Category: Press Releases

  • Two Ghanaian Civil Society organisations appeal to government to pardon condemned Prisoners 

    Two Ghanaian Civil Society organisations appeal to government to pardon condemned Prisoners 

    Accra, Oct 10, GNA – In commemorating the 20th World Day against the Death Penalty on Monday October 10, 2022, the Action by Christians Against Torture (ACAT) and Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG) have jointly appealed to government to pardon condemned prisoners. 

    This is in support of the global call spearheaded by Federation of International Action by Christians Against Torture (FIACAT) for abolition of the Death Penalty in Ghana.

    They particularly pleaded with President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to intervene in the case of a 75-year-old, John Narh Terkpe, who spent 20 years on death row, 26 years on life sentence and still counting on in Nsawam Prison in Ghana.

    This was in a news release signed by Florence Venunye Ayivor-Vieira, Secretary ACAT Ghana and Joseph Wemakor, Executive Director of HRRG Ghana and copied to the Ghana News Agency in Accra.

    It is on the theme: “Death penalty: a road paved with torture”, ACAT Ghana and HRRG appeal to the President, His Excellency, Nana Akufo-Addo to grant Amnesty to all prisoners on death roll to life sentences”.

    The group also appealed to the President to grant general amnesty, which had not been granted for the past three years to other deserving prisoners to decongest all prisons across the country.

    The decongestion, the statement said would improve the health and living conditions of the inmates who were already battling myriads of psychological and physical problems.

    GNA

  • HRRG demands immediate arrest, prosecution of Benjamin Narh Okunor for defilement

    HRRG demands immediate arrest, prosecution of Benjamin Narh Okunor for defilement

    The Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG) has learned with regret the alleged crime of defilement of two minors of 12 and 14 years perpetrated by Benjamin Narh Okunor, a 64-year old foster father of the two victims at Kpone-Bawaleshie in the Greater Accra Region. 

     
    The paedophile, according to media reports, was said to have fled barely two months ago since a case of defilement was filed against him to the Domestic Violence and Victims Support Unit (DOVVSU) of the Shai-Osudoku Divisional Police Command, Dodowa.

    We at HRRG, without mincing words, condemn this perverse act of sexual assault on these poor children as it robs them of their innocence, dignity and infringes on their rights as children as guaranteed by the 1992 Constitution of Ghana.

    Per the report exposing the sexual misconduct by Benjamin as seen in the newspaper publication of The Chronicles, we further learn the suspect took advantage of the COVID-19 lockdown period to perpetrate his abusive act and would often pull out a gun to threaten the young victims if they ever disclosed their ordeal.

    The HRRG believes this shameful act should not go unpunished. It constitutes a crime as espoused in the Ghana’s Criminal Code, Chapter 6 which addresses matters concerning various sexual offences.

    The immoral act of the alleged suspect flies in the face of Section 104 which specifically offers definition to defilement of a child under 16 years of age.

    It stipulates in sub-section (1) that, ‘For purposes of this Act, defilement is the natural or unnatural carnal knowledge of any child under sixteen years of age.’

    It further defines in sub-section (2) that, ‘Whoever naturally or unnaturally carnally knows any child under sixteen years of age, whether with or without his or her consent commits an offence and shall be liable on summary conviction to imprisonment for a term of not less than seven years and not more than twenty-five years.’

    We charge the police administration to step its game and cause the immediate arrest of the alleged culprit to face prosecution, serving as deterrence.

    It is sadly reported that the biological mother of the young girls pleaded with the police and sought an out of court settlement for such criminality.

    The HRRG applauds the Social Welfare Department for swiftly filing a case of defilement upon such an abhorrent plea.

    We implore the police administration to conduct further investigations to bring this case to a logical conclusion.

    The general public must be cautioned from treating such abusive persons as one that needs protection from the long arm of the justice system by calling for out of court settlements.

    Defilement is a crime and abuse against children’s rights, that must outrightly be condemned and the culprit be made to face the full rigors of the laws of Ghana.

