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Ghana to criminalise inappropriate internet content

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The Minister of Communications, Mrs. Ursula Owusu-Ekuful has announced that Ghana will soon criminalise the sharing of inappropriate social media content.

She said the law would soon be enshrined with strict penalties so that sending, retaining, and sharing of such contents would be punishable by law.

The Communication Minister cited sexual images as an example of inappropriate content, adding that all should comply with the domestic laws, when passed, to avoid being penalized.

Mrs. Owusu-Ekuful was addressing stakeholders on the second day of the National week celebration of the Cyber Security Awareness Month 2019, being held at the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC), Teshie, Accra.

Dubbed: “Demonstrating Ghana’s Cyber Security Readiness,” the programme brought together security agencies, heads of departments, school children and others to discuss Child Online Protection (COP) and develop a framework to curb the risk posed to young people for using the internet.

The Minister said there will be sufficient provision in the law to protect children/adolescents from online abuse.

She, therefore, called on the public to be wary of such messages, delete as soon as they received them, and avoid passing them on.

The Ministry is working with the Attorney General, and Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection, among others to come-up with the framework on child online development and welfare within the shortest possible time.

Mrs. Owusu-Ekuful said most children had become active users of the internet for learning but were unfortunately faced with a lot of challenges, which affected their human rights and, therefore, the need to protect them.

She said most of the laws of Ghana were enacted before child online protection came up, as a result, sufficient laws should be put in place to protect children being abused on the internet.

Government, she said, had increased awareness among children across all the regions and by the end of October, 40 schools would have been reached.

She said cyber security policy would be reviewed to meet international standards and called on corporate bodies to support government since it was their collective interest to protect the children.

The wife of the Vice President, Mrs. Samira Bawumia said a collaborative effort was essential to protect children from online predators.

Quoting UNICEF’s research done in 2016, she said four out of 10 children had seen sexual images and half of the 2000 children used in the survey expressed online abuse by adults.

She, therefore, called on government, educators, civil society organisations, international development partners to come up with policies and legislations to protect young internet users.

Hajia Samira Bawumia commended the Ministry of Communications for initiating channels whereby victims who feared reporting to the police could report to seek redress.

“Parents have to be abreast of the use of the internet in order to guide their children on its usage as their children mostly knew more than them,” she advised.

The UNICEF-Ghana Representative, Anne-Clare Dufay called on industry players to make their products child-friendly to prevent them from being taken advantage of.

The National Cyber Security Advisor, Dr. Albert Antwi-Boasiako, said child protection issues needed a multi-sectorial approach where children themselves should not be left out of the solution.

Chief Director of Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection, Afisah Zakaria, called for the monitoring of service providers of sex sites to protect children from accessing those sites.

GNA

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