Author: Andy Ogbarmey-Tettey

  • Joe Wollacott begins pre-season training with Charlton Athletic

    Ghana goalkeeper Joe Wollacott commenced pre-season training with his new club Charlton Athletic ahead of the start of the 2022/23 season.

    He was put through his pace together with his teammates by coach Dejan Stankovic and his technical team.

    Ben Garner and his Addicks side travelled to Estepona, Spain as part of their pre-season preparations on Saturday.

    Wollacott was named in the 22-man squad that made the journey to southern Spain for a week of hard work and bonding.

    The 25-year-old, who featured in the 2021/22 League Two Team of the Season, joins the Addicks on a three-year deal following the expiry of his contract at Swindon Town.

    After impressing with the Robins under Ben Garner, Wollacott earned his maiden Ghana call-up last October and has since helped his country qualify for this year’s World Cup in Qatar.

    He has 10 caps for Ghana after making his international debut last year.

    The goalkeeper came through the ranks at Bristol City and had a variety of loan spells outside of the EFL.

    He joined then-League Two side Forest Green Rovers on loan in 2019/20, making his professional debut against Charlton at The Valley in the EFL Trophy.

    He joined Swindon on an emergency loan in 2021, before signing a permanent deal with the Robins at the start of the 2021/22 season.

    Below are photos of Joe Wollacott training with his new club Charlton Athletic:

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Gareth Bale: Los Angeles FC hope for ‘long-term partnership’ with Wales captain after Real Madrid exit

    Los Angeles FC hope to have a “long-term partnership” with Gareth Bale, after the Wales captain agreed to join the MLS side on a free transfer.

    Forward Bale, 32, is currently a free agent having left Real Madrid after nine years in Spain.

    LAFC co-president John Thorrington said negotiations with Bale had not been “a financial conversation” and expects the deal to be finalised “within 10 days”.

    “We don’t have a firm date,” Thorrington confirmed.

    “Our transfer window opens in early July when we can register [players]. We still have to go through paperwork, hopefully a week or the next 10 days to take care of that, to welcome him and his family to LA, get up to speed.”

    Thorrington would not be drawn into the details of the agreement in place with Bale, but said that it would run beyond November’s World Cup in Qatar, where Wales will be making their first appearance at a finals since 1958.

    “I’d love to get into specifics but I don’t as a policy, but what I can tell you is that LAFC and Gareth are hoping that this is a long-term partnership,” Thorrington said, speaking after a 2-0 win over New York Red Bulls that kept the side top of the MLS standings.

    “It was never about six months just for the World Cup. We were always talking about longer term than that. That was very clear from Gareth and his representative.

    “When Gareth is looking at what he needs to do, his priority will be at LAFC – we are absolutely sure of that – but we’re not naive to the fact that he, like some other players of ours, have a World Cup on the horizon.”

    Thorrington, who is also Los Angeles FC’s general manager, said that Bale’s first game for the MLS side could potentially be the home derby against LA Galaxy on 9 July.

    The five-time Champions League winner had been linked with a return to Tottenham Hotspur as well as a move to home-city club Cardiff.

    The signing of Bale, who joined Real Madrid for a then world-record fee of £85m in 2013, follows LAFC’s move for Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini earlier this month.

    “We presented to them what we feel is an unique opportunity for them at a stage of their career to do something different,” Thorrington said.

    “But we want to win and we want winners, and we have a guy who’s won five Champions Leagues and a guy who’s won the World Cup [Chiellini].

    “We have two great players who will continue to do great things in the next phase of their career here.

    “We see them being great influences on the guys we already have here.”

    There was speculation that Bale would end his playing career had Wales missed out on qualification for the 2022 World Cup.

    But after Robert Page’s side booked their place in Qatar by beating Ukraine in their World Cup play-off final earlier this month, the only question about Bale’s future was which club he would join.

    There had been suggestions Bale would opt to join Cardiff, with his agents confirming last week that they had held talks with the Championship club.

    Cardiff share a training ground with the Football Association of Wales, which would have allowed Bale to continue working closely with Wales’ medical and fitness staff while on club duty.

    But he is instead heading for the MLS, where the season runs from February until October and the competition’s secondary transfer window opens on 7 July.

    “We have done incredible diligence and it was an open, transparent conversation and we quickly saw it was a right match in the face of stiff competition worldwide – and he [Bale] agreed and we’re excited to welcome him in the next couple of weeks,” Thorrington said.

    “It wasn’t a financial conversation with Gareth or us. If Gareth was making this decision with financial motives he wouldn’t be in MLS.

    “This league is really exciting globally and he saw an opportunity to make a real impact. He sees here an opportunity to make a difference with the stage we provide.

    “He sees the chance to pull this sport up to competing with the other sports.

    “As much as possible… understanding how to manage a player like Gareth, a Ferrari or thoroughbred racehorse, they need extra attention in order to succeed, we’re confident we’ll be able to do that.

    “The benefit of him joining the group we have, we will have a player who can play as much as he can, but we will do so sensibly.

    “His priority will be at LAFC but we’re not naive – he has a World Cup on the horizon and how we manage his preparation ahead of the World Cup will be important to Gareth and the success of LA, but we want him peaking after the game with the US!

    “The exact preparation he needs will be the same for us as it is for the World Cup, which I know for Wales is an historic one.”

    Wales will head to Qatar in November, where they will face the USA, Iran and England in Group B at the World Cup.

    LAFC, who are managed by former USA international Steve Cherundolo, are currently top of the MLS’ Western Conference and have 18 regular-season games to play.

    When asked what Bale and Chiellini will bring to his squad, Cherundolo said: “Having been on phone calls and zooms with Gareth Bale and Chiellini, I know 100% they are here for the right reasons.

    “I hope he [Bale] will bring what he brought to Tottenham, Real Madrid – goals, assists, constant threat – a prolific player who knows how to win championships.”

    The end-of-season play-offs follow, with the season-ending MLS Cup final to be played on 5 November – 16 days before Wales’ World Cup campaign begins with a game against the USA.

    Source: BBC

  • Nasa launches first rocket from Australian commercial spaceport

    An unassuming patch of red dirt in remote Australia has made history as the site of Nasa’s first rocket launch from a commercial spaceport outside the US.

    The sub-orbital rocket blasted off from the tiny site early on Monday local time.

    It will enable astrophysics studies that can only be undertaken in the Southern Hemisphere, Nasa says.

    The launch was also the first in Australia in more than 25 years.

    The rocket is Nasa’s first of three to blast off from the newly constructed Arnhem Space Centre on the edge of the Northern Territory.

    Scientists hope it will help them study the impact of a star’s light on the habitability of nearby planets.

    Onlookers who travelled to the remote site glimpsed the rocket for only about 10 seconds before it shot out of view.

    “It was in the blink of an eye, but to me, it was like it was in slow motion because the whole area just lit up,” Yirrkala School co-principal Merrkiyawuy Ganambarr-Stubbs told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

    “It went up, and then the sound, it was just like a rumbling boom, like nothing I’ve ever heard. And I just shook with amazement.”

    Map

    The sounding rocket’s tenure in space was similarly short – the 13m-long projectile fell back to Earth after a planned 15 minutes.

    But the data gathered in that time will help illuminate the secrets of star constellations 430 million light years away, says the chief executive of Equatorial Launch Australia, which runs the space centre.

    “Without getting too deep into the science, it was effectively a large X-ray camera looking at various… phenomenon and trying to capture parts of boulders in the Milky Way and particularly the star cluster of Alpha Centauri,” Michael Jones told the local network Nine.

    Northern Territory Chief Minister Natasha Fyles hailed the launch as an “extremely proud” moment for Australia, adding it was conducted with the blessing of the region’s Aboriginal traditional owners.

    “Here on Yolngu land, young Territorians can look up at the sky and know what can be done,” Ms Fyles said.

    “When we see the oldest living culture combining with the science of space, as we have here, it’s something we can all reflect on and be very proud.”

    Equipment pictured at the Arnhem Space Centre
    IMAGE SOURCE,NASA Image caption, Nasa consulted with Aboriginal custodians of the land before the launch

    Australia has stepped up its space efforts in recent times, unveiling a defence agency focused on countering Russia and China’s ambitions in space.

    The Arnhem Space Centre is the first and only commercially owned and run equatorial launch site in the world.

    “We have achieved a remarkable feat and made a huge mark in the history of Australia’s journey in space,” Mr Jones said in a statement.

    “[It] confirms that we and Australia can provide access to space and this is just the beginning for us.”

    The next launch is expected to take place on 4 July.

    Nasa has pledged to collect all material and debris and return them to the US.

    Source: BBC

  • Jesse Lingard: West Ham make departing Manchester United midfielder offer to return to the club

    West Ham have made departing Manchester United midfielder Jesse Lingard an offer to return to the London Stadium.

    The 29-year-old officially becomes a free agent on 1 July when his contract expires at Old Trafford.

    Lingard had a successful time on loan with the Hammers at the end of the 2020-21 season and scored nine goals in 16 Premier League starts.

    But he was denied another loan spell in January as United refused to deal with a rival for a European place.

    Meanwhile, West Ham are set to confirm the signing of goalkeeper Alphonse Areola from Paris St-Germain.

    Terms have been agreed with the French Ligue 1 champions for Areola, who spent last season on loan with the Hammers and will cost around £10.5m.

    Areola impressed last term when he was in goal throughout West Ham’s run to the Europa League semi-final, where they were beaten by Eintracht Frankfurt.

    It is anticipated the 29-year-old will battle for the number one slot with established first-choice Lucasz Fabianski, who signed a one-year contract extension in May.

    It is the start of what is promising to be a busy period for the Hammers, who are flying to Scotland on Monday for their pre-season training camp at St Andrews.

    The club will learn their Europa Conference League play-off opponents when the draw is made by UEFA on 1 August.

    Source: BBC

  • Russia in historic foreign debt default, reports suggest

    Russia has defaulted on its overseas debt for the first time in more than a century after missing a Sunday deadline, reports suggest.

    Russia has the money to make a $100m (£81.4m) payment and is willing to pay, but sanctions made it impossible to get the sum to international creditors.

    The Kremlin had been determined to avoid the default, which is a major blow to the nation’s prestige.

    The Russian finance minister branded the situation “a farce”.

    The $100m interest payment was due on 27 May. Russia says the money was sent to Euroclear, a bank which would then distribute the payment to investors.

    But that payment has been stuck there, according to Bloomberg News, and creditors have not received it.

    Meanwhile, some Taiwanese holders of Russian bonds denominated in euros have not received interest payments, according to the Reuters news agency, which cited two sources.

    The money had not arrived within 30 days of the due date, that is, Sunday evening, and so is considered a default.

    Euroclear would not say if the payment had been blocked, but said it adhered to all sanctions, introduced following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Although default is a symbolic blow, it will have few immediate practical consequences for Russia.

    Defaulting nations usually find it impossible to borrow any more money, but Russia is already in effect barred from borrowing in Western markets by sanctions.

    In any case, it is reportedly earning about $1bn a day from fossil fuel exports, and Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said in April the country had no plans to borrow more.

    ‘Legacy’ problem

    The default will trigger repayments on a large chunk of Russia’s debt, according to Chris Weafer, former chief strategist at Russia largest bank Sberbank-CIB and chief executive at Moscow-based consultancy Macro Advisory.

    “Some parts of that debt will now become automatically due because there will be early repayment clauses in all debt instruments so if you default on one it usually triggers the immediate demand for payment on the other debts, so Russia could certainly face immediate debt repayment of about $20bn at this stage,” he told the BBC’s Today programme.

    The last time Russia defaulted on its foreign debt was in 1918, during the Bolshevik Revolution when the new communist leader Vladimir Lenin refused to pay the debts of the Russian Empire.

