#Sexforgrade: University of Ghana suspends two lecturers

#Sexforgrade: University of Ghana suspends two lecturers

Two Ghanaian lecturers, Professor Ransford Gyampo and Dr Paul Kwame Butakor, who were secretly filmed sexually harassing undercover BBC reporters in t

Chinese city to discard streetlights for artificial moon by 2020
Liberian president, George Weah takes salary cut
Namibia slams five-year ban on car shopping  for politicians

Two Ghanaian lecturers, Professor Ransford Gyampo and Dr Paul Kwame Butakor, who were secretly filmed sexually harassing undercover BBC reporters in the #Sexforgrade documentary, have been suspended pending an investigation.

Both professors have denied any wrongdoing. The suspensions follow similar action against two lecturers in Nigeria, who were also filmed by the BBC. Footage of the University of Ghana lecturers was broadcast on Monday as part of a documentary by the BBC’s Africa Eye investigative unit, exposing sexual harassment and misconduct by lecturers at prestigious institutions in West Africa.

The University of Ghana said Professor Gyampo and Dr Butakor had been called to appear before a committee to give evidence. The University of Lagos in Nigeria also suspended two lecturers Dr Boniface Igbeneghu and Dr Samuel Oladipo and established an investigative committee after the Sex For Grade video went viral.

Speaking after the broadcast of the film, the chairperson of the Anti-Sexual Harassment and Misconduct Committee at the University of Ghana, condemned the conduct of the Ghanaian lecturers seen in the footage.
“Unacceptable, inappropriate behaviour that is really an affront to their positions as lecturers at the University of Ghana,” Dr Margaret Amoakohene told the BBC’s Thomas Naadi in Accra.

She said the committee would make recommendations to the university authorities only after an investigation had concluded.
“What we are doing now is to open our doors to other victims to come and testify to us as to what their experiences have been, whether they are current students or past students. We invite them to come and tell us.”

In a statement published on Tuesday, the University of Ghana said it had created “additional communication channels” for members of the university community to report harassment, including a dedicated email address: hearmystory@ug.edu.gh.