The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has underscored the need for stakeholders to leverage the influence of traditional leaders to fight the scourges of child marriage and Gender-Based Violence (GBV) in Ghana. Dr Doris Mawuse Aglobitse, the Gender Team Lead at UNFPA, said traditional leaders, particularly paramount chiefs and queen mothers, were at the heart of community development and must be engaged to co-create solutions to child marriage. She said child marriage was pervasive in Ghana and the fight could only be won if chiefs were well-armed with the relevant information to deal with the complications and nuances of the issues decisively. Dr Aglobitse said these at a UNFPA workshop on 'ending child marriage and GBV,' for traditional council registrars from eight Regional Houses of Chiefs and the National House of Chiefs. The regions are the Central, Volta, Oti, Greater Accra, Western North, Western, Eastern, and Ashanti. The training, held in collaboration with the Ministry of Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs, sought to deepen the understanding of the registrars on child marriage, GBV and other harmful practices to help them function effectively. The move was in furtherance of the implementation of the 15-year Global Programme to End Child Marriage, being implemented by 12 countries including Ghana from 2016 to 2030. 'It has become critical to intensify efforts with traditional and religious leaders. Every community in Ghana has a traditional leader even before democracy came onto the scene and we still respect that tradition. 'When you equip them with the right information, they will be able to identify the issues in their communities,' she noted, adding, that registrars, chiefs, queen mothers and the various religious leaders at different levels were being schooled with appropriate information. Dr Aglobitse said many chiefs believed that marrying off a pregnant girl to the culprit was a way of protecting her but insisted that it was wrong. 'The fact that the girl got pregnant doesn't mean she should be married off at that age. We must allow girls to grow to decide on who and why they should marry. She encouraged the leaders to be conversant with the legal framework to avoid making such mistakes in order not to offend the law. Dr Aglobitse acknowledged the conflict between the ages of consent to sex and marriage respectively but insisted that it was wrong and illegal to marry off a girl below 18 years for getting pregnant. She expressed UNFPA's commitment to promoting the rights of adolescent girls to avert unwanted pregnancy and early marriage so they could reach their full potential, stressing their expectation to end child marriage by 2030. Mr Evans Habadah, the Director of Human Resources at the Ministry of Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs, said child marriage and GBV remained significant concerns that the Ministry was assiduously working with stakeholders to address. He said educational programmes must target both men and women, reiterating the importance of traditional leaders in co mbating child marriage and GBV, but their limitation in understanding some of the issues was what the Ministry was seeking to address. Mr Habadah pledged his office's determination to intensify engagements with the traditional authorities for a positive outcome. Source: Ghana News Agency