Amnesty
International urges human rights in Ghana
12th January 2009
Amnesty International has urged President John
Evans Atta Mills to champion human rights in his
administration.
“We call on President Mills to make human rights
central to his political programme and to commit
himself and his administration to a clear human
rights agenda now that he has taken office,” said
Ms. Véronique Aubert, Amnesty International’s Africa
Deputy Programme Director.
In a statement released in Accra on Monday, the
human rights organisation listed several areas that
it said it expected the new President to tackle.
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These include
abolition of the death penalty; significant
reductions in the severe level of over-crowding in
prisons and other places of detention and
eradicating the widespread violence against women
and legislative reforms to ensure equal rights for
men and women. |
It also urged
President Atta Mills to stop and prevent the
practice of forced evictions that have deprived
hundreds of men, women and children of their homes
and in most cases, livelihoods; ending illegal
detention and ensuring prompt and fair trials for
the thousands of prisoners awaiting trial–often for
periods longer than the maximum sentence prescribed
for their alleged offence; putting an end to mob
violence, which has led to the killings of dozens of
people over the last year and full compliance with
Ghana’s international and regional human rights
obligations and commitments, as explicitly set out
in the treaties it has ratified.
“This is a critical moment for Ghana when it comes
to its human rights reputation around the world,”
said Ms Aubert.
“We hope that the new administration will grasp this
opportunity to build on the human rights advances
that have taken place over the last decade and take
the Ghana’s human rights record to a whole new
level,” she said.
Source: GNA
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