Region/Country Dropdown Lists

Ghana

REPUBLIC OF GHANA

Oral statement on the outcome on Ghana under the Universal ...
11 June 2008

AI Index: IOR 41/026/2008. PUBLIC. Human Rights Council. Eighth Session. 2-18 June 2008. Agenda Item 6. Amnesty International. Oral statement ...

Document       IOR 41/026/2008

Eighth session of the UN Human Rights Council, 2-20 June 2008 ...
1 June 2008

AI Index: AFR 28/003/2008. PUBLIC. Eighth session of the UN Human Rights Council, 2-20 June 2008. Review of Ghana under the Universal Periodic Review: ...

Document       AFR 28/003/2008

Ghana: What’s happening in the prisons?
1 May 2008

During a recent visit to Ghana in March 2008, the Ghanaian government refused Amnesty International’s request to visit Ghanaian prisons. Amnesty International has ...

Document       AFR 28/002/2008

The death penalty worldwide developments in 2007
15 April 2008

In 2007 the world continued to move closer to the universal abolition of the capital punishment. A historical landmark is the resolution on a moratorium on executions ...

Report       ACT 50/002/2008

Ghana: Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review: Second ...
25 January 2008

In this submission, Amnesty International provides information under sections B, C and D (as stipulated in the General Guidelines for the Preparation of Information ...

Report       AFR 28/001/2008

Ghana | Amnesty International
23 May 2007

Region      

Ghana: Forced evictions in the Digya national park area must stop
19 April 2006

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. Public Statement. AI Index: AFR 28/001/2006 (Public). News Service No: 098. 19 April 2006. Ghana: Forced evictions ...

Press Release       AFR 28/001/2006

West Africa: Time to abolish the death penalty
10 October 2003

This doument summarizes each of the 16 ECOWAS countries' legislation on the death penalty, provides information on the most recent executions and convictions and ...

Report       AFR 05/003/2003

Ghana: Time to abolish the death penalty.
18 April 2002

Press Release       AFR 28/001/2002

Ghana: Detention and abduction with impunity
25 August 2000

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. Public Statement. 25 August 2000. AI Index AFR 28/002/2000 - News Service Nr. 164. GHANA: DETENTION AND ABDUCTION WITH IMPUNITY. ...

Press Release       AFR 28/002/2000

Taken from the Amnesty International Report 2007

Head of state and government: John Agyekum Kufuor
Death penalty: abolitionist in practice
International Criminal Court: ratified

The government began paying reparations to victims of human rights violations under previous governments. The death penalty continued to be handed down in cases of murder and for treason. Violence and discrimination against women remained prevalent.

Violence against women

Women continued to be victims of domestic violence and female genital mutilation.

The Domestic Violence Bill was the subject of Parliamentary debate, during which a clause that would criminalize marital rape was dropped. The Bill had not become law by the end of the year.

Forced evictions

Forced evictions and internal displacement, particularly of marginalized people, continued to occur.

 Hundreds of residents from the Dudzorme Island (in the Digya National Park) were forcibly evicted in late March and early April. Those evicted were not provided with alternative housing or with compensation. On 8 April, some of those evicted were reportedly forced into an overloaded ferry, which subsequently capsized, leaving around 30 people dead according to official sources, and many others unaccounted for.

Death penalty

Despite statements by government officials that the death penalty should be abolished, no concrete steps were taken towards abolition and death sentences continued to be handed down. No executions were carried out.

The National Reconciliation Commission

In October the government began paying reparations to some 2,000 Ghanaians who had suffered human rights abuses under former governments. The reparation payments were recommended by the National Reconciliation Commission, which was formed in 2002 to address human rights violations committed under various governments since Ghana gained independence in 1957.