    Children must be protected at all times as expressed in the Article 3 of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, which states, ‘When adults make decisions, they should think about how their decisions will affect children. All adults should do what is best for children. Governments should make sure children are protected and looked after by their parents, or by other people when this is needed.

    Governments should make sure that people and places responsible for looking after children are doing a good job.

    As the sole aim of the Human Rights Reporters Ghana is to expose human right violations against the vulnerable in the society especially children, women, girls, persons with disabilities, the aged and the minority groups, we take special interest in this case to bring the sexagenarian, Benjamin to book so as to ensure justice is served the victims without further delay.
    Thank you.

    Signed.

    Joseph Wemakor
    Executive Director (HRRG)
    Tel: 0243676813

     

  • Wa flogging: Perpetrators should be made to face full rigours of the law-HRRG

    Wa flogging: Perpetrators should be made to face full rigours of the law-HRRG

    The Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG), a vibrant media advocacy cum human rights non-governmental organization has charged the Ghana Police Service to endeavour and ensure that those miscreants committed the atrocious act by flogging the two lovers in Wa are meant to face the full rigours of the law at all cost.

    This follows media reports confirming severe severely flogging of two lovers by some irate youth at the forecourt of Wa Naa’s palace in Wa in the Upper West Region after their sex tape was leaked on social media.

    The heart-breaking news has since received an outburst of public outcry and wide condemnation with multitudes calling justice to be served the victims and the perpetrators brought to book.

    The Human Rights Reporters Ghana is the latest to add its voice to calls for the perpetrators to be dealt with according to law to serve as deterrent to others while justice is served to the victims to ensure peace prevails.

    In a statement dated June 3 signed by its Executive Director, Joseph Wemakor and copied to the press, the group said, “We applaud the Ghana Police Service in their swift response in effecting some arrests and hope the perpetrators are made to face the full rigors of the law, as a testament to the fact that Ghana is governed by the rule of law where no custom, by-law or religious rule supersedes that of the state”.

    Read the full statement below:

  • World Health Day 2022: Refocusing to save our planet, environment

    World Health Day 2022: Refocusing to save our planet, environment

    As all peoples of the world are once again called upon to commemorate the 74th anniversary of the World Health Organization, in observing the 2022 World Health Day, the Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG) wishes every Ghanaians in all walks of life, a life of good health and prosperity in all their endeavors.

    The HRRG is a vibrant non-governmental organization comprising media practitioners, lawyers and human rights activists, advocates and defenders who are committed to bringing to light human rights abuses and ensuring full protection and justice served the abused especially where it concerns children, women, girls and the minority groups in Ghana and beyond.

    As we celebrate this all important day, we are called to reflect on the very essence of our humanity, good health of mind, body and the environment which finds expression in this year’s theme, ‘Our Planet, Our Health.’

    This chosen theme is very much reflective of the fact that, all economies are gradually escaping the devastating impact of the COVID-19 and facing a far more dangerous phenomenon of climate change and all societies are already reeling from the effect of changing or distorted weather patterns in one form or the other.

    On this note, the HRRG wishes to use the opportunity to heighten the awareness of all citizens of Ghana the debilitating effects of climate change and global warming. It is not a distant subject matter but already becoming our reality in our everyday lives. The chosen theme is a concrete reminder that the health of our environment and planet as a whole impacts our people’s health directly, positively or for the worse.

    As fate may have it, humanity is rendering our planet sick and ironically, we have the potential to restore its health to her better days. The recent extreme weather conditions we are experiencing in our communities are obvious manifestations of how impacting climate change has become. Changing weather patterns are first of all resulting in drying up of water bodies, threatening food security which also caused high costs of living for the ordinary Ghanaian, instances of deluges with its accompanying unpreparedness by policymakers are but a few to mention.

    A case in point is the recent unforeseen Keta Tidal Wave on November 7 2021, in the Keta Municipality of the Volta region which sadly, has displaced over 3000 persons with many seeking shelters in neighbouring towns and villages with several others dead.

