Private legal practitioner, Dr Maurice Ampaw has waded in on the ongoing debate on sex for grades following an expose by the BBC.

According to the outspoken lawyer, he was sexually harassed during his time as a lecturer at the Central University, Ghana.

Speaking on Adom TV’s morning show, Dr Apaw indicated that the female students harassed him with love proposals with many desiring to be in a relationship with him.

“I was sexually harassed at Central University when I was a lecturer there. They went on vacation and when they returned, one of the female students bought me boxer shorts, added £100 cash and put it in my pigeonhole on campus in order to draw my attention," He said

Adding that, “She even came to class and was staring at me with sexy eyes. I even informed the class though I didn’t mention her name,”

According to him, he resisted those temptations and ensured that he did not misconduct himself as a respected teacher of the law.

Reacting to the ‘Sex for Grades’ investigative documentary by BBC Africa Eye, Lawyer Ampaw said Prof Gyampo and the other lecturer, who was implicated in the video, should have known better and behaved accordingly.

To him, the term #SexForGrades was just a term to describe the documentary and was used to denote the use of sexual exploitation to influence academic progress in the many forms it exists.

He said in as-much-as some lecturers take advantage of female students, some of the female students are very bad and consistently tempt their teachers into having sexual affairs with them.