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Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Headmaster Gives Students ‘Identification Hair Cut’

THE HEADMASTER of Ghana National College, Robert Koomson Barnes, last Friday incurred the wrath of parents when he decided to give students of the school a new hairstyle that observers would describe as an ‘identification haircut’.

Mr Barnes gave the students the trim before they left for vacation.

The headmaster, who subjected the students to harsh treatment and scraped their hair haphazardly, was alleged to have used just a pair of scissors for his operation without considering the health implications.

Some parents of the students who were given the new haircut, stormed the offices of DAILY GUIDE yesterday and stated that the headmaster does not allow the children to go on midterms, adding that they did not understand why he was so furious about the children keeping bushy hair.

According to a parent whose child was a victim of the headmaster’s ‘barbering spree’, she was confused and mad at how the headmaster carried out his actions on the students since they had not committed any crime.

She added that the very day the headmaster carried out his activity was a vacation day and could not fathom why he had to turn himself into a barber, knowing very well that the children were going home that day.

The parent stated that her ward has an eye problem and that the headmaster’s act has worsened her problem.

She told DAILY GUIDE that a teacher earlier barbered the hair of some students a week before the headmaster’s incident, indicating that the action of the teacher must have gingered the headmaster up.

She was angry that instead of the headmaster to query the teacher for his actions, he rather went further and barbered the hair of over 30 students on vacation day.

According to her, her ward reported to her that one of the students had sores on his scalp but the headmaster did not mind and went ahead to barber him and used the same pair of scissors for the rest of them.

She told DAILY GUIDE that she was dragging the headmaster to the Commission of Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) for maltreating the children.

All efforts to speak to Mr Koomson Barnes proved futile as his mobile phone was switched off.

DAILY GUIDE also gathered that Mr Banes was out of town.

From Sarah Afful, Cape Coast
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