Helen & Helena |
Newly established and promising nongovernmental
organisation (NGO) Kiddy Care Foundation (KiC Foundation), has launched a
project aimed at halting begging by poor mothers of twins and triplets on the
streets of Tamale.
It is an
ambitious project by such a very fledgling charity, however management of the Foundation,
believes support from benevolent individuals and other likeminded organisations,
could make a huge difference.
As a first step
towards realising this ambitious goal, KiC Foundation recently set out to
register all begging mothers with twins or triplets and by the end of the
programme, 65 mothers were registered. All registered mothers were present with
their twins and triplets at the children’s section of the Northern Regional
Library, venue of the programme.
Co-founded by
triplets, Herbert, Helen and Helena Akwetey, the vision of KiC Foundation is to
see a society that respects children’s rights to healthy life and total development.
It seeks to realise this vision by creating a medium of intervention to support
better living conditions for underprivileged children.
Helena Akwetey
told Savannahnews, that the Foundation would enrol all mothers into skills
training programmes of their choice. “This will enable them to cater for their
children after completion instead of sitting on the streets begging.”
Nowhere in Ghana
is the phenomenon of mothers with twins or triplets who beg on the streets,
more pronounced than the Northern Regional capital town of Tamale. Notably
Ghana’s third largest city after Accra and Kumasi, one of the saddest scenes to
behold is mothers of twins or triplets begging on the streets with their young
ones from dawn to dusk.
Mothers, Children Pose for a Picture After Being Registered |
The phenomenon
is being driven by superstitious beliefs which have been used to brainwash
ignorant women, mostly the uneducated. They have been made to believe that when
their twins, triplets, quadruplets or octuplets fall sick frequently, the best
solution to end that problem is by sitting by the wayside or roam the streets
and beg for alms everyday till the children grow.
Thus, it is
common to see one or two-month old babies enduring the sunny weather conditions
with their mothers. It is a life threatening situation to see such vulnerable
women and their children struggling on the streets as speeding cars and
motorbikes constantly screech to a halt each time any of them attempt to cross the
road. At times, the unlucky ones get hit and injured or killed.
Director of
Operations of KiC Foundation, Mr. Clement Boateng, appealed to Ghanaians who
are well-to-do to support families and parents of multiple births to raise
their kids in a healthy way that guarantees them a better future.
“When parents of
twins and triplets are left to raise their kids alone amidst various forms of
stigma, they are compelled to succumb to certain pressures to risk the lives of
the kids for anything”, he observed.
Meanwhile, the
Department of Social Welfare has supported the KiC Foundation’s plan to take all
begging mothers of twins and triplets off the streets of Tamale.
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