    On this occasion, we add our voices to the many calls on the government of Ghana to do more to help ease the burden of the victims of the rising sea-levels robbing them of their livelihoods and lands. To buttress our case, is a publication by the Ghanaian Times, weeks after the unfortunate incident, residents of Fuveme claiming the government has reneged on its promise to allocate parcels of land in the adjacent communities to them. They have largely received donations and relief items from benevolent citizens.

    Continuously threatening our environment are the activities of illegal mining and small-scale mining known in local parlance as ‘Galamsey.’

    For a couple of years now, the Government has launched what we believe to be an unrelenting battle against this menace which is polluting our precious water bodies and rendering rivers not conducive for usage of all kinds. Communities can no longer irrigate farms from these water sources because of harmful chemicals like mercury which helps these miners dig for gold and other minerals indiscriminately.

    Humans and livestock no longer find these water bodies potable enough for consumption. Farmlands are now sorely becoming mining sites, increasing the phenomenon of food shortages and food scarcity, underpinning the harsh reality of our planet and environment in serious crisis.

    We sincerely believe government’s campaign has stalled because elements closer to the corridors of power are heavily involved in this exploitation meaning that the state’s efforts accrues only minimal gains. Nonetheless, we charge the government and appropriate state institutions to be resolute in this battle so, posterity can judge us rightly.

    Ghana as well as the world is yet to completely root out the COVID-19 pandemic. Without overstating the obvious, COVID-19 has weakened many economies, making a lot more people poorer today than before and rights of already vulnerable persons largely women and girls. Thanks to science, the world has seen vaccine development at an unprecedented pace offering renewed optimism to many who were in absolute despair. 

    This nonetheless, has created the challenge of vaccine inequality where the global north and other first world nations have acquired enough vaccines to protect themselves from the scourge of the disease while Africa and other nations in the global south have fully vaccinated only around 10 percent of their populations.

    As COVID-19 restrictions have been lifted in Ghana giving a sense of the country cautiously emerging out of the woods, we would like to see the government secure more vaccines to inoculate the populace from the severity of corona virus as we learn to ultimately live with it.

    As accountability is a tenet in all democratic societies of which Ghana prides itself of, Ghanaians have been seeking answers to the expenditure of the Covid-19 funds accrued after government established the Ghana national COVID-19 Emergency Preparedness and Response Plan (EPRP) which received immense response from the public and international bodies. For instance, the bank of Ghana donated GHC10 million to that effect as well as financial support to the tune of US$ 100 million was equally received from the World Bank, among others.

    We call on the Government of Ghana to heed to these calls and offer proper accounts in regard to how the COVID-19 relief fund, which was established for a good cause, was utilized.

    As at March 2022, Ghana has recorded close to 2000 deaths related to COVID-19, with infections standing a little above 161,000. The Ghana Health Service (GHS) has successfully vaccinated over 13 million Ghanaians. This will stand as a good indication that we are on the right track in fighting the worst effects of the disease and urge authorities to do more.

    A healthy society breeds a healthy planet with the right policies implemented. On this occasion we sincerely believe in the power of unity and a common cause in keeping the planet safer and healthier for future generations. As the WHO estimates, more than 13 million deaths around the world each year are due to avoidable environmental causes. 

    At the Human Rights Reporters Ghana we say our planet, our health: Re-imagine our economy, society, and health. #OurPlanetOurHealth.

    Author: Joseph Wemakor

    The writer is a seasoned journalist, a staunch advocate of human rights and the Executive Director of Human Rights Reporters Ghana. 

  • Human Rights Reporters Ghana condemn harrasment of a female by police officer

    Human Rights Reporters Ghana condemn harrasment of a female by police officer

    The Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG), a media advocacy cum human rights non-governmental organization has expressed utter shock at a viral video which captured police officer allegedly harassing a female in a vehicle.

    In a press release signed by Joseph Wemakor, it’s Executive Director, the group outrightly condemns the shameful and indispicable act of General Lance Corporal Victor Antwi Yeboah’, the police officer allegedly accused of harrasing the woman in the video while commending the police authority for swift arrest of their own upon launching preliminary investigations into the accident.