    Russia’s last debt default of any kind was in 1998 as the country was rocked by the rouble crisis during the chaotic end of Boris Yeltsin’s regime. At the time Moscow failed to keep up payments on its domestic bonds but managed not to default on its overseas debt.

    Russia has seemed on an inevitable path to default since sanctions were first imposed by the US and European Union following the invasion of Ukraine.

    These restricted the country’s access to the international banking networks which would process payments from Russia to investors around the world.

    Mr Weafer said that while the default would have no short or medium-term impact on Russia, because it is reaping revenue from selling high-priced commodities such as oil, it would create a “legacy” problem if the situation with Ukraine and the resultant sanctions improves.

    “This is the sort of action that will hang over the economy and make recovery much more difficult when we get to that stage,” he said.

    Takahide Kiuchi, executive economist at the Nomura Research Institute, told the BBC he did not expect a default to have a major impact on the global markets because investors had been expecting it.

    However, he believes the combination of a foreign debt default and international sanctions will have a severe effect on Russia’s economy.

    “In the short-term the Russian economy is expected to go into recession, contracting by around 10% this year,” Mr Kiuchi said.

    “Looking further forward, the country will struggle to grow its economy as it may not be able to borrow money from overseas for decades, possibly up to 30 years.”

    The Russian government has said it wants to make all of its payments on time, and up until now it had succeeded.

    About $40bn of Russia’s debts are denominated in dollars or euros, with around half held outside the country.

    Default seemed inevitable when the US Treasury decided not to renew the special exemption in sanctions rules allowing investors to receive interest payments from Russia, which expired on 25 May.

    The Kremlin now appears to have accepted this inevitability too, decreeing on 23 June stating that all future debt payments would be made in roubles through a Russian bank, the National Settlements Depository, even when contracts state they should be in dollars or other international currencies.

    Mr Siluanov admitted foreign investors would “not be able to receive” the payments, according to the RIA Novosti news agency.

    Because Russia wants to pay and has plenty of money to do it, he denied that this amounts to a genuine default, which usually occur when governments refuse to pay, or their economies are so weak that they cannot find the money.

    “Everyone in the know understands that this is not a default at all,” RIA Novosti quoted him. “This whole situation looks like a farce.”

    Market trader and customer in MoscowIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES

    Meanwhile, Mr Weafer, who is based in Moscow, said that life was more or less operating as normal despite sanctions and Western companies withdrawing from Russia.

    “If you’re in Moscow right now frankly, if you weren’t reading the newspapers, you’d see there’s been a price increase but otherwise life is as it was before February 24.

    “In March and April there was a lot of concern that products would disappear, that factories would not be able to get components or materials to continue operating and we could be looking therefore at a severe drop in employment or a rise in unemployment by the summer [or] early autumn. That situation has improved,” he added.

    “We’ve seen alternative import routes opening via Kazakhstan and Turkey, the government has promoted what they call a parallel import scheme so effectively a lot of products that were blocked in March and April are now starting to reappear, albeit at a higher price.”

    Source: BBC

  • We need stronger systems to fight cyber crime – Speaker

    The Speaker of Parliament, Rt. Hon. Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, has said that Ghana could win the fight against cyber crime activities if only there are stronger systems in place.

    According to him, those engaged in cyber crime activities are always improving upon their modus operandi, insisting that it is only stronger systems that could counter and triumph over them.

    For instance, he said that Ghana’s cyber security machinery should be linked to the Information Communication Technology Department of the Parliament of Ghana, believing that would contribute in curbing the menace.

    “As we move towards a cashless economy, there is the need to build stronger systems to counter cyber crime. This is very important as we develop as a country”, he noted.

    The Speaker made this observation when a delegation led by the Executive Director of Center for Cyber Watch and Data Protection paid a courtesy call on him.

    Commenting further on the issue, Rt. Hon. Bagbin said there is also the need to work on the mindset of Ghanaians and as well, raise awareness in order to bring change.

    His comments follow a report by the Director of the Center for Cyber Watch and Data Protection, Abubakar Issakar, that cyber crime activities were on the rise in the country.

    As a part of the measures to curb the menace, Mr. Issakar proposed the need to build a cyber security system for Parliament.

    Further to that, he proposed the need to scale up advocacy for cyber security and capacity building for medium and small scale enterprises.

    Source: Communications Team of Parliament

  • US Senate passes first gun control bill in decades

    The US Senate has passed a gun control bill – the most significant firearms legislation in nearly 30 years.

    It imposes tougher checks on young buyers and encourages states to remove guns from people considered a threat.

    In a rare bipartisan breakthrough on gun control measures, 15 Republicans joined Democrats in the Senate to approve the bill.

    It still needs the endorsement of the lower house before being signed into law by President Joe Biden.

    A vote in the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives is expected soon.

    The president urged a quick vote “on this bipartisan bill” despite it falling far short of his demands. Gun control activists and most Democrats would also like to see far more stringent measures on gun control.

    “Tonight, after 28 years of inaction, bipartisan members of Congress came together to heed the call of families across the country and passed legislation to address the scourge of gun violence in our communities,” Mr Biden said.

    The bill came after mass shootings last month at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, and a primary school in Uvalde, Texas, that left 31 people dead.

    The reforms include:

    • Tougher background checks for buyers younger than 21
    • $15bn (£12.2bn) in federal funding for mental health programs and school security upgrades
    • Funding to encourage states to implement “red flag” laws to remove firearms from people considered a threat
    • Closing the so-called “boyfriend loophole” by blocking gun sales to those convicted of abusing unmarried intimate partners

    President Biden has pushed for bigger reforms – including a ban on assault weapons, which were used in the Texas and Buffalo mass shootings – or at least an increase in the age at which they can be purchased.

    The gunman in the Texas shooting is believed to have purchased two semi-automatic rifles days after turning 18.

    Important milestone

    The bill is also significant because it is the first time in decades that proposed reforms have received this level of support from both Democrats and Republicans.

    Historically, efforts to strengthen US gun laws have been blocked by the Republican party.

    This time the vote in the 100-member Senate was 65-33.

    All 50 Democrats, including the party’s most conservative members, Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema, voted for the bill.

    They were joined by deal-making Republicans, including the party’s Senate Leader Mitch McConnell and Lindsey Graham, who is a close ally of former President Donald Trump and a traditional opponent of gun-control legislation.

    Senator John Cornyn
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Texas Senator John Cornyn became a leading Republican voice for a compromise deal in the wake of the Uvalde shooting

    However, two-thirds of Senate Republicans opposed the legislation, and all of those who backed it – except for Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski and Indiana’s Todd Young – will not face voters in November this year or have announced their intention not to seek re-election.

    Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who is widely tipped to seek the Republican presidential nomination in 2024, condemned the bill as an attempt to “try to disarm law-abiding citizens rather than take serious measures to protect our children”.

    Gun safety group March For Our Lives – founded by survivors of the 2018 Parkland school shooting in Florida – welcomed the advancement of the bill.

    “We know there’s A LOT more work to be done to end this epidemic. But a lot of hard work got us to tonight. We refuse to quit or be silenced. Ending gun violence is the fight of our lifetime,” the group tweeted.

    The National Rifle Association (NRA) has opposed the bill, and argued that it will not stop the violence.

    Why is gun control such a big deal?

    There are an estimated 393 million firearms currently in the US.

    It has the highest rate of firearms deaths among the world’s wealthy nations – more than 20,900 people have been killed in gun violence in the US this year, including through homicide and suicide, according to Gun Violence Archive, a non-profit research group.

    But it is also a country where many cherish gun rights that are protected by the Constitution’s Second Amendment to “keep and bear arms”.

    The last significant federal gun control legislation was passed in 1994, banning the manufacture for civilian use of assault rifles and large capacity magazines – but it expired a decade later.

    On Thursday, the Supreme Court struck down a New York law restricting who can legally carry a gun – effectively expanding gun rights.

    Although polls indicate a majority of Americans support gun control efforts, many Republican senators represent states with large pro-gun communities.

    And the Republican voters whose support they need to win primary elections – the selection process within each party – are even more opposed to reform.

    Graphic showing an international comparison of gun-related killings as a percentage of all homicides in each country. The US leads with nearly 79% of all homicides occurring with guns.
    Source: BBC
  • Speaker Alban Bagbin visits state institutions unannounced

    The Rt. Hon. Speaker Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin on Thursday, June 24, paid a surprise visit to the National Buffer Stock Company and the School Feeding Programme offices to ascertain their successes and challenges.
    According to Mr Alban Bagbin, it is his duty as the Speaker to familiarise himself with the challenges of these institutions to appreciate their concerns when they are brought before the House.
    This is despite the fact that there are specific Parliamentary Committees assigned to perform their oversight responsibilities over these state institutions.
    Welcoming the Speaker to the Offices of the National Buffer Stock Company, the Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab noted that the staff strength of the company has been increased and their offices have expanded from operating in three regions to all the 16 regions since he took over in 2017 therefore their inputs have improved.
    Speaker visits state institutions unannounced Credit: Parliament of Ghana
    He mentioned the lack of big ware houses and inadequate allocation of funds as major challenges of the company.
    Speaker visits state institutions unannounced Credit: Parliament of Ghana
    At the School Feeding Programme Secretariat, the National Coordinator Mrs. Gertrude Quarshigah revealed that most of the caterers are complaining because the current 97 pesewes per head for a day is woefully inadequate considering the increase in prices lately.
    She indicated that the Caterers are asking for GHc3 per head and can also feel the pain of Government in the wake of economic crisis across the globe.
    Speaker visits state institutions unannounced Credit: Parliament of Ghana
    She assured the caterers that all outstanding payments would be made as soon as the Controller releases funds.
    Speaker visits state institutions unannounced Credit: Parliament of Ghana
    The Speaker assured the Heads of the institutions that he will lead the House to make sure that enough funds are allocated to solve the above mentioned challenges.
    Speaker visits state institutions unannounced Credit: Parliament of Ghana
    Speaker visits state institutions unannounced Credit: Parliament of Ghana
    Speaker visits state institutions unannounced Credit: Parliament of Ghana
  • Bagbin supports ¢3 feeding grant demand by School Feeding Programme caterers

    Speaker Alban Bagbin has assured that Parliament will ensure the demand by school feeding caterers to increase school feeding grant is met by the government.

    The caterers are requesting that government increases the current grant of ¢0.97 to ¢3 per school child to enable them prepare meals for school children amidst current economic challenges.

    During a surprise visit to the School Feeding Programme Secretariat on June 23, the Speaker stated that their demands are of sound mind therefore Parliament’s decision to support them.

    “We see that there is a challenge and the challenge is financing. The caterers, as you say, do the pre-financing because of the global economic situation, which has affected Ghana.

    “There is the need for an upward adjustment of the amount you give to them. Definitely, ¢0.97 is on the low side, and their demand is justified,” he stated, according to media reports.

    Speaker visits state institutions unannounced Credit: Parliament of Ghana 

    Prior to his visit to the School Feeding Programme Secretariat, Speaker Alban Bagbin paid a courtesy visit to the National Buffer Stock Company to ascertain its successes and challenges.

    Expansion of school feeding programme on hold Cecilia Abena Dapaah

    In a Facebook post, the Communication team of Parliament stated that the Speaker personally visited the institutions to “familiarise himself with the challenges of these institutions to appreciate their concerns when they are brought before the House” despite there being specific Parliamentary Committees assigned to perform their oversight responsibilities over these state institutions.

    The Chief Executive Officer of National Buffer Stock Company, Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab, who welcomed the Speaker noted that the company has seen significant growth since his inception.

    Speaker visits state institutions unannounced
    Credit: Parliament of Ghana

    According to him, the National Buffer Stock Company has increased its number of offices and is currently operating in all 16 regions of the country.

    He stated that the company used to operate in just three regions of the country.

    Nonetheless, Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab mentioned the lack of big ware houses and inadequate allocation of funds as some major challenges of the company.

