Academic Warns of Rising Abuse Cases in Schools, Urges Strong Legal Deterrence
Professor Aheto has called for urgent legal reforms to criminalise sexual relationships between teachers and students, describing the practice as an abuse of authority that undermines education systems and endangers young learners.
He argues that existing disciplinary measures within educational institutions are not strong enough to deter offenders, and that only clear criminal sanctions will effectively protect students from exploitation.
The academic’s remarks add to growing concerns about safeguarding in schools, where reports of inappropriate relationships between educators and students have continued to surface, prompting calls for stronger enforcement mechanisms.
Power Imbalance at the Centre of Concern
Prof. Aheto stressed that the teacher–student relationship is inherently unequal, making any form of sexual involvement a violation of trust and professional ethics, regardless of consent claims.
He warned that such conduct not only damages the psychological wellbeing and academic performance of students but also erodes public confidence in the education system.
Call for Legislative Action
He is urging policymakers to introduce explicit laws that define and criminalise sexual relationships between teachers and students, with clear penalties to deter offenders and protect vulnerable learners.
According to him, disciplinary procedures alone—such as dismissal or suspension—are insufficient, especially in cases where victims suffer long-term emotional and psychological harm.
Education Sector Under Scrutiny
The call comes amid renewed debate about safeguarding standards in schools, with stakeholders pushing for stronger reporting systems, improved oversight, and mandatory training on professional boundaries for teachers.
Child protection advocates say clearer legal frameworks could help close gaps that allow abuse cases to go unpunished or be handled only administratively.
Push for Stronger Safeguards
As discussions intensify, Prof. Aheto’s proposal is expected to fuel wider conversations about child protection laws and institutional accountability within the education sector.
The debate now centres on whether Ghana should move beyond policy guidelines and make teacher–student sexual relationships a specific criminal offence with enforceable penalties designed to deter misconduct and protect students.