    “This singular act is a further departure from the convention of citizens meted out with abuse by agents of our security apparatus with impunity which often go unpunished”, the statement said while lauding the police force for a good job done.

    In adding their voice to the numerous calls by civil society organizations and the general public alike for justice to be served to the victim while the perpetrator is punished when found culpable, the group further appealed to all citizens to play their part in the fight against violations of human rights especially the state authorities by appropriately using their communication gadgets like smartphones or cameras to discreetly record and share all forms of right abuses to raise awareness and rid of miscreants in the reputable security services within the country.

    Read the full statement below:

  • 2021 Int’l Day of the Girl Child: Safeguard the rights of girls for a brighter future-Human Rights Reporters Ghana

    2021 Int’l Day of the Girl Child: Safeguard the rights of girls for a brighter future-Human Rights Reporters Ghana

    For Immediate Release October 11, 2021
    To All Media Houses

    2021 Int’l Day of the Girl Child: Safeguard the rights of girls for a brighter future-Human Rights Reporters Ghana
     
    As the world commemorate this year’s International Day of the Girl Child, a day dedicated to the growth of girls around the world, we at the Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG) fully demonstrates our solidarity towards the welfare of all girls across the world.
     
    The selection of this year’s theme: “Digital generation. Our generation” which focuses on the rights, safety and education of girls around the world is by no means a coincidence but appropriate and timely especially at a time the world is busily embracing technology to advance its cause.     
     
    In accordance with the resounding theme, we at the Human Rights Reporters Ghana are calling for equal access to the internet and digital devices for girls and targeted investments to facilitate opportunities for girls safely and meaningfully access, use, lead and design technology. 
     
    According to the United Nations, even in the post-COVID-19 era that saw many businesses and education moving online, “2.2 billion people below the age of 25 still do not have internet access at home”. The report further stated that, girls are more likely to be cut off and less likely to “own and use devices” leading to a gender divide within the digital divide. 
     
    As we mark this momentous day, we are humbly appealing to the authorities to help prioritize the issues of the girl child and ensure their rights are safeguarded for a brighter future.
     
    The phenomenon of kidnapping, rape, forced/child marriage, teenage pregnancy and other social vices which lower the dignity of our girls must be dealt with dispassionately to forestall its occurrence.
     
    At a recent event, Country Director of Days for Girls Ghana, a non-profit organization, Ms. Sandra Boakye lamented unfavorable policies on menstrual hygiene products which is a concern calling on government to scrap the 20% luxury tax imposed on it to ensure that these products reach women and girls around the country.
     
    HRRG believes that this initiative would help create avenues to eradicate the stigma and limitations of girls and women for improved health, education and livelihood.
     
    Access to education, healthcare services, skill-based learning facilities, equal opportunities, shields against deception, gender-based violence and discrimination.
     
    HRRG equally believes that women and girls are breaking boundaries and tackling issues every day, thus with a helping hand the gender gap grows compact.
     
    Finally, we urge leaders from civil society, government and the private sector to make commitments to build more inclusive digital societies through providing equitable opportunities to girls, investing in feminist technology and putting girls and young women at the centre of designing and learning solutions for the digital world. 
     
     Thank you

    Signed

    Joseph Kobla Wemakor
    Executive Director
    Tel: 0243676813

  • Human Rights Reporters Ghana calls for proper investigation into alleged assault and battery by military personnel on unarmed protesting students

    Human Rights Reporters Ghana calls for proper investigation into alleged assault and battery by military personnel on unarmed protesting students

    Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG) has been following the media space with grave concern on the alleged cases of assault and battery on unarmed students in Kumasi Senior High School protesting the Ghana Education Service (GES) directives to keep them in school for their mid-semester break instead of going home.

    The report in the media landscape suggests alleged physical and psychological abuse on the school girls’. Some students granted interviews in which they revealed that soldiers broke into their dormitory, pulled some of them out, caned them and even stepped on their abdomens.

    As far as one is quick to dismiss such accounts as a figment of the students’ imagination and over exaggeration, HRRG is therefore calling for a proper investigation into these allegations, rightly so because of the military’s earlier reported involvement in similar human right abuses in Wa and in Ejura.

