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Report: 51.9% Of Females In SHS Assaulted Sexually Between 2019 & 20212 min read

Report: 51.9% Of Females In SHS Assaulted Sexually Between 2019 & 2021<span class="wtr-time-wrap after-title"><span class="wtr-time-number">2</span> min read</span>

 

A report by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the Girls Excellent Movement (GEM) on sexual harassment in Senior High Schools (SHS) says 51.9% of female students were sexually assaulted between 2019 and 2021.

The report, titled: “Sheltered yet Exposed”, said 54.3% of those girls were between the ages of 17 and 22 while 45.7% were in the 11 and 16 age brackets.

It said the act was usually perpetuated by friends, family friends, schoolmates, teachers and strangers.

Friends topped the chart with 24%, family friends, 12%, schoolmates, 12%, teachers, 10%, and strangers, 9%.

The founder and executive director, of GEM, Juliana Ama Kplorfia, said at a stakeholder engagement in Accra.

The engagement, which was put together by the Center for Social Justice (CSJ) with support from the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Ghana, was to discuss sexual harassment in SHS and the role of stakeholders.

Kplorfia said other groups, which perpetuated the act of sexual assault on female students in SHS included uncles, cousins, neighbours, fathers and fathers-in-law.

The report said aside from sexual assaults, the females also suffered other forms of gender-based violence such as physical assault, bullying, verbal assault and harassment.

Kplorfia said the reason the females fell victim to the various forms of assault was mainly due to academic, financial and mental challenges.

Speaking on the impact of such abuses, she noted that most of the victims ended up with depression, trauma, bipolar disorder, anxiety and panic attacks, which sometimes compelled them to drop out of school.

She, therefore, called on the Ministry of Education and the Ghana Education Service (GES) to resource their counselling units in the schools to work effectively.

Kplorfia also called on parents and guardians to keep careful watch over female students in schools.

She asked parents to ensure that children had role models, who impacted their lives positively because some fell prey to sexual assaults due to bad role models.

Kplorfia urged the government to make medical reports for rape and sexual harassment free.

She also called for the abolishment of taxes on sanitary pads and that they (pads) should be supplied to schools free of charge.