    In response, the Speaker assured that he will lead the House to make sure that enough funds are allocated to solve the above mentioned challenge.

     

  • Fuel price hikes: Government lost GH¢182.6m after temporary removal of PSRL Ofori-Atta

    Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, has disclosed that a total of GH¢182.60 million was lost in revenue following government’s suspension of the Price Stabilization and Recovery Levy (PSRL).

    He stated that though government run at a loss, the move was to cushion Ghanaians, especially motorists amidst the incessant hike in petroleum products across the country.

    The fuel price increment has in the past months had dire consequences on Ghanaians amidst the economic hardship.

    While speaking on the floor of parliament on Wednesday, June 22, 2022, to answer questions on what measures the Finance ministry has put in place to address the increase in fuel prices, Ken Ofori-Atta said, “The suspension of this levy [PSRL] resulted in a loss of revenues of about GH¢182.60 million for the period.”

    “The government also intervened to suspend the margins on the petroleum price build-up by a total of 15 pesewas per litre effective April 1, 2022, for three months as part of measures to slow down the increasing petroleum products prices at pumps,” he added.

    Government in November 2021 suspended the Price Stabilization and Recovery Levy – a charge on petrol, diesel, and LPG.

    Petrol had a 16 pesewas charge per litre whiles diesel had 14 pesewas per litre and LPG per kilogram attracted 14 pesewas.

    The suspension, however, ended in January 2022.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Roe v Wade: US Supreme Court strikes down abortion rights

    Millions of women in the US will lose the legal right to abortion, after the Supreme Court overturned a 50-year-old ruling that legalised it nationwide.

    The court struck down the landmark Roe v Wade decision, weeks after an unprecedented leaked document suggested it favoured doing so.

    The judgement will transform abortion rights in America, with individual states now able to ban the procedure.

    Half of US states are expected to introduce new restrictions or bans.

    Thirteen have already passed so-called trigger laws that will automatically outlaw abortion following the Supreme Court’s ruling. A number of others are likely to pass new restrictions quickly.

    In total, abortion access is expected to be cut off for about 36 million women of reproductive age, according to research from Planned Parenthood, a healthcare organisation that provides abortions.

    The Supreme Court had been considering a case, Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organization, that challenged Mississippi’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks.

    But the court ruled in favour of the state by a majority vote of six to three, effectively ending the constitutional right to an abortion.

    Democratic governors of several states including California, New Mexico and Michigan have already announced plans to enshrine abortion rights within their constitutions if Roe v Wade is overturned.

    The landmark 1973 Roe v Wade case saw the Supreme Court rule by a vote of seven to two that a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy was protected by the US constitution.

    The ruling gave American women an absolute right to an abortion in the first three months (trimester) of pregnancy, but allowed for restrictions in the second trimester and for prohibitions in the third.

    But in the decades since, anti-abortion rulings have gradually pared back access in more than a dozen states.

    Source: BBC
  • Germany moves to reform abortion law

    The government is following through on its pledge to decriminalize abortion.

    Officials plan to abolish a law that subjects doctors who publish information on abortion procedures to prosecution.

    Pro abortion protesters in Munich, GermanyWomen in Germany have been protesting for abortion to be decriminalized

    “I really struggled to find information online,” said Verena, who was 22 when she found herself dealing with an unwanted pregnancy. “There was no easy way to find out which doctors perform abortions, where they are or how the procedure is performed.”

    Abortion is illegal in Germany and punishable by up to three years in prison. But the women and their doctors do not face penalties if the pregnancy poses a health risk to the woman or in cases of rape. Otherwise, an abortion may be carried out within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy (14 weeks since the last period) after mandatory counseling. However, many barriers remain.

    One of the biggest hurdles to obtaining an abortion in Germany was paragraph 219a of the criminal code, which has its origins in Nazi-era social policy. It stated that anyone who publicly “offers, announces [or] advertises” abortion services can face penalties of up to two years’ imprisonment or a fine.

    Kristina Hänel sits at a deskGynecologist Kristina Hänel was found guilty of ‘advertising’ abortions under §219a

    Although a reform three years ago allowed doctors to state that they perform the procedure on their websites, they were still banned from giving medical detail.

    But on Friday, Germany’s coalition government of the center-left Social Democrats and Greens and neoliberal Free Democrats pushed the motion to scrap 219a through parliament.

    Under 219a, Kristina Hänel, a gynecologist in the western German city of Giessen who has performed abortions for 30 years, was sentenced in 2017 to pay a fine of €6,000 ($6,926) for offering abortion services on her website. The case triggered a heated debate in the country.

    “If 219a is scrapped now, Germany takes a step in the right direction of providing information for patients,” Hänel told DW ahead of the decision.

    Woman holding abortion pill in her handAbortions don’t have to involve surgery — many can be done with medication

    Five years ago, Verena found that the lack of readily available information meant hours of fruitless searching before calling a local clinic, where she was cryptically told to get in touch with one of three doctors in her area. But then she found there was no way to get information such as: are these doctors well-rated by fellow patients? What is the difference between a medical and surgical abortion? What is the after-care process like, and what are the possible side effects?

    “When you Google abortion, you’re taken to websites that warn you you’ll definitely be depressed, traumatized and infertile. That isn’t medical advice — it just makes you feel like the worst person in the world,” she said, emphasizing the emotional toll of seeking even the most basic information.

    A young woman with dark shoulder length hair and a bleached streak in it sits on a grassy field, smilingVerena said she had no idea about the many hurdles to abortion until she sought one herself

    Jana Maeffert, a gynecologist with the reproductive rights organization Doctors for Choice Germany, said the dearth of information could create dire circumstances for patients, who may find out too late that a clinic doesn’t offer what they are looking for. For example, doctors cannot state on their website “whether they offer medical or surgical abortions or both. They can’t say that you only operate until the 10th week of pregnancy, so a woman might drive all the way to your practice only to find out she cannot obtain an abortion there anymore,” because she has already passed that point in her pregnancy.

    Jana Maeffert types on a computerJana Maeffert is a gynecologist with a reproductive rights organization

    Less access to abortion

    To perform an abortion, the doctor needs to see a certificate proving that the pregnant woman has undergone counseling at least three days prior in a state-approved counseling center. There are numerous organizations offering counseling, during which the woman is informed of her options, where she might find additional psychological and financial help if she decides to have the baby or how to go about adoption.

    Verena said getting an appointment for the mandatory counseling was nearly impossible. She recalled making call after call. This can turn out to be so time-consuming that it risks taking the pregnant woman over the line of her first trimester.

    Finding a counseling appointment and a doctor is far from a given for many German women. Since 2003, the number of doctors willing to perform an abortion in Germany has tumbled by 40% — there are now only 1,200 practices in the country where a woman can legally obtain one, down from 2,000 some 20 years ago.

    “In Germany, abortion is a taboo topic. For patients, and for doctors, too,” said Maeffert. “If you practice medicine in a small town, you may well decide not to offer pregnancy termination because then you’re labeled the ‘abortion doctor’ in your small community.”

    “Only one in 10 gynecologists in Germany performs abortions,” Maeffert said, “not necessarily because they’re against it, but because the barriers are so high.”

    Some patients, Maeffert said, “must travel 150 kilometers” (90 miles) to find a doctor, especially in rural and Catholic regions such as Bavaria. But, even in some major cities, the situation is critical. According to local media reports, in Stuttgart, not a single hospital offers abortions. In the city of Münster, the last doctor who offered pregnancy termination went into retirement in 2019.

    Abortion rates at 25-year low

    As the number of practices providing legal abortions has dwindled, fewer and fewer women have gotten one. The year 2021 saw the lowest rate of abortions in Germany since 1996, the first year statistics were collected on the subject. According to the Federal Statistical Office, some 94,000 abortions were carried out in 2021, a decrease in 5.4% on the previous year and part of a decadelong downward trend.

    Meanwhile, doctors who perform abortions in Germany have begun to face the onslaught of active anti-choice activists who protest outside clinics, hold marches across major cities, send hate mail and take to social media with aggressive comments.

    Maeffert, in Berlin, said she herself had not yet experienced such attacks. “But, for example, in parts of Bavaria … protesters stand in front of the clinic all the time. … It’s horrible for the patients and the doctors,” she said.

    Political will for change

    Some medical students have taken matters into their own hands, and have found creative ways to get the relevant training on how to perform the procedure. The so-called “Papaya Workshops,” for example, use the fruit as a model for the female reproductive system.

    While attending such a workshop is not sufficient for a doctor to be certified to perform surgical abortions, it closes a gap in German medical education, where students say that abortion is “discussed for 10 minutes, if at all,” according to the advocacy group Medical Students for Choice.

    According to Berlin’s public broadcaster, rbb, the workshops are fully booked. One participant told rbb that she felt the workshop had given her “a better idea of how the procedure goes, what tools you use. I had imagined it as being a lot harder. I’m not so scared of it now.”

    Some doctors in Germany are also now prescribing the pills needed for medical abortion in a telemedicine project where the pregnant person takes medications at home under supervision by a doctor to induce a miscarriage and negate the need for surgery. This is not to be confused with the morning-after pill, which has been freely available in Germany since 2015.

    Source: DW

  • Architectural drawing, creation of Burj Khalifa cost $1.8m Saani criticises alleged $22m fee to Sir Adjaye

    Security Analyst Adib Saani has joined the long list of Ghanaians who have criticised the government for the alleged $22 million payment to Sir David Adjaye for his firm’s architectural work on the National Cathedral of Ghana (NCG).

    According to Saani, even the architectural drawing and creation of the tallest building in the world, Burj Khalifa, cost $ 1.8 million.

    In a post on Facebook on June 23, 2022, the security analyst indicated that the alleged fee paid to David Adjaye is illogical.

    “The architectural drawing and creation (of the Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world which was designed and created by American architect Adrian Smith) cost $1.8million.

    “The Burj Khalifa height is a staggering 828 meters (2716.5 feet) tall, soaring over Dubai. It’s three times as tall as the Eiffel Tower and nearly twice as tall as the Empire State Building. Laid end to end, its pieces stretch over a quarter of the way around the world. Its cloud-piercing height is certainly one of the most impressive facts about Burj Khalifa.

    “National Cathedral of Ghana architecture by the only qualified architect in Ghana, David Adjaye, cost the taxpayer $22million or perhaps more… How irresponsible, insensitive, callous can you be?” portions of the post shared by Saani read.

    Meanwhile, the Vice President of IMANI Africa, Bright Simons, has alleged that the architecture work for the National Cathedral project was sole-sourced to Sir David Adjaye and Associates Limited at $22 million.

    The $22 million agreement, Simons said, is 10 per cent of the total cost to be incurred for the National Cathedral project.

    In a tweet shared on June 16, 2022, the IMANI vice president added that Sir David Adjaye and Associates Limited were paid $6 million even before they commenced work.

    “To build its National Cathedral, Ghana decides to single-source just the architecture to Adjaye & assoc for ~$22m (10% of project cost!) And pay $6m upfront!” portions of the tweet read.

    Read the post by Saani below:

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Christopher Nkunku signs RB Leipzig contract extension until 2026

    RB Leipzig forward Christopher Nkunku has signed a two-year contract extension which will run until 2026 with the German club.

    The 24-year-old had been linked with a number of clubs, including Chelsea and Manchester United, but has opted to commit to the Bundesliga side.

    Nkunku was voted the 2021-22 Bundesliga player of the season and helped Leipzig win the German Cup in May.

    “I am pleased to continue wearing the RB Leipzig shirt,” he said.

    “After our great achievement in winning the DFB-Pokal (German Cup), it remained clear that my story here isn’t over yet – we want more.

    “I was really impressed with the club’s efforts to keep me.”

    Nkunku scored 20 goals and registered 14 assists in 34 league games as he helped RB Leipzig finish fourth in the German top-flight last season.

