CHILD Rights International (CRI), an Accra-based non-governmental organisation, has expressed concern about persistent interference in child abuse cases by influential individuals, describing the practice as a major setback to justice delivery.
According to the organisation, about 90 per cent of child abuse cases in the country are resolved outside the formal legal system due to interference, a situation it said denies victims justice, weakens the rule of law and emboldens offenders.
The Chief Executive Officer of Child Rights International, Bright Appiah, disclosed this in Accra yesterday at a media engagement on challenges confronting the prosecution of child abuse cases.
He said the organisation had observed a recurring trend where chiefs, politicians, religious leaders and other influential persons pressured families to settle child abuse cases out of court.
“Offences committed against children are not private family matters but crimes against both the child and the State,” Mr Appiah said, stressing that such interference undermined accountability and exposed victims to further harm.
He explained that many in cases reported to the police failing to proceed to court.
In some instances, he noted, cases that reached court were repeatedly adjourned, forcing families to abandon the process out of frustration.
Mr Appiah described the situation as worrying, saying justice was critical not only for punishing offenders but also for helping victims to heal.
He also stressed the need for deterrence, noting that adults who committed crimes against children must face the full rigours of the law.
Mr Appiah therefore called on law enforcement agencies, the judiciary and the public to resist interference and ensure that child abuse cases were handled strictly in accordance with the law.
parents found it difficult to resist pressure from powerful figures in their communities, resulting
BY AGNES OPOKU
SARPONG
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