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International Women's Day 2023

International Womens Day PR World Scaled File photo

Tue, 7 Mar 2023 Source: CHRAJ

The Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice in solidarity with the

International Community commemorates International Women's Day, this 8th day

of March 2023. On this auspicious occasion, the Commission calls for sustained

effort and committed leadership in establishing an all-inclusive environment for

development of women and girls all over the world.

This year's International Women's Day is celebrated on the theme "DigitALL:

Innovation and Technology for Gender Equality". The focus is to explore how digital inequality impacts the social positioning of women in society while

emphasizing the need to expedite the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for

Sustainable Development, particularly Goal 5 which seeks to achieve gender

equality and empower all women and girls.

It is regrettable that women continue to face challenges of gender inequality which prevents them from achieving their full potential. The gendered dimension of inequality in society cuts across all spheres: economic development; education; access to healthcare; income; vulnerability to violence and even political representation.

This is exemplified in the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) publication that women in public sector employees earn on average GHS165 less than their male counterparts, representing a gender pay gap of 6%1. These inequalities are fueled by some cultural and social practices, high levels of illiteracy, and a general lack of awareness.

The Worldwide web or Internet is an essential tool that brings different cultures closer to more people, making it easier and more accessible. It also nurtures the rise of new forms of expression for art and the spread of knowledge. There has been a large emergence in the use of technology within Sub-Saharan Africa, especially in Ghana.

This is evidenced by schools, institutions, individuals, and businesses deploying and using technology in their daily operations. Although there is an increased use of technology within the country, there is still a huge gender disparity. The GSS, for instance, records that 17% of the Ghanaian population aged 12 years and older do not own any functional ICT device; and the proportion is higher among females (19.3%) than males (14.1%) and in rural (26.6%) than in urban (9.8%) areas.

Additionally, 29% of Ghanaian women used the internet in 2020 compared to 20%

in 2016, which is significant progress toward closing the gender gap in accessing the internet.3 The gap in internet access is just one element of a much greater digital gender divide in which women are less able to use and influence the technology that is reshaping our world.

There are many ways the internet we have today is not working equally well for men and women, from gaps in quality of connectivity and digital skills to threats that disproportionately impact the safety and rights of women and girls thereby preventing them from fully benefiting from the opportunities that digital technology presents.

Women and girls often experience online abuse centered around harassment, hate speech, cyberstalking, and the non-consensual distribution of photos.

Although Ghana has cybersecurity legislation and a Cyber Security Authority

(CSA) with a mandate to regulate cybersecurity activities, including providing technical support for law enforcement agencies to prosecute cyber offenders and promote the protection of children online, these measures appear inadequate to

protect women's rights online.

Accordingly, the Commission urges the Government and its agencies, especially the Ministry of Communications and Digitalisation (MoC&D) to include the following.

Agencies under it: The CSA, the National Communication Authority (NCA) and the

Data Protection Agency (DPC) to intensify public education and awareness on

responsible use of technology and the internet and implement innovative policies

meant to utilize the internet to reduce gender inequality. These relevant agencies should further mount surveillance to arrest and prosecute perpetrators of online bullying of women to serve as a deterrent to others.

As we observe this Day, the Commission calls on Government and its relevant

agencies as a matter of priority to design and/or implement innovative policies to improve access to technology by Ghanaian women and girls in the short and medium to long term.

Joseph Whittal

Commissioner

4 See Cybersecurity Act, 2020 (Act 1038).

Source: CHRAJ