Criminal logo

Ghana Vibrators Unlawful Like Skin Bleaching, Child Marriage & Rape They Won't Enforce Sh*t!

The country that upside down made or it is what it is Ghana!

By IwriteMywrongsPublished about a year ago 5 min read
Collage Created By Author

Thursday, 25 July 2024

By: TB Obwoge

Ghana is the most unlawful country I've ever lived in. The fact the second highest scammers in Africa think they are the moral Africans of the continent is so frustrating.

Living in the country random Ghanaian strangers think that they have the right to yell out insults.

Ghanaian men, married and un-married are seemingly quick to jump on scamming a foreigner. In fact some of these immoral scammers can have sexual intercourse with anyone, no matter how they look or who they are, speaks to the overall mentality.

The viral child marriage in Ghana that made news even all the way in Zambia, nothing happened. The Ga tribe ranted and argued, after changing the 12-year old brides age from 12-years to 16-years old which is still a child Ghana did nothing.

There were claims that Ghana's AG Godfred Yeboah Dame was on the cover of the paper saying police should look into the marriage, they didn't.

The Ga Tribe claims now that the child married a deity not a real man, even though the wedding was with a real man.

Soon though one of her rites as stated by the Ga Tribe themselves is that she is to have a baby. I am curious to see if they will hide the birth of the baby or proclaim it is the second coming of Jesus Christ.

That is life in Ghana, lawless. The only reason people don't run rampant is the fear of jail. However even with that crime in Ghana has been on the rise for some years, up 40% with Kumasi, Ghana leading the way.

There is little to no follow up from the police, laws are not enforced often, people who are victims of crime would know this.

Accra, Ghana the Supreme Court has made anal sex and vibrators unconstitutional. I can believe it but at the same time I can't blieve this! With all the rampant femicide, child abuse and sex with children in the country. 

When you rally people who have so much hatred in their hearts you can get them to ignore anything and focus on the most mundane issues. Possibly why corruption has been unchanged for 4-years in the country. 

Women in Ghana are often disrespected and for some reason it is common for men and sometimes even women to call women 'whores'. In the country only 14% of the government are women, a bit better than Nigeria which has only 5% of women in their government.

Women may rarely get praise in Ghana but the hidden rape culture and the normalized gender-based violence is disgusting to say the least.

Unlike the women in Kenya who have gone to the streets to protest femicide in their country. It would snow in Ghana before women took to the streets to fight for their rights.

Here we can look at what this court ruling in Ghana actually says.

Supreme Court rules that using dildos and vibrators unlawful

A seven-member panel of the Supreme Court unanimously dismissed a suit challenging the constitutionality of Section 104 (1) (b) of the Criminal Offences Act, 1960 (Act 29).

This section criminalizes sexual intercourse in an unnatural manner, even between consenting adults, including the use of sex toys.

The Supreme Court on Wednesday, July 24, 2024, upheld that the existing law, which makes it unlawful for both heterosexuals and homosexuals to engage in anal sex, does not breach the 1992 Constitution, graphic.com.gh reports.

Pursuant to Section 104 (1) (b) of Act 29, any person aged 16 years and above who has unnatural carnal knowledge with another person, even with consent, commits a misdemeanor punishable by up to three years in prison.

Pursuant to Section 104 (1) (b) of Act 29, any person aged 16 years and above who has unnatural carnal knowledge with another person, even with consent, commits a misdemeanor punishable by up to three years in prison.

The suit was initiated by Dr. Prince Obiri-Korang, a law lecturer at the University of Ghana.He argued that Section 104 (1) (b) of Act 29 violated Article 14 (1) of the 1992 Constitution by depriving individuals of the liberty to choose their intimate sexual partners and engage in sexual conduct without state interference.

Additionally, Dr. Obiri-Korang contended that the law infringed on adults' privacy rights under Article 18 (2) and discriminated based on sexual orientation, violating Article 17 (2).Dr. Obiri-Korang sought a declaration from the Supreme Court that Section 104 (1) (b) of Act 29 was unconstitutional.

However, the court, presided over by Justice Paul Baffoe-Bonnie, ruled that the suit had no merit and dismissed it."There is no merit in the action. In the

circumstances, the whole action fails and same is dismissed," the court held.The court will deposit the full reasoning behind its decision at the Court's Registry within 10 days.

Other members of the panel included Justices Avril Lovelace Johnson, Issifu Omoro Tanko Amadu, Emmanuel Yonny Kulendi, Ernest Gaewu, Yaw Darko Asare, and Richard Adjei-Frimpong.

Section 104 of Act 29 is divided into three parts.

Section 104 (1) (a) criminalizes unnatural carnal knowledge with a person below 16 years, a first-degree felony punishable by five to 25 years in prison. Section 104 (1) (b) makes it a misdemeanor for consenting adults to engage in unnatural carnal knowledge, the specific provision challenged by Dr.

Obiri-Korang. Section 104 (1) (c) criminalizes sexual intercourse with an animal.

Unnatural carnal knowledge, as defined by Section 104 (2) of Act 29, refers to "sexual intercourse with a person in an unnatural manner or with an animal." Judicial interpretation in cases like Gligah & Atizo v

The Republic and Banousin v The Republic has clarified that natural carnal knowledge involves the penetration of a woman's vagina by a man's penis.

In his suit, Dr. Obiri-Korang argued that the law's wording could affect not only homosexuals but also females using dildos and vibrators for self-pleasure.

"The term unnatural carnal knowledge may include penetration per anum, the penetration of the female genitalia or male/female rectum with object, fellatio, and cunnilingus, all of which are not exclusive to homosexuals."

Dr. Obiri-Korang further argued that the government's justification for the law to protect morality was flawed, emphasizing the need to differentiate between public and private morality.

Source: GhanaWeb.Com

The fact that some 70% to 80% of women don't climax from penetration alone is sad. I blame the 137th ranking in education for a lot of the worthless laws in Ghana. Who in the world would tell an adult heterosexual couple what sort of sex they can have?

Thank you for reading 🙏🏽 Please consider buying a coffee for Lacey’s House efforts in Gender Equality & Children’s Rights.

©️TB Obwoge 2024 All Rights Reserved

travelcapital punishment

About the Creator

IwriteMywrongs

I'm the president of a nonprofit. I've lived in 3 countries, I love to travel, take photos and help children and women around the world! One day I pray an end to Child Marriages, Rape and a start to equal Education for ALL children 🙏🏽

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.