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Sunday, 28 July 2019

Gender Minister calls for support to end human trafficking


                                                  
                                               



Mrs Cynthia Morrison, the Minister of Gender, Children and Social Protection, has said 

 Ghana is making a headway  in its quest to protect the child.



She said the country, since the ratification of the United Nations (UN) Convention on the Right of 


the Child (CRC) has strengthen its laws to protect children.
 

Mrs Morrison was speaking at the launch of the 30 years of the UN CRC in Accra.
 
She said the Domestic Violence Act and Human Trafficking Act as well as other related policies are 

meant to complement the CRC to protect the rights of children.






The CRC was signed and adopted by the Member States of the United Nations on November 20, 

1989, and has become the 

world most ratified treaty which sets out basic, universal standards for every human being.
 
  Ghana became the first country to adhere to the CRC by ratifying the convention on January 29, 

1990 Mrs Morrison said Ghana in 1989 synchronized its previously existing child care legislation to 

 conform to the CRC and created the Children’s Act 1989, Act 560.





She said since then a number of legislative and policy frameworks which include a child-rights based 

approach such as Child 

and Welfare Policy, National Justice for Children Policy, Inclusive Education Policy, Trafficking Act, 

Juvenile Justice Act 

(568), Adolescent Health Service Policy and Strategy and Expanded Programme on Immunization 

Policy among others, have  been drafted and enacted.
 
Mrs Henrietta Fore, United Nations International Emergency Fund (UNICEF) Executive Director, in 

a message to the  participants, said Ghana has shown the world how to make the CRC real by 

reducing mortality for children and mothers; 

getting more children into school and by reducing the number of girls getting married before 18 years.





She said UNICEF has been proud to walk the path with their partners in Ghana where many children 

don’t have access to 

 clean water and sanitation and too many still face the barrier of poverty, discrimination and 

inequality.  Mrs Fore said for the next 30 years Ghana must continue moving from advocacy to 

realizing children’s rights adding that such rights can open opportunities and give children the tools 

 to shape their futures.
 



She said in the first decade of life, there is the need to scale-up early childhood development 

programmes like nutrition, 

stimulation and protection, whilst in the second decade, “Ghana must give young people the 

education, entrepreneurial and 

digital skills they need for the world of work.



The UNICEF Executive Director said: ”As we look back at 30 years of the CRC, let’s look forward 


to the next 30 years, 

realise these rights, transform these rights into opportunities and solutions for every child and young 

person in the country”.




Dr Kojo Appiah-Kubi, Member of Parliament for Atwima Kwanwoma and Chairman of the 

Parliamentary Select Committee 

on Gender, Children and Social Protection, said his committee has began focusing on child rights 

violation like ‘Child Marriage’ which occurrence continues in the society.


He said, according UNICEF, 21 per cent of girls in Ghana were married before age 18 and these rates 

vary greatly between 


regions and can be as high as 39 per cent in the northern parts of the country but only 12 per cent in 

the Greater Accra Region.





Dr Appiah-Kubi said government recognizes that child marriage is a major impediment to the 

development of the country and the full realization of the rights of children.



“Government has also increase advocacy to end child marriage by instituting a national campaign, 

which culminated in the First African Ladies Conference on ending Child Marriage in Accra in 

2018”.





source : Ghananews.com

















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