    He added: “RB Leipzig have made a name for themselves on the international stage in recent years and have shown time and again that we can compete for titles.

    “We want to build on that going forward and go one step further.”

    Source: BBC

  • Nick Pope: Newcastle United sign England goalkeeper from Burnley for an undisclosed fee

    Newcastle United have signed England goalkeeper Nick Pope from relegated Burnley for an undisclosed fee.

    The 30-year-old moves to St James’ Park on a four-year contract after spending six seasons at Turf Moor.

    Magpies boss Eddie Howe called Pope “an exceptional Premier League and international-level goalkeeper”.

    “I’m very pleased to be adding strong competition to a very important position,” Howe added.

    Pope joined Burnley in 2016 when the club was newly promoted to the top flight and made 155 appearances, including playing 36 times last season.

    He played an integral part in helping the club qualify for the Europa League during the 2017-18 campaign when the Clarets finished seventh.

    Pope’s England debut came in 2018 as a substitute against Costa Rica in a friendly. Then in March 2021 he became the first goalkeeper to keep a clean sheet in his first six appearances for England following a 2-0 win over Albania.

    On his move to Newcastle, Pope said: “Now I’m here, I can’t wait to get started.

    “The deal has taken a couple of weeks to come to fruition, but it got over the line really quickly and I’m delighted to be here and I’m really looking forward to getting stuck into it.”

    Pope is Howe’s second summer deal after the Magpies completed the signing of Aston Villa left-back Matt Targett for £15m on a four-year contract.

    Newcastle open their Premier League campaign against promoted Nottingham Forest on 6 August at 15:00 BST.

    Source: BBC

  • WAFU-B U17 Tournament: Ghana’s Julian Nunoo to handle final match between Nigeria and Burkina Faso

    Ghana’s Julian Nunoo has been handed the role as referee for the WAFU-B U17 final match between Nigeria and Burkina Faso.

    He will be assisted by compatriot Roland Addy and Adiwotso Komlan from Togo.

    Soro Tuoniféré from Ivory Coast is the 4th official for the game.

    Brou Kouadio Parfait is the referee assessor.

    Match 13 : Nigeria vs Burkina Faso

    Ref: Julian Nunoo (Ghana) AA 1 : Roland Addy (Ghana) AA2 : Adiwotso Komlan (Togo) 4th Ref : Soro Tuoniféré (Côte d’Ivoire) Assessor: Brou Kouadio Parfait (Côte d’Ivoire)

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Angola ex-leader Dos Santos admitted to hospital

    The former president of Angola, José Eduardo dos Santos, has been admitted to a hospital in the Spanish city of Barcelona, Portuguese state news agency Lusa has reported.

    “[Mr Dos Santos], has been hospitalised in an intensive care unit in a hospital in Barcelona, where has resided for the past few years,” Lusa said.

    The report comes amid speculation about the health of the former long-serving leader of the southern African country.

    In May, the 79-year-old ex-president responded to rumours about his death by slamming the “contradictory reports” about his health and pointing out that his personal doctor was the only one authorised to speak on the matter.

    He served as the president of Angola from 1979 to 2017.

    Source: BBC

  • Ghana goalkeeper Jojo Wollacott joins League One side Charlton Athletic

    Black Stars goalkeeper Jojo Wollacott has joined League One side Charlton Athletic in the ongoing transfers window.

    Wollacott had a standout season with Swindon Town, earning a spot on the 2021-22 League Two Team of the Season.

    In 37 league appearances for his team, the 25-year-old kept 11 clean sheets.

    On 7 August 2019, Wollacott joined EFL League Two side Forest Green Rovers on loan for the 2019-20 season, facing competition for the first-team spot from Adam Smith and Lewis Thomas.

    He made his debut in professional football six days later, saving a penalty as he kept a clean sheet in a 0-0 draw with Charlton Athletic in the EFL Cup, before going on to finish on the winning side in the penalty shoot-out.

    Wollacott received his first call-up to the Ghana national team for the 2022 World Cup qualification game against Zimbabwe. He debuted with the Black Stars in a 3-1 2022 FIFA World Cup qualification win over Zimbabwe on 9 October 2021.

    Below are photos of Jojo Wollacott after putting pen to paper:

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Netflix cuts 300 more jobs after subscriptions fall

    Netflix has announced another round of job cuts as it grapples with slowing growth and increased competition.

    The streaming giant said it was cutting 300 more jobs – roughly 4% of its workforce – mostly in the US, after axing 150 people in May.

    The moves come after the company reported its first subscriber loss in more than a decade in April.

    The firm is exploring an ad-supported service and cracking down on password sharing as it tries to boost growth.

    “While we continue to invest significantly in the business, we made these adjustments so that our costs are growing in line with our slower revenue growth,” Netflix said in a statement on Thursday, adding that it was continuing to hire in other areas.

    While Netflix has 220 million subscribers globally and remains the clear leader in the streaming market, it has faced fierce competition in recent years with the launch of rival platforms such as Disney Plus and Amazon’s Prime Video.

    The company also recently embarked on a series of price increases in the US, UK and elsewhere, which have contributed to its subscriber losses.

    The firm has said it expects its subscriber count to fall by another two million in the three months to July, after dropping by 200,000 earlier this year.

    Surveys by Kantar research firm consistently identify saving money as the number one reason for cancelling streaming services – even in the US, where overall streaming subscriptions have held steady, unlike the UK.

    On Thursday, Ted Sarandos, the company’s co-chief executive, told an audience at a conference in Cannes on Thursday that Netflix was in talks with many companies as it explores new advertising partnerships to appeal to price-sensitive audiences.

    “We’re not adding ads to Netflix as you know it today. We’re adding an ad tier for folks who say ‘Hey, I want a lower price and I’ll watch ads’,” Mr Sarandos said at Cannes Lions.

    The job cuts at Netflix come amid rising worries in the US that the labour market boom the country has enjoyed since the pandemic is coming to an end.

    Signs of slowdown are particularly evident in the tech sector, where start-ups have cut nearly 27,000 workers since May – roughly double the number recorded in all of 2021, according to layoffs.fyi, which tracks publicly announced redundancies.

    Firms in the housing sector have also announced hundreds of cuts in recent weeks.

    The head of America’s central bank told members of Congress this week that its efforts to bring down rapidly rising prices by raising interest rates risk triggering a sustained economic slowdown, but were worth it to restore price stability.

    “We’re not trying to provoke, and don’t think we will need to provoke a recession,” Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell said.

    But he conceded in response to questioning, it’s “certainly a possibility”.

    Source: BBC

  • Severodonetsk: Ukrainian forces told to retreat from key eastern city

    Ukrainian forces in Severodonetsk have been told to withdraw, according to the top regional official.

    The city is the focus of Russia’s invasion as Moscow tries to take control of large parts of east Ukraine.

    “Remaining in positions that have been relentlessly shelled for months just doesn’t make sense,” Luhansk regional governor Serhiy Haidai said.

    Russian forces have made advances in recent days and have nearly encircled the city, and its twin city Lysychansk.

    “They have received orders to retreat to new positions… and from there continue their operations,” Mr Haidai told Ukrainian television.

    “There is no point in staying in positions which have been destroyed over several months just for the sake of staying,” he said.

    The city’s entire infrastructure has been completely destroyed, Mr Haidai added, with over 90% of houses shelled and 80% of them critically damaged.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which began in February, has been focused on Severodonetsk and its twin city Lysychansk for several weeks.

    They are the last remaining Ukrainian positions in the Luhansk region, one of two regions which make up the eastern Donbas.

    Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has falsely claimed that Russian speakers in the Donbas have been the victims of genocide – one of the key justifications he uses for invading Ukraine.

    On Thursday, Russian forces took control of more territory to the south of Severodonetsk and Lysychansk, raising fears that Ukrainian forces will soon be encircled there.

    Source: BBC

  • Lil Wayne joins performers at BET Awards 2022, with Keke Palmer, Idris Elba and more to present

    The BET Awards 2022 are getting some added star power!

    The annual award show has added Lil Wayne to its slate of performers, as well as an A-list line-up of presenters, including Idris Elba, Daniel Kaluuya and Keke Palmer.

    The “Lollipop” rapper, 39, will join a previously announced performance set that includes Lizzo, Jack Harlow and Chloe Bailey.

    Among the other presenters set to take the stage are Ne-Yo, Janelle Monáe, Nene Leakes, Tamar Braxton, Ray J, Sanaa Lathan, Big Freedia, Bleu, Carl Anthony Payne II, Crystal Hayslett, Ebony Obsidian, Eva Marcille, Irv Gotti, KJ Smith, Luke James, Marsai Martin, Mignon, Novi Brown, Serayah, Terrence J, Tisha Campbell and Will Packer, the network announced on Thursday.

    MC Lyte will serve as announcer, and DJ Diamond Kuts will return as house DJ when the BET Awards air live from Los Angeles’ Microsoft Theater on June 26.

    This year’s show, hosted by Taraji P. Henson, will also include performances by Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds, Latto, Chance the Rapper, Ella Mai, Fireboy DML, Giveon, Joey Bada$$, Muni Long, Roddy Ricch and Maverick City Music x Kirk Franklin, plus newcomers GoGo Morrow and OGI on the BET Amplified Stage.

    Sean “Diddy” Combs will be honored with this year’s Lifetime Achievement Award.

    Doja Cat has the most nominations heading into the night, with six, while Ari Lennox and Drake trail with four apiece.

    Source: People.com

  • Gareth Bale: Wales captain’s representatives hold talks with Cardiff City

    Cardiff City have held talks with Gareth Bale’s representatives as they step up their efforts to sign the out-of-contract Wales captain.

    Bale, 32, is available on a free transfer having left Real Madrid.

    His representatives have confirmed to BBC Sport Wales that they are in negotiations with Cardiff chairman Mehmet Dalman.

    However, the deal is not yet done and Bale’s agents are also “still in talks with lots of other clubs”.

    Five-time Champions League winner Bale has been linked with a move to a Major League Soccer team in the United States, as well as a return to Tottenham.

    As improbable as dropping down to the Championship might seem for a man who joined Real Madrid for a then world-record fee of £85m in 2013, Cardiff are a realistic option.

    Bale was born and raised in Cardiff and his primary focus is leading Wales in their first World Cup since 1958 later this year.

    Cardiff share a training ground with the Football Association of Wales, which would allow Bale to continue working closely with Wales’ medical and fitness staff.

    His family still live in the Welsh capital and then there is the theory Bale might be able to be more selective with which games he plays for Cardiff – as opposed to a Premier League team – in preparation for the finals in Qatar.

    At Real, Bale earned £600,000 per week, more than the weekly wage bill of Cardiff’s entire first-team squad.

    But according to those close to the forward, money is not the most important factor with Wales’ World Cup campaign, which begins in November, in mind.

    Source: BBC

  • Maradona: Medical staff to be tried for football legend’s death

    Eight medical personnel are to stand trial accused of criminal negligence in the death of legendary Argentinian footballer Diego Maradona.

    A judge has ordered a culpable homicide trial after a medical panel found Maradona’s treatment was rife with “deficiencies and irregularities”.

    Maradona died in November 2020 of a heart attack in Buenos Aires, aged 60.

    He had been recovering at home from surgery on a brain blood clot earlier that month.

    A few days after his death Argentine prosecutors launched an investigation into the doctors and nurses involved in his care.

    Last year, the panel of 20 experts appointed to examine his death found Maradona’s medical team acted in an “inappropriate, deficient and reckless manner”.

    It also concluded that the footballer “would have had a better chance of survival” with adequate treatment in an appropriate medical facility, according to the court ruling.

    Among those facing charges are Maradona’s neurosurgeon and personal doctor, Leopoldo Luque, a psychiatrist and psychologist, two doctors, two nurses and their boss. They have all denied responsibility for his death.

