Saturday, April 01, 2006
April ~ A Dreadful Month For Liberia
The month of April should be a prayerful month for Liberia and for all her citizens wherever they may be. The below incidents were just a few of the human tragedies and carnage that I remember from where I sit, without much thinking, that occurred during the month of April in various years ago. Plane crashes that took the lives of permanent citizens, especially the one on April 28, 1975; the April 14, 1979 Rice Riot; the April 12, 1980 Coup d'état and execution of President William Richard Tolbert; the April 22, 1980 execution of the thirteen government officials; the April 14,1981 execution of five members of the original coup members including the number two man for allegedly staging a putsch; the April 1, 1985 Flanzamaton 50-caliber fiasco who was later executed; the Saturday, April 6,1996 Roosevelt Johnson night mare; and several other dates within the month of April during the war with unprecedented carnage and human suffering that began on Sunday, December 24, 1989 and ended on Monday, August 11, 2003 when Charles Taylor left for exile. It is cautiously interesting that the Taylor saga from his alleged disappearance to his helicopter flight to Freetown occurred at the eleventh hour before the month of April 2006.
Ghana's Draconian Law Against Female Students
With the many strides nations have made and are making to break the disparity of education between the sexes, Ghana still practices the policy to deny pregnant students the right to sit for their basic education and senior secondary school certificate examinations. Recently many female students' rights were violated when they were forced to undergo pregnancy test without their consents. A number of these students, who had just weeks to sit for their school certificate examinations, were kicked out of school because they were found to be pregnant.
This is not one world. It appears that the heads of schools discriminate, harass and traumatize these young ladies, which is a clear violation of their human rights. I urge the leaders of the Ghana Education Service, yea the Republic of Ghana to abolish the policy that denies pregnant students the right to sit for their basic education and senior secondary school certificate examinations; moreover, those who violated the rights of the students be persecuted for their gross violation of several counts of human injustices.
Who Were Responsible?