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 CODAC empowers women to fight extremism in UE/Region

 The Community Development and Advocacy Cen­tre (CODAC), a Non-Governmen­tal Organisation (NGO), is implementing a pilot project dubbed, ‘Women Against Violent Extremism (WAVE),’ in some border districts in the Upper East Region.

The districts include the Bawku West, Binduri and Pusiga, all under the Kusaug Traditional Area, tar­geted as part of efforts to prevent violent extremists who operate in neighbouring countries such Burki­na Faso from entering the country through those border districts.

The project, sponsored by the Common Wealth Development Organisation, under British High Commission in Ghana, is expected to enhance capacities of at least 540 young men and women in 12 border communities to detect and respond to early warning indica­tors.

As part of the project imple­mentation, community volun­teers would be formed and their capacity built will be linked up with WANEP-Ghana and the security agencies to enable them report on incidents on violent extremism in their respective communities.

It was also to strengthen col­laboration between major stake­holders at the various communities and districts of the project to jointly work at preventing violent extremism.

Speaking at separate inception meetings organised by CODAC in Bawku West, Binduri and Pusiga districts, Mr Issahaku Bukari, Pro­gramme Manager, CODAC, said since 2019, cross-border incidents had confirmed attempts by Violent Extremist Organisations (VEOs) to infiltrate Ghana, particularly from the Central Region of Burki­na Faso, which shares borders with Ghana’s Upper East Region.

“Extremist activities in Ghana’s Bawku, Widnaba, and Nazinga forest have been confirmed, with Burkinabe fighters from Boulgou province in Burkina Faso involved in the conflict. Arms are allegedly being smuggled from Burkina Faso into Ghana, but no links with ter­rorist cell have been proven yet,” he stressed.

The Programme Manager stated that violent extremism had gender dimensions, making it crucial to have gender-focused initiatives to prevent and counter it, and explained that it was against this background that the project was gender-based focus.

He stated that despite the nu­merous local and national violent extremism programmes in Ghana, there was no women-focused project aimed at raising awareness of threats of violent extremists, vulnerabilities, and ways to protect women and girls.

“Women and girls in the Ku­suang Traditional Area, tribes in Burkina Faso and Togo are more likely to fall into VEOs than em­bark on hazardous journeys abroad due to uncertain financial and economic rewards in undertaking the latter.

Their strong cross-border social bonds can be exploited by extrem­ist groups to recruit more women and girls in Ghana into VEOs,” he intimated.

The WAVE in border commu­nities project aims to address gen­der-specific threat gaps by raising awareness of women and girls’ vulnerability to manipulations, im­plementing recruitment strategies, targeting gender-specific radical­isation processes, and facilitating women and girls’ deployment and activities within VEOs

The inception meeting attract­ed stakeholders including Queen mothers, representatives of women groups, youth groups, Ghana Im­migration Service, Customs, Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS), the Police and Opinion leaders. They are expected to collaborate to help fight violent extremis.

The leadership of the security agencies lauded the project and stated that to sustain it, the imple­mentation should be extended to more years in order to help make a greater impact. -GNA

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