
The District Director of Education for the west Mamprusi District Alhaji Mohammed Haroon arrived in London with a very warm welcome from the Cashman family.
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"The Social Network" premieres Friday at the New York Film Festival, and is already being compared to "Citizen Kane" and "The Godfather," two iconic portraits of powerful men felled by their own ambition.
[Facebook execs' efforts against upcoming movie]
The 26-year-old hasn't engaged in much high-profile philanthropy so far -- unlike fellow tech billionaire and education reformer Bill Gates -- which makes his Oprah appearance and $100 million gift more notable. Zuckerberg will announce the donation alongside Newark Mayor Cory Booker and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, according to the New York Times' scoop. The money represents an eighth of the city's total education budget. Zuckerberg's net worth skyrocketed by 245 percent in the past year as Facebook's market valuation topped $23 billion.
[Status update: 7 surprising secrets about Zuckerberg]
Zuckerberg, described as a "wary and private" person in a recent New Yorker profile, has been forced to tear down some of the barriers between his life and the public. This new plunge into civic-minded activity seems designed in part to fend off bad publicity generated by the film and accusations that as a student, he hacked into private emails and stole the original idea for the site from fellow students. The movie is loosely based on an equally unflattering book by Ben Mezrich, who used a burned former Facebook investor (and former Harvard colleague of Zuckerberg) as his primary source.
[Photos: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg]
According to the movie, Zuckerberg created the site to get admitted to exclusive parties and to meet girls. (Rebecca O'Brien has a more nuanced take on Zuckerberg's college years here.)
[Is "The Social Network" a hatchet job?]
See Below For The Full Petition Sent On Behalf Of The New Crusading GUIDE By Ken Attafuah Law Place Legal Practitioners, Kesewaa Chambers
September 14, 2010
THE COMMISSIONER COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS & ADMINISTRATIVE JUSTICE (CHRAJ) CHRAJ HEADQUARTERS HIGH STREET ACCRA
Dear Sir,
COMPLAINT OF HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES AT OSU CHILDREN’S HOME AND OSU REMAND HOME
We act as counsel for and on behalf of The New Crusading Guide Newspaper.
We hold the instructions of our client to formally complain to you about, and to request that you investigate its allegations of, violations of the fundamental human rights of children, abuse of power and corruption at the Osu Children’s Home and the Osu Remand Home, both in Accra.
Our client makes this complaint on its own behalf as a corporate citizen of Ghana with an enduring interest in the protection of children’s rights. Our client also makes the complaint on behalf of the scores of children in the two homes – children who are not in a position to file a complaint on their own behalf. It is our client’s instruction that the children in these homes constitute a captive population and/or detainees, and most of them are either illiterate or are simply incapable of filing a complaint as a result of mental incompetence and/or lack of awareness of their basic rights. Accordingly, this complaint is filed pursuant to Section 2(2) of the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (Investigations Procedure) Regulations (2010), Constitutional Instrument No. 67.
A. Evidence of Violations
The evidentiary bases of our client’s allegations are derived from the results of a seven-month undercover investigation conducted by its ace investigative journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, at the two homes for the care of children in distress or in conflict with the law. Some of the highlights of the results of the said investigation were captured in a 90-minute television documentary publicly aired on September 1, 2010. On behalf of our client, we hereby enclose for your kind attention and perusal a CD-Rom copy of the said documentary.
Osu Children’s Home
Our client specifically alleges the following violations by the under-listed respondents against children at the Osu Children’s Home: 1. Subjection of children to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, contrary to Article 28(3) of the Constitution of the Fourth Republic of Ghana (1992) and Section 13(1) of the Children’s Act (1998) (Act 560). This includes:
a. Undignified, abusive and discriminatory treatment of children with mental and physical disabilities, contrary to Article 15(1) of the 1992 Constitution and Section 10 of Act 560; and b. Subjection of some children to corporal punishment;
2. Physical, verbal and emotional abuse of some children;
3. Deprivation of food to some children as punishment;
4. Abuse of power contrary to Article 218(a) of the Constitution;
5. Deprivation of medical care to some sick children, leading to the death of one child;
6. Maintenance of inhuman and inhospitable living conditions that endanger the health and lives of inmates; and
7. Corruption, including the unlawful sharing and appropriation of food donations and other items meant for the upkeep of the children, contrary to Article 218(a) of the Constitution.
