Abuse Relief Corps

Abuse Relief Corps A non-profit NGO helping women and children who are being abused, sexually and physically, to seek justice.

Protecting a 14-Year-Old SurvivorThis September, our team at Abuse Relief Corps (ARC) supported law enforcement in respo...
30/09/2025

Protecting a 14-Year-Old Survivor

This September, our team at Abuse Relief Corps (ARC) supported law enforcement in responding to a case involving a 14-year-old girl who was new in her community. Isolated and unfamiliar with her surroundings, she was taken advantage of and sexually assaulted by a local perpetrator.

With swift collaboration between ARC and the police, the survivor was rescued and the suspect arrested. We are now actively supporting the court processes to ensure justice is served, while also helping the survivor and her family access the care and protection they need.

Every child deserves safety, dignity, and justice. At ARC, we remain committed to standing with survivors of sexual exploitation, trafficking, and severe abuse through every stage of their journey.

Why Justice Matters Beyond One CaseThis week, we celebrated a conviction that sent a ra**st to prison. But Ama’s story (...
23/09/2025

Why Justice Matters Beyond One Case

This week, we celebrated a conviction that sent a ra**st to prison. But Ama’s story (not her real name) is also a reminder of the many survivors in Ghana whose cases never reach this point.

Too often, sexual and physical abuse cases collapse because families withdraw complaints, survivors cannot afford medical exams, or trials drag on for years without conclusion. When this happens, perpetrators walk free, and survivors are left with wounds but no justice.

At Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), we are committed to changing this reality. By covering medical costs, supporting police investigations, standing with survivors in court, and pushing for speedy trials, we help ensure that justice is not the exception, but the rule.

Every conviction is a victory. But the real goal is a system where every survivor has access to justice, protection, and healing.

Justice Served: Protecting the Most VulnerableThis week, we stood beside the Police Prosecution team in securing justice...
18/09/2025

Justice Served: Protecting the Most Vulnerable

This week, we stood beside the Police Prosecution team in securing justice for a young girl we’ll call Ama (not her real name).

Ama, a minor with intellectual disabilities, had wandered away from home. A man pretended to offer help in taking her back, but instead he took advantage of her and defiled her.

Thanks to swift collaboration between the Police, prosecutors, and our team at Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), the case was fully investigated and prosecuted. The perpetrator was sentenced to 5 years in prison.

For Ama and her family, this verdict brings some measure of closure. For us, it is a reminder that every survivor deserves to be heard, protected, and supported.

We remain committed to working with law enforcement, Social Welfare, medical officers, and other partners to ensure that perpetrators are held accountable and that survivors are never left to walk this journey alone.

Justice is possible. And it must continue.

Why Delayed Justice Hurts SurvivorsWhen cases of sexual abuse and trafficking enter the court system, they often drag on...
17/09/2025

Why Delayed Justice Hurts Survivors

When cases of sexual abuse and trafficking enter the court system, they often drag on for months, even years. Each adjournment has a cost. Survivors are retraumatized. Families lose hope. Perpetrators walk free on bail while survivors live in fear.

Ghana’s Constitution guarantees every citizen the right to a fair and speedy trial. Yet in practice, survivors of sexual and gender-based violence rarely experience this.

At Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), we stand beside survivors through these long waits. But justice delayed is justice denied. Every postponement weakens trust in the system and discourages others from reporting abuse.

It’s time for a justice system that protects the vulnerable with urgency, not delay. Survivors deserve closure, not endless waiting.

From Promises to Protection: Survivors Cannot Wait In recent months, Ghana has taken steps to strengthen the fight again...
16/09/2025

From Promises to Protection: Survivors Cannot Wait

In recent months, Ghana has taken steps to strengthen the fight against sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV):

✔️ The Boame SGBV Mobile App was upgraded to give survivors quicker access to help.

✔️ A regional mission under the MIGRET Project focused on trauma-informed care and the operationalisation of shelters.

✔️ In the Ashanti Region, a new campaign aims to reduce SGBV by 25% in selected communities, combining awareness, legal, and psychological support.

✔️ The Domestic Violence Fund received GH₵1.5 million to support survivors with rehabilitation and medical care.

These are encouraging signs. But every day at Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), we see the reality: survivors still struggle to find shelter, to pay for medical exams, to access psychosocial support, and to move their cases through a court system that delays justice.
Progress must move from policy to practice. Survivors need:

• Clear procedures to access the DV Fund.

• Fully operational shelters and safe spaces across the country.

• Consistent access to medical, psychosocial, and legal services.

• Speedy trials that match the courage it takes to report abuse.

Promises matter. But protection is what changes lives. Survivors cannot wait.

When Survivors Have Nowhere Safe to Go In Ghana, one of the most urgent gaps in protection is the lack of safe spaces fo...
15/09/2025

When Survivors Have Nowhere Safe to Go

In Ghana, one of the most urgent gaps in protection is the lack of safe spaces for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV).

Just this month, the Planned Parenthood Association of Ghana (PPAG) revealed that in the Central Region, survivors often have no shelter available. In one case, a girl who reported her abuse was forced to return and live with her abuser, because there was nowhere else to go.

In the Ashanti Region, a new campaign by Rights and Responsibilities Initiative Ghana (RRIG) with support from GIZ aims to reduce SGBV cases by 25% in targeted communities, highlighting that survivors face barriers such as weak reporting systems, lack of rehabilitation, and inadequate follow-up support.

At Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), we know that reporting abuse is only the first step.

Survivors also need:

• Safe housing and shelter.

• Medical and psychosocial care.

• Legal protection and accountability.

Justice is not only a court verdict. It means ensuring survivors are safe enough to begin healing. No one should ever be forced to choose between safety and justice.

Exploitation Has Gone OnlineExploitation no longer happens only in hidden rooms or brothels. Increasingly, it happens on...
12/09/2025

Exploitation Has Gone Online

Exploitation no longer happens only in hidden rooms or brothels. Increasingly, it happens on a phone screen.

Across Ghana, children and young people are being targeted on social media and messaging apps. Traffickers and abusers use false identities, promises of friendship, or offers of opportunity to lure them in. What begins as a chat often ends in coercion, blackmail, or abuse.

At Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), we know this danger is real. Survivors tell us how easily a conversation online turned into exploitation they could not escape.

Protection today means teaching children how to stay safe online, strengthening law enforcement response to digital crimes, and ensuring survivors of online exploitation receive the same care and justice as any other.

The internet should be a tool for growth, not a trap for exploitation.

A Child Is Not a BrideThe law in Ghana is clear: marriage is for adults, not children. And yet, across many communities,...
11/09/2025

A Child Is Not a Bride

The law in Ghana is clear: marriage is for adults, not children. And yet, across many communities, girls as young as 15 are still given into marriage.

It does not happen by accident. Poverty makes families desperate. Gender inequality makes girls’ education seem less important. Harmful traditions make early marriage appear acceptable. And when enforcement is weak, the cycle continues.

At Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), we see what this means for real lives. Childhood is cut short. Dreams of education are lost. Abuse becomes a daily reality.

Child marriage is not culture. It is not protection. It is a violation. And it must end.

Survivors Deserve Dignity, Not Exposure In Ghana, there have been recent concerns about how the media reports on sexual ...
10/09/2025

Survivors Deserve Dignity, Not Exposure

In Ghana, there have been recent concerns about how the media reports on sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) cases. Too often, survivors, including minors, are exposed in ways that compromise their privacy and safety.
At Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), we believe survivors must never be re-traumatized in the name of awareness. Responsible reporting means:

• Protecting survivor identity at all costs.

• Prioritizing dignity over sensationalism.

• Ensuring stories empower survivors, not harm them.

Every time a survivor’s face, name, or details are made public, it is not awareness — it is another form of harm. Survivors deserve respect, protection, and the chance to heal without being put on display.
We call on all stakeholders, especially media professionals, to remember: justice is not just about the courtroom, it begins with how we tell survivors’ stories.

Trafficking Hides In Plain SightA girl promised work in a salon. A boy taken to “help” on the lake. A teenager told she ...
09/09/2025

Trafficking Hides In Plain Sight

A girl promised work in a salon. A boy taken to “help” on the lake. A teenager told she is going to school in the city, only to be locked away in a room she cannot leave.

These are not distant stories, they happen in our communities. And too often, neighbours notice something is wrong, but stay silent.

At Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), we know that silence protects traffickers. Awareness and action protect survivors. If you see a child who has stopped school, a young person who cannot move freely, or someone always under watch, it may be more than poverty, it may be trafficking.

Report. Speak up. Protect. Because every survivor rescued begins with someone who refused to look away.

Life After Trafficking: The Road to Healing Escaping trafficking is only the beginning of a survivor’s journey. What fol...
08/09/2025

Life After Trafficking: The Road to Healing

Escaping trafficking is only the beginning of a survivor’s journey. What follows is often just as difficult, rebuilding a life after abuse, isolation, and betrayal.
At Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), we walk with survivors through this process:

• Emergency care: medical treatment and safe shelter when they first leave exploitation.

• Psychosocial support: counseling to help process trauma and restore confidence.

• Legal guidance: standing with survivors in court to hold traffickers accountable.

• Reintegration: supporting education, vocational training, or return to family where it is safe.

Survivors are not defined by what they endured. With the right support, they can reclaim their dignity, rebuild their lives, and become powerful voices for change.

Healing takes time, but every survivor deserves the chance to begin again.

How Traffickers Deceive Survivors Trafficking rarely begins with violence. It begins with deception. At Abuse Relief Cor...
05/09/2025

How Traffickers Deceive Survivors

Trafficking rarely begins with violence. It begins with deception. At Abuse Relief Corps (ARC), many of the survivors we support were lured into sexual exploitation through false promises of opportunity.

The patterns are clear:

• False job offers: traffickers present themselves as businesswomen or “madams,” promising work in shops, salons, or tailoring.

• Debt bo***ge: survivors are told they must “repay” huge sums for transport or accommodation, trapping them in exploitation.

• Exploitation of vulnerability: traffickers target girls finishing secondary school, unemployed young women, or those already in trades but seeking better opportunities.

• The cycle continues: some survivors, after years of exploitation, are pressured into recruiting others, repeating the abuse.

By the time the deception is uncovered, survivors are often isolated, traumatized, and too afraid to seek help.

Understanding how traffickers operate is the first step toward breaking their cycle of exploitation. At ARC, we work with survivors, families, and law enforcement to expose these tactics and protect vulnerable young women from falling prey.

Address

Accra

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Abuse Relief Corps posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Abuse Relief Corps:

Share