Accra, Dec.19, - Women in Law and
Development Africa (WiLDAF) has called on the President to translate his position
as the Co-chair of Eminent Advocates of
the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development into actual rights for women
in the country.
Ms Abigail Edem Hunu, the
Programme Officer, WiLDAF Ghana, said Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) want
to see an improvement in women appointment, and in other decision making bodies
as Ghana was still lagging greatly in this regard.
Ms Hunu was speaking at a
day’s step down training programme
supported by Grassroots Africa on gender and the Sustainable Development Goal five
(SDG’s 5) in Accra
The aim of the training was to
build the capacity of participants on gender and the SDGs to enhance their work
and to enable them monitor the implementation of the SDGs especially in their
respective organizations and regions or districts to feed into the future
shadow reports.
The SDG 5 talks about the need to
achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls.
It also targets an end to all
forms of discrimination against all women and girls everywhere, eliminate all
forms of violence against women and girls in the public and private spheres,
including trafficking, sexual and all other kinds of exploitation.
She said according to the 2016
Gender Gap Calculator, it was going to take Ghana 83 years to achieve gender
equality and therefore the fight for SDG 5 was important as this was a human
rights and it is also a pre-requisite for sustainable development and
democratisation.
Ms Hunu said in order for
government to achieve gender equality at a faster pace, there was the need to
allocate funds to the education and sensitization of religious, traditional and
community leaders so that some of the harmful traditional practices would be
minimised or eradicated completely.
According to her there were still
gaps in the SDGs 5 and that was the reason why the Gender Gap Calculator
indicated that it would take Ghana a long time but this could be averted if the
right policies, laws, education and sensitisation initiatives were implemented.
It was also important for
government to end sexual abuse drastically as this was a huge challenge in
schools, institutions among others as well as the need to introduce gender
equity topics into syllabus of the training colleges to help in the fight.
She said the return of pregnant
girls into their schools had also become a thing of concern to CSOs and
advocacy groups and also appealed to the Ministry of Education to help create a
conducive environment for such girls as the law mandated them to go back to
school even in that condition.
She said as Civil Society
Organizations (CSOs) ,they are willing to collaborate with government of Ghana
because they were at the grassroots
level and could help in the advancement of the rights of women in the country.
GNA

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