
President John Dramani Mahama on Sunday visited Vice President Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang, who is recuperating in London.
The President, in a statement to mark this year’s International Mother’s Day, extended a special Mother’s Day greeting to his Vice President, whom he had the pleasure of visiting earlier on Sunday morning.
“She is taking a deserved rest after recovering from illness and looking forward to resuming her duties soon,” the statement said.
“To her and all Ghanaian mothers, I say Happy Mother’s Day,” President Mahama stated in the statement.
The President was accompanied by Dr Cassiel Ato Baah Forson, the Minister of Finance and Mr Kwame Governs Agbodza, Member of Parliament for Adaklu.
In a related development, Dr Freda Prempeh, the Founder of the Ultimate Women Foundation (UWF), has urged Ghanaians to help protect girls against cancers and related diseases, as the world celebrates this year’s International Mother’s Day.
UWF seeks to encourage and motivate indigenous and vulnerable women and girls to know their worth and to empower and well-position them to contribute to the development of their communities and the larger society.
As future mothers of the nation, Dr Prempeh said girls could grow to become healthier and responsible women, if they were protected against life-threatening diseases like cervical cancer.
She said the HPV vaccine against cancers had proven efficacious and medically healthy for girls, saying now that the nation had the vaccines, there was the need for families to encourage their girls to take the shots and protect themselves.
“It’s medically proven that the HPV vaccine can prevent cancers caused by a Human Papillomavirus infection including cervical cancer,” she stated.
Dr Prempeh, also the former Member of Parliament (MP) for Tano North Constituency, indicated that as the nation celebrate “Mothers’ Day,” attention ought to be on tackling challenges impeding the holistic growth and development of girls to enable them to grow to become responsible adults in society.
She expressed regret that despite intensified public education and awareness creation, some socio-cultural, traditional and other religious beliefs still persisted and were inimical to the growth of women and girls.
Those beliefs, Dr Prempeh added, had contributed to early/forced marriage, widowhood rites as well as other worst forms of abuses against women and girls in parts of the country.
The former MP said girls ought to be supported enough to achieve higher education and to pursue their life careers to the optimum, urging more economic support for indigenous women to help build on their lives too.
Dr Prempeh said mothers ought to be supported and celebrated due to their essential role in the family, in putting food on the table and also facilitating the proper upbringing of children.
GNA
The post Mahama visits Veep Opoku-Agyemang in London appeared first on The Ghanaian Chronicle.
Read Full Story
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
Instagram
Google+
YouTube
LinkedIn
RSS