Ms Felicia Kraja |
The Northern Regional Industrial Relations Officer of the Public
Service Workers Union (PSWU) of the Trades Union Congress (TUC) Felicia Kraja,
has called on Ghanaian women particularly those in the labour unions to “stop
downgrading themselves” and compete for enviable positions.
According to Ms
Kraja, the lack of confidence and the fear of being a failure are largely the reasons
responsible for women not taking up leadership positions in the various unions,
and thereby also contributing to the low representation of women at decision
making levels.
“Some women are
worth more than they think they’re…when they can come out of that shell….when
they can feel deep within them that I am beyond what I think I am, then they will
be able to perform wherever they go” Ms Kraja said this at a workshop of the Women’s
Committee of the PSWU of the TUC in Tamale.
She vehemently encouraged
women in the various labour unions in Ghana to take time off their busy
schedules and develop serious interest in labour matters as well as partake in
elections in order to bring dynamism into the activities of labour unions which
have mainly been male driven over the years.
Ghana has
several labour unions which include the Industrial and Commercial Workers Union
(ICU), Health Services Workers Union (HSWU), Government and Hospital Pharmacists Association of Ghana (GHOSPA), General Agricultural Workers Union
(GAWU), PSWU, Civil and Local Government Staff Association of Ghana (CLOGSAG) and the Ghana Medical Association (GMA).
The rest are
the Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT), Polytechnic Teachers Association
of Ghana (POTAG), University Teachers Association of Ghana (UTAG), National
Association of Graduate Teachers (NAGRAT), Teachers and Education Workers Union
(TEWU), Federation of Universities Senior Staff Associations of Ghana (FUSSAG)
and the Ghana Registered Nurses Association (GRNA) among others.
File picture |
Sadly, leadership
positions in most of these unions over the years have largely been occupied by
men with just a handful of women serving as deputies or treasurers. Even in the
mother union, TUC – a greater percentage of leadership positions are occupied
by men and this is in contrast with the over 50 percent of women constituting
the total work force of the country.
It is against
this background that, the meeting of the PSWU in Tamale was held with an
objective to whip up the interest of women trade unionists in the various
labour unions to be bold to take up leadership positions at the regional and
national levels.
Meanwhile, Member
of the National Trustee of the PSWU Fati Seidu Tamboro charged women in the
Union to be hungry for knowledge acquisition as well as build their capacities
for certain tasks in their life in future.
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