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General News of Friday, 17 June 2011

Source: GNA

Irresponsible parents commit crime against humanity - Nana Konadu

Accra, June 17, GNA - Nana Konadu Agyeman Rawlings, former First Lady, on Friday said irresponsible parents commit crime against humanity. "We commit a crime against humanity if we fail to bring up our children to be responsible citizens in society," she said.

"That responsibility goes beyond sending the child to school to catering for their most important needs of care and attention and making sure that their moral training is not left to some of their peers who may themselves require parental support," she added.

Nana Konadu, who is also President of the 31st December Women's Movement, said this in a statement issued in Accra to commemorate the 20th International Day of the African Child on Thursday, June 16.

"Today marks the 20th anniversary of the International Day of the African Child, a day originally set aside by the Organisation of African Unity, now the African Union, to honour the memory of hundreds of school children from Soweto who were shot protesting against the poor quality of education by the then Apartheid regime in South Africa.

"Today the International Day of the African Child is also marked to raise awareness of the continued need for improvement in the education provided to the African child and to emphasise the need for protection and guarantee for a better future for our children," she said.

This year's celebration is on the theme: 93All Together for Urgent Actions in Favour of Street Children."

Available statistics indicate that there are an estimated 30 million street children on the continent. This include children who are suffering on the streets begging, selling petty items, pilfering and sleeping in front of buildings at night, exposed to the vagaries of the weather as well as unscrupulous adults.

"My definition of the street child includes children whose parents are unable to afford an education for them despite the fee-free education policy of the State and have lent them out as servants or even slaves to unscrupulous artisans and other small-scale business owners," Nana Konadu said.

She said: 93While the State has to put in place mechanisms to ensure that every child receives the requisite education and does not feel inferior in school to pupils from so-called well-endowed homes, parents have a huge responsibility in ensuring that children are given their due as far as a decent living is concerned.

"It is unfair to the child when as parents we fail to plan their growth in terms of education and other facets of life. It is more worrying when some parents actually give birth to children and use them as bait for economic sustenance from other members of society.

"On this special day for the African child I enjoin all parents in all economic circumstances to appreciate the fact that a child represents the success or failure of our country. We have a responsibility to give birth to children we can afford to look after until adulthood. We commit a crime against humanity if we fail to bring up our children to be responsible citizens in society."

Nana Konadu, an NDC Flagbearer Aspirant, said: 93In Ghana in particular the increasing number of cases of sexual exploitation of children is very worrying. There has been a frightening upsurge in the number of sexual offences against children.

"Our security agencies also need to be more adept and sensitive to the plight of victims. We still have many cases of victims who have reported sexual assault cases to the police and have been reprimanded either for encouraging the assault through their dressing or the time of night they were out and about.

"While there may be serious concerns about parental neglect no one has the right to take sexual advantage of a child or for that matter an unwilling adult," she stressed.

She therefore called on the security agencies to continue to educate their officers to open their arms to all victims, so perpetrators of sexual violence could be apprehended and prosecuted.

She said: 93News of four children being burnt by a fire outbreak in Accra on Monday, June 13, and another three dying in a similar incident at Pease in the Bosumtwi District of the Ashanti Region the following day, further exposes the laxity of parental control that has engulfed our society.

"In both incidents the parents of the victims were not within the vicinity of the accident to serve as a first point of rescue. As parents we have a huge responsibility not to leave our children at home alone or unsupervised and assume that once they are asleep one can sneak out and run a quick errand.

"Let us unite as a society to discuss the rights of children, appreciate the dynamism that permeates modern society and endeavour to be alert in protecting and nurturing our children to be responsible leaders of tomorrow."