    All eight will be tried on a legal definition of homicide based on negligence committed in the knowledge that it may lead to a person’s death.

    The crime can hold a sentence of eight to 25 years in prison, according to Argentina’s penal code. A date for the trial is yet to be set.

    Maradona
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Maradona was one of the greatest football players of all time

    Mario Baudry, a lawyer for one of Maradona’s sons, told Reuters that the football legend was “in a situation of helplessness” by the time of his death.

    “As soon as I saw the cause, I said it was homicide. I fought for a long time and here we are, with this stage completed,” he said.

    The legal proceedings were prompted by a complaint filed by two of Maradona’s daughters. They raised concerns about their father’s treatment after the brain operation.

    In an emotional press conference in November 2020, Dr Luque cried, saying he had done all he could to save the life of a friend.

    At one point, the doctor shot back at reporters: “You want to know what I am responsible for? For having loved him, for having taken care of him, for having extended his life, for having improved it to the end.”

    The doctor said he had done “everything he could, up to the impossible”.

    Diego Maradona is largely considered to be one of the greatest footballers to ever play the game. He was captain when Argentina won the 1986 World Cup, scoring the famous ‘Hand of God’ goal against England in the quarter-finals.

    During the second half of his career, Maradona struggled with cocaine addiction and was banned for 15 months after testing positive for the drug in 1991.

    The news of his death threw the football world – and his home country of Argentina – into deep mourning, with many thousands of people queuing for hours to walk by his coffin at the presidential palace in Buenos Aires.

    Source: BBC

  • Germany takes step closer to gas rationing

    Germany has taken a step closer to gas rationing after a drop in supplies from Russia.

    The country has triggered the “alarm” stage of an emergency gas plan to deal with shortages, Germany’s economy ministry said.

    It is the latest part of a standoff between the European Union and Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.

    German economy minister Robert Habeck said Russia was using gas “as a weapon” in response to EU sanctions.

    “We must not fool ourselves. The cut in gas supplies is an economic attack on us by [Russian President Vladimir] Putin,” Mr Habeck said, adding Germans would have to reduce consumption.

    Mr Habeck said there would “hopefully never” be a need to ration gas for German industry, but he added: “Of course, I can’t rule it out.”

    Emergency plan

    Germany has now moved to the second stage of its three-part emergency plan, which is triggered when there is disruption or very high demand for gas.

    The government will provide €15bn (£13bn) of loans to try to fill gas storage facilities, and will start auctioning gas to industry to encourage big businesses to use less.

    Moving to stage two of the plan puts more pressure on suppliers and network operators to balance out disruption by taking measures such as finding alternative sources for gas.

    However, the country stopped short of letting utilities pass on soaring costs to customers, although that is theoretically possible under stage two.

    Gas firms already had to ensure supplies under the first stage of the emergency plan, while gas network operators were reporting to the Economy Ministry at least once a day, and electricity grid operators had to ensure grid stability.

    State intervention would happen under the third stage when there is a significant disruption to supply which the market cannot cope with, meaning supplies are rationed.

    In the third stage, supply to industry would be restricted first, while households and critical institutions such as hospitals would continue to get available gas.

    Twelve European Union countries have now been affected by cuts to gas supply from Russia, EU climate policy chief Frans Timmermans said on Thursday.

    Russia cut flows through its Nord Stream 1 pipeline to 40% of capacity last week citing problems with equipment, affecting countries including Germany.

    Nord Stream 1 is due to undergo maintenance from 11 to 21 July when flows will stop.

    The head of the International Energy Agency, Fatih Birol, has warned that Russia may cut off gas supplies to Europe entirely and that Europe needs to prepare now.

    Russia has already cut gas supplies to Poland, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, Denmark and Finland over their refusal to comply with a new payment scheme.

    Source: BBC

  • South Africa reports first case of monkeypox

    South Africa on Thursday (June 23) announced its first confirmed case of monkeypox.

    “The patient is a 30-year-old man from Johannesburg who has no travel history, which means it cannot be attributed to infection outside South Africa,” Health Minister Joe Phaahla told a news conference.

    The health authorities have begun contact tracing on the case.

    The first symptoms of monkeypox are usually a high fever, swollen lymph nodes and a chickenpox-like rash. The virus usually disappears after two to three weeks.

    The WHO said last week that Europe remains the epicentre of the monkeypox epidemic.

    The UN health body is due to hold an emergency meeting on Thursday to discuss classifying the global epidemic as a public health emergency of international concern.

    Source: Africanews

  • IMF releases $216m to Senegal

    The International Monetary Fund has released nearly $216 million U.S. dollars for Senegal after a review of its aid programs for the West African country.

    The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced Wednesday ( June 22)

    “The completion of the audits allows the immediate release of about 215.78 million dollars,” the institution said in a statement.

    In addition, the board approved an increase in aid to the country.

    “As a result, total access under the 18-month agreements approved in June 2021 has been increased by about $172.6 million, from about $650 million, at the time of approval, to about $776.67 million,” the fund said.

    “Soaring global fuel and food prices, compounded by the war in Ukraine and, to a lesser extent, the freeze on trade with Mali are disrupting the post-pandemic recovery,” the institution commented.

    The IMF has revised down its 2022 growth forecast for the country to around 5% while inflation is expected to reach 5.5%, driven by rising food and energy prices.

    Source: Africanews

  • Afghanistan quake: Gyan clinic with five beds for 500 injured patients

    “Of 500 patients who have come to the clinic since the morning, 200 have died” – that is the blunt assessment of Muhammad Gul, a staff member at a tiny clinic in Gyan, in eastern Afghanistan.

    The facility has just five beds, but Tuesday’s earthquake left even these meagre resources unusable.

    “All the clinic’s rooms have been destroyed,” Mr Gul told the BBC.

    He said a helicopter had airlifted a handful of patients from the remote district in Paktika province to cities for treatment, and two doctors were manning a makeshift outdoor clinic to try to treat people who had nowhere else to go.

    The generator supplying power has only a limited supply of fuel, and the help promised by other provinces has yet to materialise.

    Meanwhile, casualties keep on arriving.

    “There are dozens of people who need immediate medical help. I don’t think they will survive the night,” Mr Gul added.

    The damaged buildings of Gayan Comprehensive Health Center
    IMAGE SOURCE,GAYAN COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH CENTER Image caption, The Gayan Comprehensive Health Center suffered extensive damage

    The earthquake struck impoverished hilly areas with weak buildings, ill-equipped to handle the shock. Hundreds of houses have been destroyed and there have been landslides.

    Gyan is one of the worst-hit areas. Many people remain trapped under the rubble.

    International development agencies set up the clinic there a couple of years ago. It was meant to deal with minor health conditions and refer people to hospitals in major cities for more significant treatment. It had no accident and emergency department.

    Since the hard-line Islamist Taliban took power across the country last August, many international aid agencies have left the country. The medical system has been dealing with severe shortages of supplies and staff.

    An interior picture showing the basic conditions at Gayan Comprehensive Health Center
    IMAGE SOURCE,GAYAN COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH CENTER Image caption, The clinic was only intended to deal with minor health conditions

    When the Taliban’s acting district governor toured Gyan on Tuesday, people shouted at him, telling him to leave, a volunteer from a neighbouring district told the BBC.

    “The Taliban are not capable of dealing with this disaster. There is no system in place,” the volunteer, who did not want to be named, said.

    “And we cannot be hopeful for international help. The world has forgotten Afghanistan.”

    Even before the Taliban takeover, the country’s emergency services in its larger towns and cities had limited capacity to respond to natural disasters. There were few aircraft and helicopters available.

    According to Paktika’s medical authorities, there is a severe shortage of painkillers and antibiotics in the region.

    One of the doctors at Gyan’s makeshift clinic went there from the neighbouring district of Ghazni to volunteer.

    There was one young father who had suffered a chest fracture, and who was crying and asking for his family members, including his children, the doctor said. “He asked me to let him die if they were not alive.”

    Most of the patients were men, as women and children were less likely to be able to free themselves from debris and destroyed buildings, the doctor said.

    Some children were at the clinic without their parents, including a severely injured boy of eight.

    “He was begging people to go and help his parents and siblings who were trapped in their house,” said the doctor.

    “He then overheard someone tell me that they were all dead, and he cried and fell unconscious.”

    The BBC has been shown photos of people with open wounds waiting to be seen at the clinic.

    Bodies are reported to be lying on the ground in the area.

    There are no official aid workers present, but people from neighbouring areas are arriving to help with rescue efforts.

    One volunteer rescue worker from the nearby city of Urgun was helping to pull trapped people from the rubble.

    He said he had found 40 bodies since the morning, mostly of young children.

    But even for those who did make it out of the devastation alive, the immediate future looks bleak.

    “We don’t even have access to clean water to wash the wounds and it’s extremely hot,” the volunteer doctor said. “I think soon, infection will spread.”

    Map
    Source: BBC
  • Gunmen behead another abducted Nigerian politician

    A second Nigerian politician has been beheaded by abductors in the south-east of the country, the authorities say.

    Police in Anambra state say the decapitated body of a former local MP, Nelson Achukwu, was found two weeks after he had been kidnapped by gunmen for a second time.

    On both occasions, his family is reported to have paid a ransom for his safe return.

    It is not clear who abducted and subsequently killed the disabled politician.

    One month ago, a serving member of the state assembly, Okechukwu Okoye, was also abducted and beheaded.

    http://backend.theindependentghana.com/2020/11/nigerian-ministers-brother-abducted-by-gunmen/

    A military officer and his female partner were also decapitated recently.

    There has been a series of gruesome murders in the south-east as the country prepares for elections.

    Some officials have blamed the separatist group, Indigenous People of Biafra (Ipob), but it has always denied carrying out violent attacks.

    Source: BBC

  • IMF backs Tunisia’s $4bn loan bid amid protests

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has expressed support for a wide-ranging but controversial economic reform programme being implemented by the government in Tunisia.

    The country is facing a severe economic crisis and is asking for a $4bn (£3.2bn) loan.

    Jihad Azour, the IMF’s Middle East director – after meeting President Kais Saied in Tunis on Wednesday – said he liked the reform plan and that the IMF was ready to discuss a loan.

    The plan includes freezing wages, stopping recruitment in the public sector and cutting energy and food subsidies.

    But there have been big protests and Tunisia’s powerful trade union movement has called nationwide strikes.

    The president has already suspended parliament and sacked his entire cabinet.

    He says he needs even more powers to better steer the country – his opponents say that amounts to a coup against democracy.

    Source: BBC

  • Mammoth report delivered on SA’s Zuma-era corruption

    The final part of a mammoth report into alleged corruption in South Africa under former President Jacob Zuma has been handed to his successor Cyril Ramaphosa.

    The report by Judge Raymond Zondo is more than 5,000 pages long.

    It paints a picture of a country whose coffers were looted by its former president and his associates – the prominent Gupta brothers.

    It also accuses him of halting an investigation into alleged financial misdeeds by the Guptas. They and Mr Zuma deny wrongdoing.

    The Guptas’ influence on the hiring and firing of government ministers has also been laid bare by the report.

    It found that Mr Zuma enabled, indirectly, Gupta family members to occupy a place of prominence to the detriment of the country.

    The South African authorities are currently working on having the Gupta brothers extradited from the United Arab Emirates to answer for their alleged crimes.

    The commission’s chairman has also recommended that election rules be amended to allow for South Africans to directly elect a president instead of using the party system.

    This, he says, will prevent the country having another leader such as Mr Zuma.

    Mr Ramaphosa must now decide whether further legal action should be taken against his predecessor.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine war: Russia aiming to ‘destroy’ Donbas, Zelensky says

    A key advisor to Ukraine’s president has said the battle for the eastern cities of Severodonetsk and Lysychansk has reached a “fearsome climax”.

