By Philip Tengzu
Jirapa, (UW/R), May 30, GNA – Madam Abiba Nibaradun, the Upper West Regional Programme Manager of ActionAid Ghana (AAG), has said access to sanitary pads by schoolgirls was key to ensuring equity in access to good quality education between females and their male counterparts.
She said this was because difficulty in accessing sanitary pads by some girls, particularly at the basic level adversely affected their effective participation in teaching and learning as they missed out important classes during their menstrual periods.
She said it was worrying to acknowledge the fact that some girls had to engage in amorous relationships with men against their will, to get money to buy sanitary products due to poverty.
Madam Nibaradun said this at Jirapa at an event to mark the year’s Menstrual Hygiene Day on the theme: “Together for a #PeriodFriendlyWorld”.
The commemoration started with a float along the principal streets of Jirapa with over a hundred people including members of the AAG’s Young Urban Women Movement and the Girls’ Empowerment and Advocacy Platforms from Basic Schools across Jirapa and Lambussie participating in the march.
They held placards with the inscriptions such as: “A sanitary pad to someone makes a difference. Donate a pad and not humiliation”;” Don’t laugh when I soil myself with menstrual blood, support me cover up when I am stained,” among others.
Madam Nibaradun said her interactions with some girls in some Basic Schools in the Jirapa and Lambussie districts revealed that those who could not afford sanitary pads stayed out of school during their menstrual periods, for fear of humiliation and stigma should they stain their cloths.
She explained that in the 21st century, sanitary pad price hikes and stigma associated with menstruation still hindered many girls, particularly in the rural communities from enjoying fully, their right to quality education.
The least price of a sanitary pad in the open market is GhȻ15.00, which Madam Nibaradun attributed to the high import taxes on these products and other raw materials imported for their production locally.
“It is expected that for a nation like Ghana with more than 50 per cent of its population being female, the prices of sanitary products should have been very affordable in the market to support women and girls during menstruation,” she explained.
The AAG Regional Boss condemned the myth that girls and women in their menstrual periods could not cook for some people to eat, go to certain places, or eat certain foods.
Madam Nibaradun said ActionAid had, in the past years, distributed re-usable sanitary pads to over 600 basic schoolgirls who were members of the advocacy platforms in the Jirapa, Sissala and Lambussie districts to support their retention in school.
She appealed to stakeholders and benevolent individuals and organisations to help provide sanitary pads to support girls, particularly those in rural communities, to enable them to maintain personal hygiene during menstruation and to stay in school within that period.
ActionAid also distributed 100 reusable sanitary pads to the girls at the event to help reduce absenteeism during these periods.
Some of the girls who spoke to the Ghana News Agency expressed their gratitude to AAG for the support, saying, it would enable them stay in school during their menstrual periods to enhance their academic performances.
Madam Florence Darimaani, the Adolescent Focal Person at the Jirapa Municipal Health Directorate, educated the girls on personal hygiene management during menstruation.
Madam Lydia Ninberewe, the Jirapa Municipal Gender Desk Officer, advised the girls to extend the menstrual hygiene knowledge to their peers and urged parents to provide menstrual hygiene needs for their children when necessary.
She also advised the girls not to use poverty as an excuse to request sanitary pads from men who would in turn ask for sex and eventually truncate their life dreams and aspirations.
Mr Huudu Kunaateh, the Jirapa Municipal Director of Education, observed that some people stigmatised menstruating girls or women to the extent that they felt less human, which he described as “unfortunate”.
He thanked AAG for its continuous support to the education sector in the municipality to help improve education, especially for the girl child.
GNA