Accra, Nov 28, - A new research
project aimed at tracking and reporting child abuse cases in Ghana was on
Tuesday launched in Accra.
The project dubbed: “Protect That
Child”, which is a flagship work of Participatory Development Associates (PDA)
would contribute to continuous research, fill data gap as well as create
awareness and public support for child protection in the country.
The online tracking system that
would also identify cases of violence against children, report them timely,
collect and analyse reported cases of child abuse was launched on the theme for
this year’s International Children’s Day “Stop Violence against Children.”
“It will also track identified or
reported cases on children, this is opportune especially when a significant
number of children are exposed to abuse, economic exploitation and
vulnerabilities,” Mr Tony Dogbe, the Principal Consultant of PDA, said.
Speaking at a knowledge sharing
workshop on child protection, organised by PDA, a non-governmental organisation
(NGO) of skilled people who aim to support processes of empowerment and
self-determination in communities, organisations and individuals, Mr Dogbe said
the need to generate data on the state of children in Ghana was critical now than ever.
“But we do not need to search for
evidence of availability of child abuse but most importantly, we need to
convert research findings into appropriate policies and need intervention to
tackle the critical issues of child protection that had been left unaddressed
in the past,” he said.
The Principal Consultant of PDA
noted that children represented the future of the country and indeed the world,
and so their welfare and access to public support was something stakeholders
owe as a topmost responsibility.
“We cannot also afford to leave
this fight only in the hands of parents or families. We cannot also afford to
leave it in the hands of government alone. It is rather a shared responsibility
starting with parents, families, government, and we as a non-state or civil
society actors,” he said.
He therefore, called for
collective action at all levels adding; “Our collective action at our various
spheres of influence is much handier at this time than ever as we are racing
against time towards achieving universal goals achieving improved human dignity
by 2030.”
“We cannot afford to be left behind in this
race, neither do we want to appear in the list of countries that failed on
human targets in the Sustainable Development Goals,” Mr Dogbe added.
Mr Mawutor Ablo, the Director,
Policy Planning Monitoring and Evaluation, at the Ministry of Gender, Children
and Social Protection, lauded PDA for the initiative that would bring to bear
on timely child abuse cases in the country.
He called for a concerted and
collaborative approach at all levels, especially at the District levels where
all the actions were being done to help make the goal of fighting child abuse
in the country worthwhile.
Mr Ablo said the government would
continue to work for the greater good of children through the provision of
needed frameworks for the enhancement of NGOs works.
There were discussions on topics
like; teasing out the issues of child exploitation and protection, world café,
the practice of child protection: The present, the future and reviving connections
and collaboration for child protection; need for a network.
GNA
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