
Audio By Carbonatix
Children from low and middle-income countries are less likely to use the internet from home, and are more likely to go online from cyber cafes.
These children are also said to be at greater risk of encountering inappropriate images and online and offline solicitation, according to a recent report by UNICEF’s Innocenti Research Centre (IRC).
In light of this, J Initiative, a youth focused non-governmental organisation in partnership with Tigo Ghana, have sensitised over 1,500 school children in 14 basic schools in the Greater Accra region on the need to stay safe and protected when using the internet.
This forms part of several activities lined up for their Child Online Safety and Protection Campaign.
At the climax of the internet safety awareness programme for the 14 schools at Burma Camp Basic and Garrison Schools, resource persons from J Initiative and Facebook UK educated the children on how to detect suspicious persons and activities online, as well as, how to keep their personal information secured.
In her presentation, the Executive Director of J-Initiative, Awo Aidam Amenyah, highlighted some of the dangers the internet could bring when used wrongly.
Touching on the success of the three-week awareness programme, Ms. Amenyah said: “Since we began the awareness programme in basic schools, a lot of parents have reached out to us asking for advice on how best to protect their children. Some even ask for counselors to help them deal with children who are already engaged in bad internet practices such as explicit media content.”
She also explained that the overwhelming response they have been receiving from teachers and the students is indicative that there are deep-seated issues that need to be addressed through appropriate regulation and legislation.
She was excited some schools had requested for assistance to incorporate internet safety in their ICT curricula.
Latest Stories
-
CJID expands support for environmental and climate journalism in West Africa
5 minutes -
CJID steps up AI fight with new tools to combat election misinformation
10 minutes -
The roads home haven’t changed, they are worse now
11 minutes -
Brandy’s slimmer appearance sparks concern as fans urge compassion over online speculation
12 minutes -
CJID to fund investigative journalism and strengthen newsrooms across West Africa
14 minutes -
Gov’t pursuing misinformation law while protecting media freedom – Shamima Muslim
21 minutes -
Journalism has become democratic infrastructure, not just the fourth estate – Shamima Muslim
25 minutes -
Misinformation now one of biggest threats to democracy in West Africa – Shamima Muslim
32 minutes -
Gov’t announces implementation plan for two-day national flood aftermath clean-up exercise
39 minutes -
‘What are you doing about it?’ Ahmed Shaib questions Local Gov’t Minister over ‘Aboboya’ menace
43 minutes -
Man Utd plan naming rights deal for new stadium
56 minutes -
Quansah banned for two games after Mexico red card
59 minutes -
Creative Arts Agency rallies creatives to join National General Cleaning Exercise
1 hour -
No Agenda 111 hospital is operational despite GH¢4.8bn spent – Health Minister
1 hour -
Ridne Humanitarian Food Hub, Ukraine Embassy donate to flood-affected refugees
1 hour