen Nsempa programme, were described by the university as “entirely false, misleading, and defamatory.”
In a statement released by management on November 24, the university clarified that its recent review of the 2024 Statutes did not introduce any provisions endorsing or promoting LGBT+ activities.
Instead, the revisions simply replaced gender-specific pronouns such as “he” and “she” with gender-neutral terms, including “they” and “their”, reflecting modern English usage and removing the need for repetitive phrasing in legal documents.
The university stressed that the updates were conducted strictly in line with national laws and established governance procedures, noting that the singular “they” is now widely accepted across academic, legal, and religious texts.
The press statement further condemned what it termed an “unacceptable personal attack” on the vice-chancellor by Foh-Amoaning, asserting that no vice-chancellor has unilateral authority to amend university statutes.
Any attempt to question her integrity on the basis of unfounded allegations, the university said, was both disrespectful and in bad faith.


The University has therefore demanded that Foh-Amoaning retract his comments without delay and issue a public apology to the Vice-Chancellor and the wider University community.
It warned that failure to comply within a reasonable period would leave the institution with no choice but to pursue legal action under Ghanaian law to protect its integrity and leadership.
Management also urged media organisations to exercise greater responsibility when reporting on sensitive institutional matters, warning that the amplification of unverified claims undermines public trust and risks misleading the public.

The University reaffirmed its commitment to transparency, ethical governance, and its overarching mission of delivering global impact through teaching, learning, and research, insisting that it would not be distracted by baseless claims.
Latest Stories
-
Transport Minister urges Metro Mass Transit to strengthen internal capacity for fleet expansion
6 minutes -
KN Foundation prison outreach: Amenfi Central MP moved by sight of ‘very young boys’ as football legends visit inmates
6 minutes -
Sweety Aborchie Writes: Women, Power, Politics, Issue 3: Silence is not consent
9 minutes -
Ghana Card accepted at over 44,000 airports worldwide as a mode of identification – NIA boss
13 minutes -
Ghanaian midfielder Linda Owusu Ansah set to join AFC Toronto
26 minutes -
Grassroots sports development critical to Ghana Sports Fund vision – Yaw Ampofo-Ankrah
30 minutes -
Dr Emma Oliveira appointed Ghana Country Chair for Healthcare, Wellness, Insurance & Risk wing of Global G100 platform
34 minutes -
Youth unemployment remains government’s biggest challenge — Asiedu Nketia
58 minutes -
Cost of borrowing projected to increase despite policy rate hold – banks
60 minutes -
Guardiola to leave Man City after 10 years as boss
1 hour -
Carrick confirmed as Man Utd permanent manager
1 hour -
Photos: Parliament reconvenes, opens second meeting of ninth parliament
1 hour -
Aisha Bengai challenges young women to prioritise business investment over luxury spending
1 hour -
AMA donates streetlights to improve security and trading conditions at Kantamanto Market
1 hour -
Registrar of Companies set to delist 318 companies over compliance breaches
1 hour