    We cannot deny the crucial role the police and other legally mandated institutions play in protecting properties and maintaining peace and order in our country. As a matter of law by virtue of section 35 of Act 29 the police as a peace officer is mandated to use necessary force to maintain order, however if the accounts given by the students prove to be true then the security personnel involved overstepped their bounds and certainly may have committed assault and battery by virtue of section 84 to 87 of Act 29.

    As earlier stated, the relevant authorities should thoroughly investigate the claims of these students to forestall similar alleged abuses from ever happening in our schools bearing in mind the trauma and physical injury associated with such acts on victims especially minors.

    Also HRRG pleads with our armed forces, especially the soldiers, to stay away from duties and roles specifically assigned to police officers.

    Finally, HRRG entreats all students especially those in the senior high schools to peacefully cooperate with the authorities in their schools and to adhere to all instructions, Rules and Regulations that have been put in place to protect them and the public in this abnormal times bearing in mind the surge in COVID-19 infections in the country.

    Thank you.

    Signed

    Joseph Wemakor

    Executive Director

    Tel: 0243676813

    Margaret Attipoe

    Administrative Assistant

    Tel: 0554569068

  • Human Rights Reporters Ghana calls for calm, end to acts of violence against LGBTQI+ community

    Human Rights Reporters Ghana calls for calm, end to acts of violence against LGBTQI+ community

    The Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG) regrets the inhumane actions of some section of the public on persons identified as Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Intersex (LGBTQI+) in our communities following the recent launch of their office space in Accra which has generated a huge public outcry.

    According to reports making rounds on both social and traditional media, LGBTQI+ persons are being physically and verbally abused in their homes and at public and workplaces.

    The HRRG condemns in no uncertain terms these dastardly and dehumanizing acts of injustices, calling on its perpetrators to desist with immediate effect and allow the laws to work.

    The queer Ghanaians are people who live and work with us in our communities on daily basis. We should also bear in mind that we live in a country that upholds the Rule of Law, Freedom and Justice for all. No one should take the law into his/her own hands to deprive any person of his or her dignity through any form of violence.

    We should allow our laws and institutions to work for the sake of justice and peace to prevail.

    As a rights organization which believes that society should be free from all forms of discrimination, we add our voices to calls on leadership of Ghana to take action and ensure justice is served and peace is restored with immediate effect.

    Thank you.

    Signed

    Joseph Kobla Wemakor
    Executive Director
    Tel: 0243676813

    Margaret Attipoe
    Administrative Assistant
    Tel: 0554569068

  • Human Rights Reporters Ghana commends South Korean Government for release of Shincheonji church leader; appeals for his case to end

    Human Rights Reporters Ghana commends South Korean Government for release of Shincheonji church leader; appeals for his case to end

    Accra, Dec 10, – As the world marks the Human Rights Day 2020 today, various activities are being organized in many parts of the world and on the global stage to commemorate the significant day.

    In Ghana, a Non-Governmental Organisation, the Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG), is equally raising its voice in support of calls to end human rights violations across the world by first commending the government authorities of South Korea for the move which saw the acceptance of the bail conditions of the leader of Shincheonji Church of Jesus, Mr. Lee Man-hee leading to his release from detention on November 12, 2020.

    Chairman Lee was arrested on last August July 31, 2020 for allegedly withholding information from government authorities about church members to help combat coronavirus, according to reports.

    A statement signed by the Mr Joseph Wemakor, the Executive Director of Human Rights Reporters Ghana and copied to the media commends the government authorities of South Korea for the move and further calls on them to completely struck out his case from court and have him discharged entirely while equally ensuring the restoration of the legal entity of Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light (HWPL) a not-for-profit organization founded by Mr. Lee.

    Human Rights Day is observed every year on 10 December-the day the United Nations General Assembly adopted, in 1948, the Universal Declaration Human Rights (UDHR). The theme for this year’s celebration is “Recover Better – Stand Up for Human Rights”.