    Oleksiy Arestovych said Russian forces could soon encircle the twin cities and cut them off from Ukrainian territory.

    “The threat of a tactical Russian victory is there, but they haven’t done it yet,” he said.

    It comes as President Volodymyr Zelensky accused Moscow of trying to “destroy” the Donbas region.

    “There were massive air and artillery strikes in Donbas. The occupier’s goal here is unchanged, they want to destroy the entire Donbas step-by-step,” Mr Zelensky said in his nightly video address.

    He also repeated his calls for Western leaders to speed up the delivery of heavy artillery to his troops.

    “We again and again emphasize the acceleration of arms deliveries to Ukraine. What is quickly needed is parity on the battlefield in order to halt this diabolical armada and push it beyond Ukraine’s borders.” he said.

    A Ukrainian soldier
    IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS Image caption, Ukrainian troops have been trying to hold the twin cities against a relentless Russian assault

    Russia has directed much of its attention to Severodonetsk and Lysychansk, which are the final Ukrainian outposts in the Luhansk region, and in recent days Moscow’s forces appear to be making some progress in their attempt to encircle Ukrainian troops there.

    Regional Governor Serhiy Haidai said on Thursday that two key settlements to the south of the cities had been captured and suggested that troops in the town of Zolote, which has been on the front line of fighting since 2014, may be forced to retreat.

    In its daily update, the UK’s ministry of defence said that Russian forces have advanced over 5km (3 miles) towards the southern perimeter of Lysychansk this week.

    “Some Ukrainian units have withdrawn, probably to avoid being encircled. Russia’s improved performance in this sector is likely a result of recent unit reinforcement and heavy concentration of fire,” UK officials said.

    On Wednesday, Mr Haidai said Russian shelling has “significantly destroyed infrastructure and housing” in Lysychansk.

    He added that Severodonetsk is also shelled “every day”, despite Moscow’s forces having seized much of the city. Hundreds of civilians remain trapped there, with many of them seeking shelter in the sprawling Azot chemical plant.

    A map of the Donbas

    But Mr Arestovych said fighting in both cities had slowed significantly after Ukraine inflicted heavy losses on Russian forces, which he claimed are now made up of significant numbers of conscripted troops. The BBC cannot verify this claim and Russia denies using conscripts in the war.

    “It’s like two boxers grappling with each other in the 18th round of a bout and barely able to move things forward. This operation started on 14 April and has been going on for nearly 80 days,” he said.

    Elsewhere, Russia resumed its shelling of Ukraine’s second city of Kharkiv on Wednesday morning.

    Many civilians had started to return to the city after Russian forces were pushed back across the border, but fears have grown that Moscow could be planning a fresh assault in the region.

    Meanwhile, Russia accused Ukraine of using drones to attack an oil refinery in the Rostov region, close to the Ukrainian border.

    “As a result of terrorist actions from the western border of the Rostov region, two unmanned aerial vehicles struck at the technological facilities of Novoshakhtinsk,” representatives of the plant said in a statement.

    Social media footage appeared to show the unmanned vehicles smashing into the refinery in a rare direct assault on Russian territory. Officials in Kyiv have yet to comment on the attack.

    And near the occupied city of Kherson, the pro-Russian administration accused “Ukrainian saboteurs” of attempting to carry out the “failed assassination” of the Moscow appointed head of a town.

    The Russian state news agency Tass claimed the head of Chernobaevka, Yuri Turulev, was injured in an attempted car bombing by Ukrainian partisan forces.

    It is difficult to determine the extent of the pro-Kyiv insurgency in Kherson, but several attacks have been reported in the city and a dedicated government department, the Centre for National Resistance, has been set up to coordinate partisan activity.

    The intense fighting comes as EU leaders are expected to approve Ukraine’s application for candidate status of the bloc.

    Source: BBC

  • New Tesla factories losing billions of dollars, Musk says

    Elon Musk says Tesla’s new factories in Germany and the US are “losing billions of dollars” due to battery shortages and supply disruptions in China.

    The multi-billionaire also called the plants in Berlin and Austin, Texas “gigantic money furnaces”.

    Covid-19 lockdowns in China this year, including in Shanghai where Tesla has a huge factory, have made it increasingly difficult for manufacturers to operate.

    In recent weeks Mr Musk has been warning of job cuts at the firm.

    “Both Berlin and Austin factories are gigantic money furnaces right now. It’s really like a giant roaring sound, which is the sound of money on fire,” said Mr Musk, who is the electric vehicle maker’s chief executive.

    The plants are “losing billions of dollars right now. There’s a ton of expense and hardly any output,” he added in an interview with the Tesla Owners of Silicon Valley, a company-recognised club.

    Mr Musk said the so-called gigafactories have been struggling to increase production since they were opened earlier this year.

    Tesla’s site in Austin currently produces a “tiny” number of cars, partly because some components for its batteries were “stuck” at a Chinese port “with no one to actually move it”, he said.

    “This is all going to get fixed real fast but it requires a lot of attention,” Mr Musk added.

    The interview was recorded at the end of last month but this part of the conversation was only posted on Wednesday.

    Authorities in China locked down a number of its cities earlier this year in response to a surge in Covid-19 infections.

    Tough restrictions were imposed on the movement of people and materials including in the financial, manufacturing and shipping hub of Shanghai.

    Mr Musk said the shutdown of Shanghai was “very, very difficult” for Tesla, which reportedly halted most of its production at its ‘gigafactory’ in the city for weeks.

    The site will largely be closed again for two weeks next month for upgrading works, according to the Reuters news agency, which cited an internal memo.

    This is aimed at boosting the site’s output, bringing it closer to the company’s goal of the plant producing 22,000 cars every week, the report said.

    Tesla did not immediately respond to a BBC request for comment.

    Last week, the company raised the price of its whole range of cars in the US by almost 5%, as the cost of raw materials including aluminium and lithium rose.

    This week, Mr Musk said Tesla planned to shed 3.5% of its global workforce after earlier saying that he had a “super bad feeling” about the economy.

    Meanwhile, German carmaker BMW said on Thursday that it had formally begun production at its new $2.2bn (£1.8bn) facility in the northeastern Chinese city of Shenyang.

    BMW said the plant, which is its third in China, will increase its annual output in the country from 700,000 to 830,000.

    Source: BBC

  • Afghanistan quake: Rescuers struggling to reach survivors in Paktika

    Heavy rain, threadbare resources and rugged terrain are hampering rescuers in south-east Afghanistan, where a powerful earthquake is reported to have killed more than 1,000 people.

    Unknown numbers were buried in the rubble of ruined, often mud-built homes by the magnitude 6.1 earthquake.

    Afghanistan’s health system was facing near collapse even before the disaster.

    The Taliban authorities have called for more international aid. Communication networks are also badly hit.

    “We can’t reach the area – networks are too weak,” a Taliban spokesman was quoted by Reuters as saying.

    The United Nations is among those scrambling to provide emergency shelter and food aid to remote areas in the worst-hit Paktika province.

    Survivors and rescuers have told the BBC of villages completely destroyed near the epicentre of the quake, of ruined roads and mobile phone towers – and of their fears that the death toll will rise further. Some 1,500 people were also injured, officials say.

    The deadliest earthquake to strike the country in two decades is a major challenge for the Taliban, the Islamist movement which regained power last year after the Western-backed government collapsed.

    The earthquake struck early on Wednesday about 44km (27 miles) from the city of Khost and tremors were felt as far away as Pakistan and India.

    Afghanistan is in the midst of a humanitarian and economic crisis, and Abdul Qahar Balkhi, a senior Taliban official, said the government was “financially unable to assist the people to the extent that is needed”.

    The head of the UN, António Guterres said the agency had “fully mobilised” over the disaster. Health teams, medical supplies, food and emergency shelters were en route to the quake zone, UN officials said.

    But Mohammad Amin Huzaifa, head of information for Paktika province, told AFP it was proving “very difficult” for rescuers to reach areas “affected by floods because of heavy rains last night”.

    Source: BBC

  • Ofori-Atta answers questions on Covid-19 expenditure in Parliament

    The Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, is currently in Parliament answering 16 questions on the state of the country’s economy.

    He is providing the House the details of Covid-19 related expenditure by government and other matters.

    Ken Ofori-Atta was rescheduled to appear before the house after he failed to honor an earlier summon on Thursday, June 16.

    When the minister failed to show up the first time, the Minority in Parliament through the Ranking Member on the Health Committee, Kwabena Mintah Akandoh, described him as unfit for his office.

     

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Ghana winger Osman Bukari ‘looking forward to creating beautiful memories’ at Red Star Belgrade

    Ghana winger Osman Bukari says he is ‘looking forward to creating beautiful memories’ at his new club Red Star Belgrade.

    The 23-year-old, who spent last season on loan at Ligue 1 side Nantes, signed a four-year deal with the club from Belgian side, KAA Gent in a deal worth €2 million.

    Osman netted two goals and provided four assists in 26 matches in all competitions for Nantes.

    The Ghanaian played an instrumental role in FC Nantes’ French Cup triumph after defeating OGC Nice in the final.

    Osman was a member of the Black Stars squad that eliminated Nigeria from the 2022 FIFA World Cup final play-off round to book a ticket to the biggest stage in world football slated for November to December this year in Qatar.

    He scored his debut goal for Ghana earlier this month against Madagascar in the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers.

    He has been capped five times for the senior national team of Ghana with a goal to his credit.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Barcelona forward Memphis Depay meets Hearts of Oak midfielder Sulley Muntari

    Netherlands and Barcelona forward Memphis Depay met Hearts of Oak midfielder Sulley Muntari during his visit to Ghana as the pair played together on a pitch in Accra.

    Muntari joined Depay for a community game in Madina, a suburb of Ghana’s capital.

    In a video posted on social media, the former Manchester United ace was delighted to meet Muntari before the game.

    Depay was involved in street football in Madina, alongside former Holland player Edgar Davis and Spartak Moscow star Quincy Promes.

    Meanwhile, Sulley Muntari returned to his club Hearts of Oak for the final game of the season against Real Tamale United which they lost 4-1 at the Accra Sports stadium on Sunday.

    Depay arrived in the West African country last Wednesday, having featured for Netherlands in the UEFA Nations League where he scored three goals in four games.

    The 28-year-old regularly visits the country of his origins despite denying the chance to play for the Black Stars.

    He paid a courtesy call on the Life Patron of Kumasi Asante Kotoko, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II as well as the President of Ghana, Nana Akufo Addo and presented a signed Barcelona jersey to both.

    Earlier on Saturday, Depay paid a surprise visit to the Asante Kotoko’s camp.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Malawi president strips deputy of powers over graft

    Malawi’s President Lazarus Chakwera has stripped his Vice-President Saulos Chilima of all his delegated powers after the latter was named in a $150m (£123m) corruption scandal involving government contracts.

    The vice-president has not yet responded to the allegations.

    A report by the country’s Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) named 53 current and former officials as having received money from British-Malawian businessman Zuneth Sattar between 2017 and 2021, the president said.

    This is in relation to 16 contracts that the Malawi Police Service and the Malawi Defence Force awarded to five companies belonging to Mr Sattar.

    The officials named in the report include the vice-president and the head of police – who has been sacked.

    But Malawi’s law does not allow the president to sack or suspend his vice-president as the latter is an elected official.

    “The best I can do for now, which is what I have decided to do, is to withhold from his office any delegated duties while waiting for the bureau to substantiate its allegations against him,” the president said in a national address on Tuesday.

    Mr Chakwera joined forces with Mr Chilima to defeat incumbent Peter Mutharika in 2020 presidential elections. The pair had promised to fight corruption in government.

    Source: BBC

  • Raheem Sterling: Man City forward faces career-defining decision amid Chelsea interest

    Raheem Sterling has some big decisions to make.

