Valentina wanted to be a Teacher. “I wanted to know how it feels like to stand in front of people and talk,” she says. When she left school two years ago, that dream, like that of many other Kayayei in Agbogbloshie, fell on rocks.
Now, she wants to be a seamstress. “I want to buy a sewing machine. When I buy the machine, I can go back and learn,” she says.
Her father, a farmer, has two wives and her mother alone has more than 10 children.
“Taking care of us was a problem. Sometimes, when we go to school, there’s food to eat. That’s why I came here. To work for money so that I can buy a sewing machine and then come back home to learn how to sew clothes,” she says.
At 14, she sends about half of all the money she gets as a Kayayei back home.
“I send money to my parents and family members. I buy soap, smoked fish, sandals, clothes and some other items to support my family back home from this job,” she says.
Valentina is only one of the thousands of girls her age doing Kayayei in Agbogbloshie. Many of them have had to drop out of school in ways similar to that of Valentina. In Old Fadama, Ghana’s largest slum just nearby where they live, sexual harassment and abuse of young girls is common. Many girls, while here, have fallen pregnant because they got raped. Many times, men deny responsibility for the pregnancy.
“Many young boys here have been calling me but I have been avoiding them. I know I am a very young girl. I don't want to get pregnant and find myself in trouble. I don’t want to get raped like other girls. The last time I was nearly beaten by the boys for refusing to heed to their calls,” she says.
According to the United Nations Children’s Fund, UNICEF data, 3 out of every ten girls do not complete primary education in Ghana. At least half of that same number do not complete Junior Secondary Education while more than 65 per cent do not complete upper secondary.
Behind these statistics are girls like Valentina, hoping against all the odds that change happens soon.
This is the second of a five-part series by JoyNews shining a light on the life and struggles of Ghana’s human shopping baskets, known locally as Kayaye who mainly come from the five regions of northern Ghana.
Latest Stories
-
Election 2024: Engagement with security services productive – NDC
9 seconds -
‘Let’s work together to improve sanitation, promote health outcome’ – Sector Minister urges
1 min -
Ellembelle MP cuts sod for six-unit classroom block at Nkroful Agric SHS
5 mins -
‘I’ll beat the hell out of you if you misbehave on December 7’ – Achiase Commanding Officer
7 mins -
AFPNC leads the charge on World Prematurity Day 2024
13 mins -
Court remands unemployed man over theft of ECG property
19 mins -
Election security rests solely with the police – Central Regional Police Command
21 mins -
NCCE engages political youth activists at Kumbungu on tolerance
22 mins -
‘In Mahama’s era students lacked chalk, but are now receiving tablets’ – Bawumia
31 mins -
Project commissioning not a ploy to attract votes – Oppong Nkrumah
33 mins -
CBG records GH¢1bn revenue in Q3
35 mins -
Mahama vows to create an agro-processing zone in Afram Plains
49 mins -
Political parties should plan for losses, not just wins – IGP advises
51 mins -
524 Diasporan Africans granted Ghanaian citizenship in ceremony
53 mins -
Mahama urges Afram Plains North residents to avoid ‘skirt and blouse’ voting
54 mins