People with bleached skin and stretch marks among disqualified immigration applicant

8th January 2018

Skin-lightening treatments have been popular in Africa, Asia and the Middle East since the 1930s

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The Ghanaian Immigration Service (GIS) has defended its reason to disqualified candidates with bleached skin and stretch marks from its recruitment exercise.
About 84,000 job seekers applied for to  join the Ghana Immigration Service out of which only 500 will be recruited.

Among those disqualified were  people with bleached skin and stretch marks.Those with tattoos, dreadlocks and "bow legs" were also disqualified from the exercise.

Skin bleaching continues to be an unpleasant issue  in Ghana as it is said to have a dire health implication.

The Ghana  Food and Drugs Authority of Ghana in 2017, issued a ban on the importation of all products which contain the skin-lightening chemical hydroquinone.

Some Ghanaians condemned the bar as sexist and unfair but  GIS spokesman Supt. Michael Amoako-Atta has this was because people with such marks might bleed during the "strenuous" training.

"The kind of work we do, it's strenuous and the training is such that if you have bleached skin or surgical marks on your body during training exercises, you may incur some bleedings," Superintendent Michael Amoako-Attah, told BBC Pidgin.

Candidates must undergo a medical and a full body check as part of the GIS recruitment process.

The ban on stretch marks  has aroused a widespread condemnation and anger on social media as others have called for legal action against the GIS.Image copyrightFACEBOOK

Image copyrightFACEBOOK

While others praised the move against women who lighten their skin.
Image copyrightFACEBOOK
Image copyrightFACEBOOK

This is the latest controversy surrounding the GIS recruitment exercise.

Ghanaians also reacted angrily when the agency revealed it was only recruiting 500 people, after some 84,000 people had paid 50 cedis ($11; £8) each for an application form.

Member of Parliament for Keta and Deputy Ranking Member of Parliament’s Committee on Employment,, Richard Quashigah, has urged rejected applicants to take the GIS to court to recover the application fee.

Source:Fiifi Abdul Malik/Ghanaguardian.com