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Opinions of Tuesday, 13 February 2018

Columnist: anishaffar.org

Anis Haffar writes: The African child must be loved and cared for, not beaten

Some members of the TIS Amnesty International Club Some members of the TIS Amnesty International Club

The invitation by the Tema International School (TIS) Amnesty Club to be the guest speaker and launch their campaign (January 2018) against corporal punishment in schools took my mind back to my own childhood, to a gory incident, which I shared with the audience. I was visiting an aunt in a compound house in Fante New Town, Kumasi, when a woman burst out from her room raging at her maid servant for something the poor girl had done or not done.

In her anger, the woman snatched a frying pan and slammed the side of the kid’s face with it: blood gushed out of the child’s ear. Besides some initial murmurings, people went about their business as if nothing had happened. It was the norm to make children suffer for their offences through any means necessary.

Mindless reasons for child abuse run the gamut from anger to moral outrage, resulting sometimes in the injury to a hapless child from an manic disciplinarian.

The TIS campaign brief

The TIS campaign brief stated as follows: “As enshrined in Article 28 of the UN Conventions, Discipline in schools should respect children’s dignity. For children to benefit from education schools must employ orderly ways without the use of violence. Therefore, governments must ensure that school administrators review their discipline policies and eliminate any discipline practices involving physical or mental violence, abuse or neglect.”

The brief asserted that “schools should implement proactive policies and efficient monitoring measures that will enable members of the school communities to be self-responsible towards creating [a] friendly, orderly and safe learning environment in order to promote acceptable behaviours and actions.”

The panel speakers included the human rights education and activism coordinator, Amnesty International, Hannah Osei; Dr Wiafe-Akenten Brenya, University of Ghana Department of Psychology; Akua Boateng Duah, child’s advocate, Challenging Heights; and Rosina Adobor, Kpone-Katamanso district director of education, Ghana Education Service.

TIS was represented by Chloe Asiedu, initiator, TIS Amnesty Club; moderato Alistair Kirk; and MC Otuwa Dabanka, president of the club.

Who will throw the first stone?

In a previous column, “Suffer the little children to come unto me,” (December 14, 2015), I noted how difficult it was to forgive the absurd reasons I hears when discussing (on radio or TV) the issues of school discipline with grown-ups who should know better than hurt children. The most abusive reason, the one that has become the default mantra or excuse-in-chief, for beating up kids, is the archaic biblical quotation, “Spare the rod and spoil the child.” Many adult abusers stand ever ready to throw “the first stones” without ever stopping to “remove the mote” from their own eyes, considering society’s own contribution to the overall indiscipline and poverty we see today.

Throughout history, children have been subjected to domination, murder, abandonment, incarceration, mutilation, beatings, and forced labor – to name some examples from the litany of child maltreatment. Many practices we know today to be brutal and senseless were entirely in keeping with the ethos of the past, but unfortunately some still persist.



Children’s tennis club, Kumasi, Ashanti Region

Some ideas promoting the abuse of children are stories with deep but primitive religious roots. Two famous examples of the widespread killing of children were those ordained by the pharaoh at the time of the birth of Moses (Old Testament), and by Herod (New Testament) when the birth of Jesus was foretold to him. For goodness sake, if muscular kings themselves couldn’t locate Moses or Jesus, why must children suffer? Children are the softest targets and continue be the victims of misplaced anger.

Another culprit, one King Ahaz, was cited also for barbarous behaviour. He “burnt incense in the valley of the son of Hinnom, and burnt his children in the fire” for ritual sacrifice [2 Chron. 28:3]. Such hideous unquestioned precepts possibly set the tone for child beatings that have lingered to this day.

Societal hypocrisies

When Jesus resorted to the whip himself, it was not against children; it was against the crooks who had turned the temples of God into “dens of thieves”. Societal hypocrisies are too much with us. In Ghana, for example, were naughty children the felons who put the ghost names on the nation’s payroll, paid out dubious judgement debts, and collected bribes for our learned judges? Children need good sanitation, water, and toilet facilities in the public schools. Such are the basic human necessities which every discerning adult must help to provide in their own communities and beyond!

Creepy interpretations of religions, insidious native superstitions, half-baked literacy, and cold-blooded illiteracy breed some of the spookiest offenders clothed in holier-than-thou pretenses. Silly notions and fallacies are still held and propagated to this day. In parts of Africa, widespread poverty made children an economic liability, and were often abandoned, sold, or mutilated to make them more piteous and effective beggars.

The United Nations’ 3 Ps

Today, in lieu of the abusive, decrepit adage, “Spare the rod and spoil the child”, the United Nations introduced a charter that cut across cultures, nationalities and religions. The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) guarantees: 1. Rights of provision (adequate nutrition, health care, education, economic welfare); 2. Rights of protection (from abuse, neglect, violence, exploitation); and 3. Rights of participation (a voice in decisions affecting the child.

The UNCRC places an obligation on countries to provide and protect these rights. Ghana was one of the first nations to have ratified it. It’s now time to practice what was signed to protect the children.



TIS community service for children, Akorlikope, Volta Region