The
Upper East Regional Coordinating Council, in collaboration with the
Municipal and District Assemblies (MDAs), are to come out with
strategies to curb Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) practiced in some
parts of the Region.
The Council said it would put in place
measures to deter parents from sending their babies and daughters to
neighbouring countries such as Burkina Faso and Togo to engage in the
act.
“The Assembly members of the various MDAs will be tasked to
sensitize parents to stop this barbaric act. We cannot allow this in
this 21st century,” the Upper East Deputy Regional Minister, Mr Daniel
Syme, said.
He said this when stakeholders including heads of
department and Civil Society Organizations raised the concern at a
regional mid-year cross sector review meeting organised by UNICEF and
the UERCC in Bolgatanga on Tuesday.
The participants said FGM
was common in the Pusiga District, Bawku Municipal, the Bawku West and
the Kessena-Nankana West districts which share borders with Togo and
Burkina Faso, as parents often cross with their babies and daughters to
have their genital organs mutilated.
Dr Syme said it was a crime
under the laws of Ghana to engage in such negative cultural practices
and that parents who would be found indulging in it and their
accomplices would not be spared when caught.
The participants
suggested examination of children at health facilities to know whether
they had been taken through FGM as part of measures to halt it.
They also suggested that teachers should constantly check girls’
attendance at school because some parents take their daughters out of
school to be genitally mutilated.
Ms Clara Dube, Chief Field
Officer of UNICEF at the Tamale office, expressed worry about parents in
the Region who give out their daughters for early marriages and said
statistics showed that 39 per cent of females in the Upper East Region
were given out for marriage before age 18 years.
She said one of
the major causes of complication in child birth could be attributed to
early marriages and appealed to parents not to endanger the lives of
their daughters by giving them out for marriage before 18 years.
Ms Rubby Anang, Chief Field Officer of UNICEF in charge of Child
Protection Network, appealed to stakeholders particularly members of the
Upper East Child Protection Network to sensitize parents on their roles
and responsibilities in the upbringing of their children. |
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