    A month after coming off the bench to be a key figure in Manchester City’s stunning comeback win over Aston Villa that earned him a fourth Premier League title – a ninth domestic honour since he left Liverpool to join the Blues in a £49m deal in 2015 – Sterling is contemplating whether that memorable encounter at Etihad Stadium will prove to be his final appearance for the club.

    Teams in Spain have expressed an interest in the 27-year-old, while Chelsea are keen to bring Sterling back to his native London.

    Sources close to the player say Sterling, who has a year left on his contract, has had no substantive talks with anyone about his future and is yet to make up his mind which way to go.

    It is not a decision to take lightly.

    Sterling is about to enter the peak years of his career and wants to get the most out of them. There is also a World Cup in November to consider for the man who was widely considered to be the star performer in England’s run to the European Championship final last summer.

    Despite the suggestion of his exit, there has been no fall-out with City boss Pep Guardiola.

    Sterling recognises his manager, who arrived at the club in the summer after the England forward joined, has taught him a lot. His technical understanding of the game has improved beyond all recognition.

    With 109 goals and 56 assists in 320 Premier League appearances, Sterling has confirmed his status as one of the most effective domestic performers.

    Only former City team-mates Fernandinho and Sergio Aguero – and ex-Chelsea captain John Terry – have more than four Premier League winners’ medals, excluding the clutch of players who earned theirs during Sir Alex Ferguson’s time at Manchester United.

    By any definition, Sterling’s time at City has been a success.

    However, he does not want to become a bit-part player. He is still ambitious and believes he can be a significant figure in a club competing for the biggest prizes.

    And this is where the dilemma lies.

    Of City’s multitude of brilliant attacking players, only Bernardo Silva started significantly more Premier League games last season – 33 to Sterling’s 23.

    Phil Foden started one more and £100m man Jack Grealish one fewer.

    But Erling Haaland’s summer arrival from Borussia Dortmund appears to change the dynamic at City.

    Having waited for so long and then, including all the additional elements beyond the actual £51.2m transfer fee, spent so much on a striker capable of what Guardiola calls “sniffing” the chances his side have failed to take at points over the past few seasons, it seems unlikely Haaland will not be a starter, especially in the biggest games.

    Sterling was on the bench against Villa on the final day and in the two Champions League semi-final meetings with Real Madrid his contribution amounted to 28 minutes – all but seven of them after City had fallen behind in the tie and were chasing the game.

    It is worth noting he started three games – including both against his former club Liverpool – in that mouth-watering four-game spell that also contained the two-legged Champions League quarter-final win against Atletico Madrid, so it is not as though Guardiola has been easing Sterling out.

    But the England forward cannot feel confident of his place. And, one way or another, within the next 12 months he will commit to the deal that will probably define his career.

    Raheem Sterling shakes hands with Thiago Silva
    Sterling has played 14 times against Chelsea for Manchester City, scoring three times

    Real Madrid and Chelsea are the clubs mentioned most often around Sterling.

    Having missed out on Kylian Mbappe, it is difficult to imagine the Spanish champions letting the summer pass without making an alternative “galactico” signing in attack.

    Would Sterling fit the bill?

    That is a matter of debate but he would fit into a team where Karim Benzema is turning in performances at a level that defies his veteran status.

    Chelsea are likely to have a vacancy in attack given Romelu Lukaku’s almost certain exit.

    Sterling would not be a like-for-like replacement for the Belgian, but he was used as a false nine on occasions by Guardiola and Thomas Tuchel evidently prefers a more fluid attack than one with a battering ram at its head.

    On the face of it, though, both clubs offer the chance to compete for the biggest prizes.

    For Chelsea, however, there has to be a question mark until the new ownership works out its business model and what kind of transfer strategy it will employ, given it almost certainly will not involve losing £1.5bn as Roman Abramovich famously did.

    The alternative is to remain where he is, which raises one of two options.

    The first is to try to negotiate a new deal with City. Sterling is already very well paid due to the contract he signed in 2018 and the club’s willingness to engage will be an indication of how much Guardiola wants him around.

    The other option is to let his contract run out, which would see him become one of the most sought-after free transfers of 2023, when the lack of a fee will automatically drive his wage up.

    As he continues on his post-season break – and thinks ahead to the start of a new campaign – Sterling has a lot to mull over.

    One thing is for certain, whatever path he chooses, it will be big news.

    Source: BBC

  • Kenya tax staff ‘to wear body cams’ in war on bribes

    Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) says it will start using body-worn cameras among its staff to deal with tax cheating and bribery, its head is quoted as saying by the local Business Daily newspaper.

    The body cams will be used mainly by staff in the domestic tax department and customs and border control, according to the report.

    Some KRA staff have been accused of amassing properties that are not consistent with their pay.

    “Very soon we will also be ensuring our enforcement officers have body-worn cameras, like the ones you see in the US, so that any action they take is recorded and we can see it. When you put it off, we will also have to understand why you do it,” KRA Commissioner General Githii Mburu is quoted as saying.

    Last year, the tax authority announced it was viewing the social media profiles of targeted individuals to reconcile their lifestyles with their tax compliance.

    Source: BBC

  • Romelu Lukaku: Inter Milan to sign Belgium striker on season-long loan from Chelsea

    Italian club Inter Milan have agreed a deal to sign striker Romelu Lukaku on a season-long loan from Chelsea.

    The Blues signed the 29-year-old from Inter for £97.5m in August 2021, but he will return to the Serie A side having struggled last season.

    The loan fee for Lukaku is about 8m euros (£6.9m).

    The Belgium international scored 15 goals in all competitions for Chelsea last season, with eight in 26 Premier League appearances.

    It is understood Lukaku was willing to take a pay cut to rejoin Inter, who won the Serie A title in 2020-21 with him leading their attack.

    The Italian club’s financial situation meant it was impossible for them to match Lukaku’s wages or buy the frontman outright.

    However, president Steven Zhang got involved personally in the negotiations on Monday, which was viewed as significant.

    Lukaku, who left Chelsea to join Everton for £28m in 2014, returned to the Stamford Bridge side last summer on a five-year deal for a club-record fee.

    However, he apologised for an interview during the season where he said he was not happy with his role under Blues manager Thomas Tuchel and wanted to return to the Italian club in the near future.

    Lukaku scored only three times in his final 15 top-flight outings of the season as Chelsea’s season fizzled out.

    Tuchel’s side finished third in the Premier League, while they were beaten by Liverpool on penalties in both the FA Cup and League Cup finals.

    Inter finished second in Serie A last season, two points behind city rivals AC Milan. They are also in talks with Juventus forward Paulo Dybala.

    The Argentina international, 28, is set to be a free agent when his contract expires at the end of the month.

    Source: BBC

  • AU suspends participation in UN-led Sudan talks

    The African Union has suspended its participation in the UN-facilitated talks to end the Sudan political crisis.

    Its representative in the talks cited lack of transparency and exclusion of important political actors from the process.

    Mohamed Belaish, the AU representative in Khartoum was quoted by the state-run Sudan news agency as saying that “the African Union cannot participate in a process that is not based on transparency, honesty and non-exclusion”.

    He said the AU would “not participate in a process that does not respect all the actors and treat them with full respect and on an equal footing”.

    The AU and the regional bloc Intergovernmental Authority on Development (Igad) had previously backed the UN-led intra-Sudanese dialogue process, which began on 8 June.

    The dialogue was however postponed indefinitely a few days later, after the former ruling Forces of Freedom and Change (FFC) coalition refused to join its sessions.

    The FFC is demanding the military to leave power and return power to a civilian transitional government.

    Source: BBC

  • Burkinabè junta head in surprise talks with ex-leader

    Burkina Faso‘s military ruler has in a surprise move met the president he overthrew in a coup last January.

    Former President Roch Marc Christian Kaboré was accompanied by another former president, Jean-Baptiste Ouedraogo.

    Officials said the meeting showed Lieutenant Colonel Paul-Henri Damiba’s desire for reconciliation and that the country’s security situation was discussed.

    A video of the meeting shows handshakes and even some smiles as Burkina Faso’s military leader invites the man he ousted for a walk along the red carpet at a place he knows well – the presidential palace.

    A statement said Mr Kaboré was there to discuss security issues and to try to defuse the political situation.

    Back in January Lt Col Damiba said he had toppled Mr Kaboré because he had failed to stop the attacks by jihadist fighters.

    Despite a promise to improve security, the violence has continued.

    The military ruler has also controversially declared a three-year transition period before elections.

    Source: BBC

  • Uvalde shooting: Robb Elementary School to be demolished – Mayor

    Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas – where a gunman killed 19 students and two teachers – will be demolished, the city’s mayor has said.

    Don McLaughlin made the claim on Tuesday at a tense and emotional council meeting with residents demanding answers over the shooting.

    He did not say when the school would be demolished.

    Public anger has risen since the May rampage, with police accused of waiting over an hour to confront the assailant.

    “My understanding – and I had this discussion with the superintendent – is that school will be demolished. You can never ask a child to go back or teacher to go back in that school ever,” Mr McLaughlin said.

    Robb Elementary has nearly 600 students in the second, third and fourth grades.

    US President Joe Biden had suggested knocking down the school, State Senator Roland Gutierrez told local media last month.

    Robb Elementary will not be the first school to be demolished after a mass shooting.

    Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, was razed after 20 students aged six and seven years old and six staff members were shot in 2012. A new school was built on the same land.

    Photo purportedly showing police officers armed with rifles at Uvalde's school hallway at 11:52 local time on 24 May 2022
    IMAGE SOURCE,AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN / KVUE-TV Image caption, Images have emerged showing police officers arriving at the attack earlier than previously reported

    Texas’s public safety chief said on Tuesday there were enough police on the scene in Uvalde to have stopped the gunman three minutes after he entered the building. But police waited for more than an hour outside classrooms before a team made entry.

    Steven McCraw told a state Senate hearing the police response was an “abject failure” and accused the on-scene commander of putting officers’ lives above the children’s.

    The attack by an 18-year-old – identified as Salvador Ramos – has led to renewed national debate about gun regulations.

    US Senators on Tuesday advanced new legislation to address mass shootings in what has been called the most significant new gun controls in a generation.

  • Afghan earthquake: At least 280 killed and scores wounded, says state media

    A powerful earthquake has killed at least 280 people and left scores injured in Afghanistan, according to the country’s state news agency.

    Pictures show landslides and ruined homes in eastern Paktika province, where rescuers are scrambling to treat the injured.

    In remote areas, helicopters have been ferrying victims to hospitals.

    The local Bakhtar News Agency said the death toll was likely to rise, adding more than 600 people were injured.

    The quake struck about 44km (27 miles) from the south-eastern city of Khost shortly after 01:30 local time (21:00 Tuesday GMT).

    “Unfortunately, last night there was a severe earthquake in four districts of Paktika province, which killed and injured hundreds of our countrymen and destroyed dozens of houses,” government spokesman Bilal Karimi tweeted.

    “We urge all aid agencies to send teams to the area immediately to prevent further catastrophe.”

    Taliban officials have called for aid agencies to rush to the affected areas in the nation’s east.

    Destroyed building in Paktika
    IMAGE SOURCE,AFGHAN GOVERNMENT NEWS AGENCY Image caption, Pictures from Paktika province show extensive destruction to buildings

    Most of the casualties so far were in the Gayan and Barmal districts in Paktika, a local doctor told the BBC. Local media site Etilaat-e Roz reported a whole village in Gayan had been destroyed.

    Tremors were felt across more than 500km of Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. Witnesses reported feeling the quake in Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul, as well as Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad.

    However, there have been no immediate reports of casualties, and the earthquake caused little damage in Pakistan, according to BBC Urdu.