    Read the full statement here

    Source:Human Rights Reporters Ghana

  • 2020 Human Rights Day: Safeguard Human Rights after a peaceful election-HRRG

    2020 Human Rights Day: Safeguard Human Rights after a peaceful election-HRRG

    Today is 2020 Human Rights Day, an important moment in the fight for and the respect for the human rights of people across the world. This year’s theme is “Recover Better – Stand Up for Human Rights.”

     In a press release signed by the Executive Director, Joseph Kobla Wemakor and copied to the media, the Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG), a non-governmental organization, non-profit human rights organization independent of all political parties, governments or religious groups in Ghana indicated that the world has not been the same since the covid-19 struck.

     Its presence across the world has caused struggles in moments of lockdowns, which came with its own shades of human rights abuses and infractions.

     
    Human Rights and Election 2020

     Ghana has come out of the election but not without some instances of electoral and post-electoral violence happening that led to the death of some persons.

    Ghanaians can only be assured the freedom to enjoy their rights if stakeholders ensure the country is held together in peace. As the world marks this special day, the Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG) can only express joy for the people of Ghana having come out a stronger and united nation after the 2020 general elections.

     This success is an assurance that Ghanaians have been guaranteed a peace-loving nation and an opportunity to reach their full potentials after exercising their democratic rights to vote in an important election such as this.

     The (HRRG) used the occasion to congratulate the Ghanaian people and President Nana Akufo-Addo on his re-election into office as well as the other contenders for choosing peace at this critical time.

    COVID-19 AND HUMAN RIGHTS CHALLENGES

     Covid-19 impacted every aspect of the basic rights of citizens in developed and less developed countries around the world calling for a compromise on the right to free movement to save lives. 

     Sadly people’s right to life, health, food, and clothing were impacted by the lockdowns, lack of food, water, and financial resources for people to survive in many deprived areas.

     Governments, Non-governmental organizations, and other stakeholders rose to the challenge posed by covid-19 to help save lives through health delivery, education, and provide food and water among others.

     Even as these successes have been recorded, we cannot lose sight of the rising inequalities, poverty, discrimination, and other wide gaps in human rights protection and promotion, the impact of the COVID-19 response in many nations and for particular groups of people, has been dawdling.

    HUMAN RIGHTS AND RELIGOUS FREEDOM AND DISCRIMINATION

     The UN Secretary-General has emphasized the instability and fear that the pandemic has brought and the worrying human rights concerns of discrimination and stigmatization of persons who had been cured of COVID-19 around the world.

     The leadership of HRRG supported sister institutions around the world to ensure religious bodies and leaders such as the Shincheonji Church and its leadership in South Korea are treated with respect and dignity. This attests to the fact that abuses, stigmatization, discrimination, scapegoating by government and officials in leadership positions need to be condemned.

     The Human Rights Reporters Ghana in its quest to champion human rights issues through local and international collaboration joined like-minded civil society organizations to bring to the attention the human treatments visited on the church in South Korea.

     The release of Chairman Lee Man-Hee, the leader of the Shincheonji Church from detention brings to the fore, the power of a united front in the struggle for the respect of the rights of all persons by individuals, organizations, and governments across the world.

     As the world celebrates another Human Rights Day, on the theme Recover Better – Stand Up for Human Rights, the Human Rights Reporters Ghana has called on all stakeholders to reflect on the challenges and gains in the last ten months and to recommit efforts, resources, and policies toward ensuring the fundamental rights of all citizens are respected.

    The institution further called for the building of more resilient, just, and sustainable societies around the world in times of global crisis. This demands all stakeholders to recommit themselves to ensuring the human rights of citizens across the world are guaranteed.

     In Ghana, these calls for the efforts toward protecting and giving hope to the less privileged, educating the citizenry on their rights and avenues available to them in the case where the abused must not be ignored.

    It also calls for more efforts to support women and girls who are defiled and due to the lack of financial resources, tests needed to ascertain their status and to apprehend suspects who are lost.

    The HRRG believes that the celebration of the 2020 Human Rights Day must inspire Ghana to among other things continue to uphold, protect, and allow for the universal rights outlined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

     
    Source:HRRG