Audio By Carbonatix
The Domestic Violence and Victim’s Support Unit (DOVVSU) of the Police Service in the Volta Region and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) are talking to the chiefs and opinion leaders in the Nkwanta District over a bad cultural practice where a bride-to-be is forced to sleep with her brother before being allowed to go to her husband.
The practice, known as ‘Sister-in-bed’ in the community, is one of the negative traditional practices the unit is tackling in the Nkwanta District. Others are widowhood rites by which pepper is poured in the eyes of the woman whose husband is dead and female genital mutilation.
Assistant Superintendent of Police, Rita Narh of the Volta Region DOVVSU, said apart from the practice being backward in modern terms it is also a source of HIV/AIDS infection.
According to her, the brothers who sleep with these girls, most of whom are virgins, have wives and children and could also be an avenue for conflicts between the brother-in laws especially in situations where pregnancies and child birth occur.
The practice, she said is very common in the villages of the district and parts of Togo,
According to her the unit had had a number of cases reported to it but did not intend making arrests as this would drive people underground.
Instead, it was rather using educational campaigns such as public fora to highlight the negative impact of the socio-cultural practices on women who are always at the receiving end.
ASP Rita Narh said the unit has also embarked on radio programmes in the local dialects, that is Ewe and Twi on Domestic Violence and Gender Based Violence including child labour and trafficking which is prevalent in the Northern part of the Volta Region to educate the people.
Spectator
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
-
2026 World Cup: What would Ghana lose without Thomas Partey against Panama?
1 hour -
Olise is your man of the match in France World Cup opener
2 hours -
Partey misled Canadian officials over previous arrest
3 hours -
Kylian Mbappe France’s all-time top scorer in win over Senegal
3 hours -
Confidence high as Vice President visits Black Stars ahead of Panama showdown
3 hours -
BECE 2026: Five important steps JHS graduates should take before starting SHS
3 hours -
2026 World Cup: Ghana fails in bid to have Partey’s Canada visa denial overturned
3 hours -
University of Nottingham cyberattack triggers CSA warning to Ghanaian universities
3 hours -
Ghana-South Africa Business Chamber condemns xenophobic attacks on Ghanaians
3 hours -
“US Justice Department hasn’t gotten back to Ghana that it has served Ofori-Atta” – OSP
3 hours -
Deputy Energy Minister reaffirms Ghana’s commitment to gas-led development at West Africa Gas Summit
4 hours -
Protect Ghanaians in South Africa through diplomacy – Bosome Freho MP to gov’t
4 hours -
About 49,000 Ghanaians still live in South Africa – Bosome Freho MP discloses
4 hours -
Bosome Freho MP urges South Africa to take decisive action against Xenophobic attacks
4 hours -
Mfantsipim SHS final-year student commits suicide
4 hours