    Rescuers carrying injured people to a helicopter in Paktika province
    IMAGE SOURCE,AFGHAN GOVERNMENT NEWS AGENCY Image caption, Footage shows people brought onto stretchers

    The earthquake – which hit the mountainous country during the early hours as many people slept – was a magnitude 6.1 quake at a depth of some 51km, according to seismologists.

    Afghanistan is prone to quakes, as it’s located in a tectonically active region, over a number of fault lines including the Chaman fault, the Hari Rud fault, the Central Badakhshan fault and the Darvaz fault.

    Earthquakes tend to cause significant damage in Afghanistan, where there are many rural areas where dwellings are unstable or poorly built.

    Decades of conflict have made it difficult for the impoverished country to improve its protections against earthquakes and other natural disasters – despite efforts by aid agencies to reinforce some buildings over the years.

    In the past 10 years, more than 7,000 people have been killed in earthquakes in the country, the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reports. There are an average of 560 deaths a year from earthquakes.

    Map
  • Long queues amid fuel shortage in Lagos

    Long queues have been witnessed at petrol stations in most parts of Lagos state in south-west Nigeria after a decision by some fuel marketers to shut their operations.

    The queues that surfaced on Monday continued on Tuesday morning causing panic buying of fuel and black market sales.

    It comes as some members of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) say they can no longer operate in an unconducive environment.

    The association chairman, Akin Akinrinade, told journalists that while the government had fixed 165 naira ($0.40; £0.30) for a litre of petrol, the current realities showed that the minimum price should be 180 naira to profitably sell the product.

    He cited the high cost of transporting the product and the diesel used in running the petrol stations as another reason for the withdrawal of services.

    This development had added more pain to the suffering of Lagosians.

    The long fuel queues have led to more traffic jams that the city is known for.

    The cost of transportation has also doubled and most business premises are shut due to their inability to access fuel to power their electricity generators.

    Many Nigerians use generators for power as electricity supply is not steady in the country.

    Source: BBC

  • We dont receive ex-gratia Judges and Magistrates

    The Association of Magistrates and Judges of Ghana (AMJG) has denied claims that Superior Court Judges receive ex-gratia every four years.

    According to the judges, they rather take back pay when their actual salary is computed and back-dated.

    “It is this arrears of salary or back pay which is mischievously being described as ex-gratia in the press, particularly on radio, television and on social media platforms by some seasoned journalists and so-called social commentators, who never attempted to look for the truth.

    “These arrears of salary or back pay are paid in a lump sum or instalment this has been the situation since 1996,” a press statement dated June 21, 2022 said.

    The subject of payment of ex-gratia resurfaced after a former Council of State member, Togbe Afede XIV, decided to reject over ¢300,000 paid to him for serving on the Council for the period between 2017 and 2020.

    His move was subsequently greeted with mixed reactions, including calls for the abolishment of the payment of ex-gratia to Article 71 office holders and claims that suggested that judges too are being paid ex-gratia.

    “The Association of Magistrates and Judges of Ghana (AMJG) has noted with dismay the false and malicious allegation that judges of the Superior Courts Supreme Court, Court of Appeal and High Court are paid ex-gratia at the end of every four years.

    “The AMJG would like to state without any equivocation, whatsoever that, that allegation is false and baseless. The Association would like to state categorically that no Superior Court judge is or has ever been paid ex-gratia every four years as being wrongly stated in the media,” the statement added.

    Below is the full statement:

    We don't receive ex-gratia - Judges and Magistrates

    We don't receive ex-gratia - Judges and Magistrates

    Source: MyJoyOnline

     

  • Attorney-General to swear in OSP Board today

    The Board of the Office of Special Prosecutor will be sworn into office today, Tuesday, June 21.

    It will be done by Attorney-General and Minister for Justice, Godfred Yeboah Dame.

    The Office has been without a Board since the mandate of the previous one led by Linda Ofori-Kwarfo expired.

    This is nine months after Kissi Agyebeng was officially sworn into office as the Special Prosecutor.

    Civil Society Organisations in the country have since lamented the lack of a substantive Board and the impact on the operations of the Special Prosecutor.

    Attorney-General to swear in OSP Board today

    However, a former Deputy Attorney-General, Joseph Dindiok Kpemka, assured that the Governing Board will be inaugurated soon.

    According to sections 5 and 6 of the Office of Special Prosecutor Act 2017, Act 959, a Board is required to formulate policies for the objective of the Office, ensure proper and effective performance of the functions of the Office, advise the Special Prosecutor on the recruitment and selection of various staff among other duties.

    The Board is also to consist of the Special Prosecutor, the Deputy Special Prosecutor, one representative each from the Audit Service, the Ghana Police Service, Economic and Organized Crime Office (EOCO), Financial Intelligence Centre, Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), a person nominated by the Minister for National Security, and one other person who is a female representing the Anti-Corruption Civil Society Organizations.

    The previous Board included the then CID Boss, DCOP Maame Yaa Tiwaa Addo-Danquah; EOCO rep, Charles Nana Antwi; representatives from civil society, Linda Ofori Kwafo and Addai Wereko Tawiah; Kofi Wiredu Boakye, Charles Ayamadu and Kwaku Domfeh.

    Source: MyJoyOnline

  • Africa is a hostage of Russia’s war on Ukraine, Zelensky says

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has called Africa “a hostage” of Russia’s war during an address to the African Union (AU) on Monday.

    Russia’s invasion, and its blockade of Ukraine’s grain exports, have sparked grain and fertiliser shortages and put millions of people at risk of hunger.

    The chair of the AU commission said there was an “urgent need for dialogue” to restore global stability.

    Western countries have urged Russia to release Ukraine’s vast grain stores.

    The blockade has sent food prices soaring.

    “Africa is actually a hostage… of those who unleashed war against our state”, Mr Zelensky said in his speech.

    He said his government was engaged in “complex negotiations” to unblock grain reserves trapped in Ukraine‘s Black Sea ports.

    “This war may seem very distant to you and your countries,” he told the AU. “But the food prices that are catastrophically rising have already brought [the war] to the homes of millions of African families.”

    Mr Zelensky’s AU speech comes nearly 10 weeks after he first asked to address the continental body.

    The BBC understands that 55 heads of state were invited to the virtual session, but only four attended. The rest of the countries sent representatives.

    African countries have been divided in their response to Russia’s war in Ukraine. In March, 17 African countries abstained in a UN vote to condemn the invasion.

    But on Monday, AU’s chairperson Macky Sall thanked Mr Zelensky for addressing the union.

    Mr Sall said that “Africa remains committed to respecting the rules of international law, the peaceful resolution of conflicts and freedom of trade”.

    Initially, the AU did not want to be addressed by Mr Zelensky, and it does not fully agree with what he’s saying – they want dialogue to solve the crisis, as they always have.

    Earlier this month, Mr Sall held talks with Russia President Vladimir Putin. He told Mr Putin that African countries are innocent victims of the war in Ukraine and Russia should help ease their suffering.

    Volunteers prepare meals for Internal displaced people, fleeing the recent clashes between M23 rebels and Congolese soldiers, at a camp in Kanyarushinya north of Goma
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Food prices across African countries have rocketed, meanwhile millions of tonnes of grain are sitting in warehouses and Ukrainian ports

    Earlier on Monday, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said of Russia’s blockade: “This is a real war crime, so I cannot imagine that this will last much longer.”

    Mr Borrell met EU foreign ministers in Luxembourg on Monday to discuss the crisis.

    He described Moscow’s actions as “a deliberate attempt to create hunger in the world”.

    He rejected Russia’s claim that the current food crisis is a result of EU sanctions, adding that they “don’t forbid” countries outside the EU from conducting food trade with Russia or other nations.

    1px transparent line
    Percentage of wheat exports from Ukraine1px transparent line

    French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna said that “Russia must stop playing with global hunger” as it seeks leverage over the West.

    “Leaving cereals blocked is dangerous for stability in the world,” she said.

    The head of the Polish prime minister’s office, Michal Dworczyk, spoke with Ukraine’s infrastructure minister Oleksandr Kubrakov about changes that will speed up checks for trucks on the Polish-Ukrainian border to help export more grain from Ukraine.

    Source: BBC

  • Nayef Aguerd: West Ham complete £30m deal to sign Rennes defender

    West Ham have completed the signing of Morocco defender Nayef Aguerd from Ligue 1 side Rennes for £30m.

    The Premier League club have confirmed that the 26-year-old has signed a five-year contract with the Hammers.

    The left-sided player made 66 league appearances for Rennes after joining from fellow French club Dijon in 2020.

    “I was really excited when I heard about West Ham’s interest,” he said. “I knew I needed to go to the Premier League, it’s a dream for every player.”

    The transfer fee for Aguerd, who has 25 caps for Morocco, is the fourth-highest paid by West Ham, behind only those for Sebastien Haller, Felipe Anderson and Kurt Zouma.

    In a farewell post to fans on social media, Aguerd said it was a “difficult decision” to leave Rennes as he had enjoyed “exceptional times” at the club.

    West Ham reached the Europa League semi-finals last season while finishing seventh in the Premier League to again qualify for Europe.

    “West Ham is a historic club,” Aguerd added. “I saw a few of their games this year, and I saw the fans and the atmosphere were fantastic, with the bubbles!”

    Manager David Moyes said he hoped Aguerd would help the Hammers challenge for a top-six place again next term to match their finish in 2020-21.

    “He’s a great addition that will add to our defensive options,” said Moyes.

    “I have been really impressed with Nayef’s character and attitude during our discussions.

    “He has a great desire to improve and be successful, and I am sure he will fit in very well to the environment we have at Rush Green.”

    Aguerd was an ever-present in his country’s run to last season’s Africa Cup of Nations quarter-finals and also played in both World Cup play-off matches against DR Congo as Morocco qualified for Qatar.

    Source: BBC

  • Romelu Lukaku and Paolo Dybala: Inter Milan in talks for forwards

    Inter Milan chief executive Giuseppe Marotta has said they are in talks to sign Chelsea striker Romelu Lukaku and Juventus forward Paulo Dybala.

    BBC Sport has reported Lukaku, would take a pay cut to rejoin Inter on loan, after his £97.5m move last summer.

    “Lukaku and Dybala are our targets,” Marotta told Radio Rai.

    He added the club have deals in place to sign Roma midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Cameroon goalkeeper Andre Onana from Ajax.

    Of the bids for Lukaku and Dybala, Marotta added: “We need to consider financial issues. We are in talks with these two players and we’ll be happy if we sign them. If not, we’ll consider different targets.”

    Inter president Steven Zhang has stepped in to try to sort out Lukaku’s return to the club, according to BBC Sport’s Simon Stone.

    The Serie A side do not have the finances to engineer a permanent deal and have been struggling to meet the loan fee Chelsea want for the 29-year-old.

    Zhang has been meeting with coach Simone Inzaghi to put together a deal Chelsea would find acceptable.

    Belgium international Lukaku scored 15 goals in all competitions for the Blues last season, with eight in 26 Premier League appearances.

    He apologised for an interview during the season where he said he was not happy with his role under manager Thomas Tuchel and wanted to return to Inter in the near future.

    Lukaku, who left Chelsea to join Everton for £28m in 2014, returned to the Stamford Bridge side for a club-record fee in August 2021, agreeing to a five-year deal.

    Argentina international Dybala, 28, is set to be a free agent when his contract expires at the end of the month.

    Armenian midfielder Mkhitaryan, 33, helped Jose Mourinho’s Roma win their first European trophy last season, the Europa Conference League.

    Onana, 26, has won three Dutch titles with Ajax but received a Uefa ban for a doping rules violation last year. He is also a free agent.

    “Mkhitaryan will be official in the next few days, the same goes for Onana,” added Marotta.

    “We are evaluating a bit of everything, also players from the youth team who became Italy champions. We know that we must wait for young players and build a strong team.”

    Inter finished second in Serie A last season, two points behind city rivals AC Milan.

    Source: BBC