Ololade Adeyanju/
Two Ghanaian university lecturers who were accused of soliciting for sexual favours to award grades to their students have been exonerated of sexual misconduct.
Prof. Ransford Gyampo of the Political Science Department and Dr Paul Kwame Butakor of the Department of Teacher Education at the University of Ghana were implicated in the BBC Sex-for-Grades documentary recorded last year.
They were filmed allegedly making sexual advances towards some women who posed as students.
After months of investigations by a fact-finding committee set up by the university, the two lecturers were cleared of soliciting for sex to award grades.
According to local newspaper, the Daily Graphic, the report concluded that there was no evidence that the accused lecturers breached the university’s policy on sexual harassment.
“The committee finds that on the totality of the evidence before it, there is a huge variance between the import of the title: ‘Sex for grades’, and the content of the actual secret video recording of the affected lecturers of the University of Ghana,” it said.
The report further noted that the six-member fact-finding committee reached the conclusion that there was no evidence from the BBC documoentary proving any act of sexual misconduct on the part of the lecturers within the context of the university’s regulations.
“The committee notes that neither the documentary nor the BBC has provided any evidence to demonstrate that the affected lecturers demanded sex in exchange for grades, as asserted by the title of the documentary: ‘Sex for grades’,” the report said.
The committee however found the two lecturers culpable of conducting themselves in a manner that caused embarrassment to the university.
It therefore advised the university authorities to refer them to the university’s disciplinary committee for appropriate action.
The report noted: “On the totality of the evidence before the committee, we find credible evidence that the conduct of Prof. Gyampoh and Dr Butakor was damaging and caused embarrassment to the university. By their conduct, they failed or neglected to comport themselves in ways that will enhance their image and that of the university.
“It is, therefore, the view of the committee that there is credible evidence to support the conclusion that the conduct of Prof. Gyampo and Dr Butakor appears to breach Paragraph 6.4 of the Code of Conduct for Senior Members of the University of Ghana,” it added.
The University said it found the title of the documentary by the BBC sensational and misleading.
Explaining its findings, the committee said per paragraphs 10.1, 12.1 and 12.4 of the Code of Conduct for Academic Staff and the Anti-Sexual Harassment and Misconduct Policy of the university, a victim of sexual misconduct must be a member of the university.
However, the evidence on record showed that the two alleged victims in the video — Zara and Abigail — were not members of the university.
“Consequently, the committee notes that in the absence of any evidence that Zara and Abigail are students or members of the University of Ghana, the provisions of paragraphs 10.1, 12.1 and 12.4 of the Code of Conduct for Senior Members of the University of Ghana and the Anti-Sexual Harassment and Misconduct Policy of the university cannot be triggered against the affected lecturers,” it said.
The BBC’s Africa Eye secret video also implicated lecturers at the University of Lagos.
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