Caesar Abagali, N/R GJA Chairman |
The Northern
Regional Chairman of the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) Caesar Abagali has
said that, the rate at which rights advocates were unrelentingly advocating for
the education of the girl child was somehow also disadvantageous to the empowerment
of the boy child.
He observed that, currently a lot of resources, time
and attention were deliberately being devoted by government and most especially
non-governmental organisations towards the empowerment of girls through
education.
Mr. Abagali however, noted that, if care was not taken
a time would come when those advocating for girls would have to start doing
same for the boys because they were overemphasizing the importance of female
education and relegating that of boys to the background. “I can tell you that, many
boys are increasingly losing interest in school and dropping out to engage in
menial jobs”, he stated.
He continued “I’m one of those who always hold the
view that, if you are a beautiful girl but an illiterate, you’ll get an
educated man to marry when you grow up. But the same cannot be said about a boy
who is handsome but an illiterate.”
Mr. Abagali who is also the Manager of the Northern
Regional Bureau of the Ghana News Agency said this in Tamale at a sensitisation
and training workshop on child labour organized by the International Labour
Organisation (ILO) in collaboration with the Northern Regional chapter of the
GJA for journalists.
The overall purpose of the workshop was to contribute
to the implementation of the National Plan of Action for the Elimination of
Worst Forms of Child Labour (WFCL) in Ghana through enhanced media advocacy.
The objectives of the workshop was among other things to
sensitise journalists on the concept of child labour: incidence, causes and
consequences; an overview of existing programmes and projects in the context of
the National Plan of Action on the Elimination of the Worst Forms of Child
Labour; and the international, national and legal frameworks governing
interventions.
The ILO National Programme Manager for Ghana Kwame
Mensah, said the media was a key outlet of information and education. Both
traditional new media, he said, had become almost indispensable tools for
information dissemination and social mobilisation.
According to him, the Ghanaian media had not done
badly on child labour reportage. However, much of its focus, he said, had been
on mundane coverage of events and occasional sensational reporting on alleged
child trafficking and abuse cases.
Mr. Mensah also observed that, many media
practitioners had no thorough understanding of child labour issues, adding “They
have little grasp of the concept and the various types of child work; the
factors involved in the definitions relating to the different forms of child
labour as well as the incidence, scope and consequences of the problem.”
He stated that, generally, journalists were unaware of
the international, national and local legal frameworks and intervention
policies, programmes and projects existing to address the issue of child labour.
“The knowledge gap of journalists in this regard hampers their ability to
effectively promote efforts to combat child labour”, he pointed out.
Mr. Mensah disclosed that, in Ghana over one million
children were involved in child labour particularly in agriculture,
manufacturing, mining, child domestic servitude, kayayei, streetism and
commercial sexual exploitation among others.
He charged journalists to take keen interest in child
labour issues by learning about it so as to enable them educate the public very
effectively on the rights of children and its effects on society.
Meanwhile, participants were trained on how to
effectively report on child labour issues using the right terminology;
developing an interest in child rights, child protection and child labour
reporting and social mobilisation; and understanding and overcoming the
challenges involved in child labour reporting.
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