Osu Remand Home
Our client also alleges that the following human rights violations were perpetrated against children at the Boys’ Unit of the Osu Remand Home:
1. Physical abuse of inmates;
2. Solitary confinement of some children; and
3. Maintenance of inhuman and inhospitable living conditions that endanger the health and lives of inmates.
B. Respondents
The said homes are under the Department of Social Welfare – an agency of state under the Ministry of Employment and Social Welfare. This complaint is made against the following specific persons as respondents:
1. The Ministry of Employment and Social Welfare; 2. Hon, E. T. Mensah, Minister, Ministry of Employment and Social Welfare; 3. The Department of Social Welfare 4. Mr. Stephen Adongo, Director, Department of Social Welfare; 5. Mrs. Sharon Abbey, Manageress, Osu Children’s Home; 6. Auntie Evelyn (full name unknown), Care Giver, Osu Children’s Home 7. Grace Ohene, Care Giver; Osu Children’s Home 8. Gladys Nartey; Care Giver, Osu Children’s Home 9. Florence Adams; Care Giver, Osu Children’s Home and 10. Mr. Akuamoah Boateng, 21-year old in-mate, Osu Children’s Home 11. Mr. Amankwah, Supervisor, Boys’ Unit, Osu Remand Home
C. Liability for Violations and Abuses
Evidently, responsibility for the violations outlined above and detailed on the CD-ROM varies among the above-named respondents as follows:
a. The Ministry of Employment and Social Welfare, the Minister of Employment and Social Welfare, the Department of Social Welfare, and the Director of the Department of Social Welfare bear overall responsibility for policy development and implementation, as well as the resourcing of the homes for their safe and efficient care and maintenance, including the general duty to ensure the wellbeing of the inmates and staff. They were negligent in their duty to prevent the abuses and the existence of inhuman conditions at the homes. They jointly and severally bear vicarious liability for the impugned conduct and the maintenance of the inhuman conditions in the homes.
b. The Manageress of the Osu Children’s Home is responsible for the day-to-day running of the home, including supervision and monitoring of staff to ensure compliance with established standards of care, maintenance of a safe and congenial environment in the home, and provision of the basic necessities of life, including food, clothing and shelter in dignity and respect. She bears direct and vicarious liability for the violations.
c. Each member of staff – Grace Ohene, Gladys Nartey and Florence Adams – bears direct responsibility for the performance of their assigned duties and roles which includes, most fundamentally, the provision of care to the children in a manner that respects the rights of the children as human beings at all times and ensures that the best interests of the children remain paramount in all decisions and actions affecting them. They bear direct responsibility for the violations.
d. Mr. Akuamoah Boateng is a 21-year old man. He is an “overgrown inmate” who renders gratuitous assistance to the caregivers at the Osu Children’s Home in preparing the kids for school and supervising them generally. He physically and verbally abuses the kids at will. He is no longer a child, and must be sanctioned and removed from the home.
e. Mr. Amankwah personally subjected some of the boys at the Osu Remand Home to a regime of physical abuse and corporal punishment. He must be held personally liable for the human rights violations that occurred at the Unit.
D. Reliefs Sought
The following constitute the remedies our client seeks through the pursuit of this complaint:
1. An order compelling the respondents to cease and desist from the violations and abuses complained of, and to refrain from violating and abusing the rights of other children under their care;
2. An order for the discontinuation of any and all practices that infringe on the rights of children at the homes as described above;
3. An order to the appropriate authorities to sanction and remove from office the following persons for abusing or facilitating the abuse of the rights of children in the two homes:
a. Mr. Stephen Adongo, Director, Department of Social Welfare; b. Mrs. Sharon Abbey, Manageress, Osu Children’s Home; c. Mr. Amankwah, Supervisor, Boys’ Unit, Osu Remand Home; d. Ms. Auntie Evelyn, Care Giver, Osu Children’s Home; e. Ms. Grace Ohene, Care Giver; Osu Children’s Home; f. Ms. Gladys Nartey; Care Giver, Osu Children’s Home; g. Ms. Florence Adams; Care Giver, Osu Children’s Home; and h. Mr. Akuamoah Boateng, 21-year old in-mate, Osu Children’s Home
4. An order compelling the authorities at the Osu Children’s Home to account for all revenues and donations received over the past three years.
5. An order to the Ministry of Employment and Social Welfare and the Department of Social Welfare to establish a rigorous regime of policies and procedures to ensure compliance with the relevant constitutional provisions on children’s rights and the applicable provisions of the Act 560;
6. An order compelling the Director of the Department of Social Welfare to publish and file with CHRAJ annually a report on its operations with special reference to the observance of fundamental human rights in the homes, including measures taken to ensure respect for the rights of children with physical and/or mental disabilities or other special needs;
7. An order to the Department of Social Welfare to cause to be included in the training programme at the School of Social Welfare a comprehensive examinable course of instruction in such areas as: (a) Principles of Human Rights, Justice and Democracy in Places of Detention; (b) Implementing Human Rights Principles in Special Homes and Detention Centers, (c) Caring for Children with Special Needs; and (d) Challenges in Contemporary Social Work Practice in Ghana.
We firmly assure you, Sir, of our readiness to fully assist you to undertake, in respect of this complaint, the kind of thorough investigations for which the CHRAJ is well known.
Yours truly,
Prof. Kenneth Agyeman Attafuah Managing Solicitor
Source:The New Crusading Guide