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(When
my life is in danger)
Safety planning must be specific to each individual. Safety plans
must be flexible. Plans must change as the circumstances merit alternation.
Review your plan as often as possible in order to plan the safest
way to leave your abuser.
Consider the following:
If you think your partner will become violent:
- Plan a way to escape from the house, i.e. go to
a door if you sense your partner is getting angry.
- Plan a safe place to go.
- Stay away from places where there are weapons when
your partner is getting angry.
If you choose to leave home,
- Leave at a time when your partner is not at home
and is not expected home for several hours since abusers become more
violent when they ‘lose control’ over the victim.
- Do not tell him you are leaving or where you are
going.
After leaving,
- Your partner may still become violent if he sees
you.
- Try to avoid places you used to visit often i.e.
stores, church etc.
- Change your residence if possible.
- Ask co-workers, neighbors, relatives, and friends,
to inform you if they see your ex-partner nearby.
- Consider informing the police if your ex-partner
continues to harass you.
- Change the locks on your doors if you are living
in the same house.
- Contact the nearest police station or the Women
and Juvenile Unit (WAJU). Insist on having your statement recorded
and action taken by the Police. If this is difficult, report to WAJU
- Keep any evidence of physical abuse such as ripped
clothes or photos of bruises and injuries.
- Call a Crises Centre or any other agency that works
with survivors to find out about the laws and other resources available
to you before you have to use them.
- Know where you can go for help and keep these numbers
where you can find them easily.
- Tell someone you know and trust about what is happening
to you so that if you need to get out of your home in a hurry, you
will have someone you can turn to.
- If you are injured and the police station is quite
a distance from where you are, go to a hospital, doctor or community
health officer and tell them what happened to you.
- Support may also be available through a church,
mosque, or the traditional ruler (e.g. the queenmother).
- There is no specific law dealing with domestic
or family violence in Ghana. Therefore legal issues surrounding a
woman’s decision to leave her home may be handled under several
different laws.
- The criminal behaviour of the batterer must be
handled by the police according to the Assault or Causing Harm provisions
of the Criminal code.
- Issues of custody, divorce etc. come under Civil
Law provisions for which she may need the intervention of the Legal
Aid Board, or hire an attorney.
- The abuser, if he is your spouse/the father of
your children is still obliged to support the children even if you
have left the matrimonial home. An application for Child Maintenance
can be made on your behalf.
- If there is the fear that the children will be
left under the care of the batterer, provisions under the Children’s
Act on Care and Protection can be invoked by drawing the attention
of the Social Welfare Officer/Probation Officer of the district. This
officer can then apply to the District Tribunal for a Care and Protection
order until a custody suit is instituted and the courts make a determination
on who gets custody of the children.
- Legal issues under the civil law can be tackled
after you have found a place of safety, which should be the priority
consideration.
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