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Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Parliament summons Interior Minister over recent children assaults

Parliament has summoned the Interior Minister Ambrose Derry over the recent physical assault of children. 

Speaker Prof. Mike Ocquaye ordered that the Minister appears before Members of Parliament Wednesday, February 20  after Kunbungu MP Ras Mubarack drew the attention of the house to two separate incidents of abuse. 

He mentioned the incident at Abura Dunkwa in the Central Region where a stepmother used a machete to slash the hand of her five-year-old stepson, resulting in it being amputated.

He also drew the attention of the house to an incident in Bolgatanga where an 11-year-old boy was bathed with petrol and set ablaze for peeping at a naked woman. 

Ras Mubarack called for action to stem such abuses and the speaker in response directed that the Minister appears before the House to brief MPs.

“The entire paper should be brought to the attention of the Interior Minister before the close of day under the signature of the clerk. The Minister should endeavour to appear before this Honourable House next week Wednesday or so soon thereafter and give us a full explanation on the specific abuses mention,” Prof. Ocquaye said. 

“The statement is referred to the newly established legal department to examine any loopholes in this law (Child’s Act) and for the house to advise itself thereon. The committee on gender and social protection should take a serious view of this matter and report to the house two weeks from today,” he added. 

Below is the full statement read by Ras Mubarack:

Many Ghanaians read with shock recent reports about a five-year-old boy from Abura Dunkwa who lost his left hand from a machete wound he sustained from his Step Mother. Five-year-old Isaac Mensah’s crime was that he had defecated on the farmland, and out of anger, the stepmother hit him with a machete. The injured hand festered resulting in amputation at the Cape Coast Regional hospital in the central region.

Our constitution is quite clear in Article Twenty Eight (1), (2), (3) and (4). For emphasis, Mr. Speaker, Article 28 (2) states that “every child has the right to be protected from engaging in work that constitutes a threat to his health, education or development.” So to begin with, five-year-old Mensah should have been in school and not on the farm. 

Just when the nation was reeling from the shock of the abhorrent attack on Isaac Mensah and his amputation, we were greeted with news of another evil treatment of a child by adults. In Bolgatanga, an 11-year-old boy – Maxwell Ayinbisa was set ablaze for allegedly peeping at a woman in a bathroom. Maxwell, who apparently wasn’t the one who did the peeping, was sent to buy petrol, and when he returned, a group of adults, led one NsonbilaJohn, took the petrol from this lad, poured it on him and set him ablaze. 

Article 28(3) of the constitution is clear about such behaviour. It reads, “A child shall not be subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”

Mr. Speaker, very often, we hear about horrendous abuse of children by parents or guardians in our society – a society of church and mosque-goers. Take for example the case of a four-year-old girl who was raped by an 18-year-old lad in 2017. The child had to go through reconstructive surgery – scarred for the rest of her life, and for several weeks the perpetrator of this outrageous crime was walking freely. According to a BBC Focus on Africa report on 27th October 2017, a local chief had told the parents of the molested child that “nothing could be done because the community gods deemed the suspect innocent.” Subsequently, he was arrested, tried and set free for lack of evidence. 

Mr. Speaker, the Children’s Act of 1998 – ACT 560 also provides guidance on the way to treat our children. And for those who do not want to be legalese, there is enough counsel in the Bible, Quran and Torah about how we should treat children. In Mathew 18:10, “take heed that ye despise not one of these little children; for I say to you, that in heaven their angels do always behold the face of my father which is in heaven.’’ Is it that people have little or no regard to what laws say, or simply refuse to heed the sermons? What these people do is simply unpardonable. 

I would like to commend the Minister for Gender, Children and Social Protection – for her pledge to adopt five-year-old Isaac Mensah. I pray that others would emulate her example in our society. But what we need more than adoption is for relevant institutions to intensify public education on the relevant laws and the punishments thereof. 

Mr. Speaker, as a parent, I cringe, when I hear such atrocious things done to children. These crimes are becoming too rampant because of the kinds of punishment people get. Defilement is a second-degree felony which can attract punishment between five and twenty-five years. I think it is too light. We should change the laws – so that for defilement, any adult should go in for life imprisonment, without the possibility of parole. 

On torture or causing bodily harm to children, it is another crime that the courts take seriously. It is also a second-degree felony and could attract punishment from five up to 25 years. If stepmothers, guardians and misfits like John Nsonbila are aware they could be looking at twenty-five years in hard labour, they may think twice about inflicting bodily-harm on children. And for opinion leaders who abet these crimes or stand in the way of punishing these wackadoos, they should be looking at ten years in jail. Until we send a clear signal about our abhorrence of such abnormal behavior, it would continue, it would upset us; we would talk about it for a day or two, and sweep it under the carpet. 

Children are gifts from God and as such should be treated with the utmost care and love. The ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection should have a policy on building a compassionate society. It should be a program at the heart of this and future governments whereas God envisaged, “the hungry be fed, naked be clothed, aged protected and children cared for.” I thank you Mr. Speaker.

 

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