The Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection has indicated that the time has come for Ghana to pass a victim support law to assist children whose rights are abused.
The sector Minister, Nana Oye Lithur, acknowledged that victim support is very critical therefore urgent steps will be taken to put in place “either a policy or legal framework on victim support.”
[contextly_sidebar id=”m8XuLmP5cfliwTPUB5SJq0Q2akDiZGlb”]In Ghana, it is estimated that out of the about 80% of the gender-based violence cases which are reported, only 20% receive psychosocial counselling or support of some sort.
The Minister noted that although the Domestic Violence and Victim Support Unit (DOVVSU) which is a department within the Ghana Police Service deals with human right abuses towards women and children and also work with other organizations to offer assistance and specialized help to victims, their operations need a further boost.
Speaking at a media reporters’ workshop on ‘Eliminating Child Marriage in Ghana’, Oye Lithur said her outfit is looking to engage more proactively with the health sector to urge them to draw guidelines and protocols to scale up health support for victims.
She commended the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital for taking the lead by establishing the child assault centre.
“So the process has started but we still need a policy and legal framework to cater for victim support,” she said.
Out of court defilement and rape cases unlawful
The Gender Minister charged the general public to report any Judge who facilities an out of court settlement of defilement and rape cases to the Judicial Complainant Unit.
She argued that “an out of court settlement is unlawful. You can’t settle cases or crime so if there is any judge who is doing that, it is unlawful.”
“What is legally permissible is that in domestic violence cases, the Domestic Violence Act allows for a judge to offer or get the parties to go for mediation but for rape and defilement are not even part of the Domestic Violence Act. They are offences under the Criminal Offences Act and we have the criminal procedure code and it’s very clear,” she explained.
Mrs Lithur stressed that no judge has the power or legal authority to order an out of court settlement.
By: Efua Idan Osam/citifmonline.com/Ghana
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