Piesie Esther, who emerged as the victor at the esteemed 2023 Vodafone Ghana Music Awards, reveals that her triumph in receiving the prestigious accolade has significantly amplified the demands placed upon her professional career.
In an interview on Rainbow Radio, Piesie Esther said she put a lot of effort into her music but had no idea she would win the category.
The musician explained that “the demand for new songs has increased after winning the awards at the VGMAs. Trust me, those who are closer are requesting new projects.”
When asked if she expected the ‘Waye Meyie’ song to be so popular and successful, she said she expected the song to have an impact, but she was surprised by the level of popularity it generated.
In an interview with host Sokoohemaa Kukua, she stated that winning the award does not come with money but can serve as a means for a musician to get more opportunities to make money.
Piesie Esther used the opportunity to disagree with those who claimed that gospel musicians did not need to participate in award schemes.
She was responding to the controversies surrounding her nomination for Artiste of the Year.
She believes that gospel musicians should be proud to be involved in such schemes if they do not promote things that are contrary to their faith.
“Being nominated was a good thing,” she said. It is on Earth but in a good way. If you are nominated, it will catapult your ministry to new heights. There is nothing wrong with a gospel musician receiving an award nomination. They are people who do not understand, but I believe that people will gradually come to understand these things.”
She went on to say that some even went so far as to say that the scheme was between the devil and God, saying, “This has nothing to do with God.” God has nothing to do with it. There was no way the other side could have won if God had been present. But God has nothing to do with it. We should accept that it is being done to reward outstanding musicians, and no one should be concerned that Christians are involved.
Christians should be proud to support Christians who have been nominated for office. Surprisingly, Christians are the ones who discourage nominated Christians. If the scheme does not require you to consult a magician or someone who practices voodoo, we have nothing to worry about.”
Ghanaian musician, Akwaboah Junior, has taken a stance by delivering a heartfelt word of advice to men, urging them to embrace honesty as an integral component when it comes to engaging in sexual relationships with women,
Akwaboah expressed his frustration in an Instagram post, emphasizing the importance of being upfront about romantic intentions.
He stated, “Yo! It’s about time I go hard. What you guys are doing is not nice. If you want to sleep with a woman, let the woman know you want to sleep with her, and if you want to wife her, make sure you wife her.”
The musician’s words shed light on a common scenario where men lead women on with false promises, pretending to have serious intentions while only seeking physical intimacy.
Akwaboah condemned such behaviour, urging individuals to be transparent about their desires and intentions from the beginning.
He further stressed the importance of avoiding deception and wasting a woman’s time.
Akwaboah’s message was clear: if a man only desires a physical relationship, he should have the decency to communicate that honestly, rather than creating false expectations.
He also highlighted a specific issue that often arises in relationships: the discrepancy between a man’s words and actions and cautioned against misleading women by claiming to want a long-term commitment while secretly seeking only physical intimacy.
“Don’t tell her you want to make her your wife when you want to sleep with her. After you sleep with her and she starts to call you, you start to ignore her call,” he lamented.
The musician’s plea for honesty and respect resonated strongly, as he called for individuals to treat each other with integrity and compassion.
Akwaboah emphasized that it is essential to be straightforward about intentions and not to play with someone’s emotions.
Akwaboah concluded his message with a stern reminder, stating, “If you want to sleep with her, just say it and don’t waste her time. Do you understand? It’s not nice.”
Hollywood actress and Jay Z’s mother, Gloria Carter, has recently married Roxanne Wiltshire her partner after many years of dating each other in Tribeca, New York City over the weekend.
The announcement of their wedding excited many people and spread across social media platforms in waves.
According to TMZ, the event was nothing short of glamorous, with an array of A-list celebrities gracing the occasion.
The wedding is said to have been attended by Carter’s friends and family, including her son Jay-Z and his wife and fellow artist, Beyoncé, along with Kelly Rowland, Tina Knowles-Lawson, Tyler Perry, and Robin Roberts.
Their presence added an extra touch of elegance to the already momentous occasion.
Adding to the special atmosphere, Gloria and Roxanne’s firstborn daughter, Blue Ivy Carter, radiated charm and grace as she attended the wedding donned in a beautiful silk gown.
Her presence at the ceremony undoubtedly added a heartwarming element to the celebration of love and commitment.
the carter-knowles family attending gloria carter’s (jay z’s mom) wedding in manhattan 🥹🤍 pic.twitter.com/gN19J3pXgP
At the recent Essence Festival in New Orleans, Louisiana, Hollywood director Angela White voiced her displeasure with the Ghanaian government.
She disclosed her choice to relocate her upcoming movie project from Ghana to South Africa during a panel discussion at the festival.
Angela White, however, wanted to highlight the difficult obstacles faced by diasporan creatives who tried to invest in Ghana and urged the government to increase its support. This was not just a matter of personal preference.
It’s worth noting that Angela White’s company, hailing all the way from America, had previously collaborated with the Ghanaian government to great success.
Last year, they embarked on a groundbreaking venture that not only brought significant business opportunities but also elevated the nation’s cinematic landscape. The project, an enthralling thriller titled ‘Nine,’ employed a crew of over 120 talented individuals and featured a stellar cast comprising more than 50 gifted actors.
With its Pan-African allure, ‘Nine’ boasts of an ensemble that includes Ghana’s own luminous talent, Chris Attoh, alongside the illustrious Kate Henshaw from Nigeria and the captivating Rosemary Zimu from South Africa, among a constellation of other stars.
The filming took place in the bustling city of Accra, and the buzz generated by the project even saw a surge in the AirBnB sector, significantly bolstering the country’s revenue.
Angela White shared the intriguing backstory of ‘Nine’ during her appearance, revealing that it originally started as a modest short film named ‘Be My Valentine.’
However, as months of creative deliberation unfolded, the project organically blossomed into a full-fledged feature film, brimming with potential and artistic merit.
In pouring out her frustration, she stated, “I brought a lot of revenue to Ghana and the reason why my next project, probably South Africa, is because I got nowhere with the Ghanaian government. It really became a battle and so I’m happy to see Idris take this fight because if they don’t start getting country credits, the work’s gonna go to South Africa.”
While the filmmaker’s present encounters in Ghana may have been disheartening, Angela White remains steadfastly optimistic.
She commended the efforts of industry heavyweight Idris Elba, who has been actively championing Ghana’s burgeoning film industry.
With a tenacious spirit, Angela White fervently hopes that the Ghanaian government will come to recognize the immense economic benefits and cultural exchange that partnerships with diaspora creatives can bestow.
By fostering an environment that nurtures and supports these collaborations, Ghana has the remarkable opportunity to position itself as a global hub for innovation and creative expression.
In the face of adversity, Angela White’s unwavering resolve serves as an inspiring testament to the resilience and determination of diasporan creatives.
Her passionate plea to the Ghanaian government serves as a wake-up call, urging them to embrace the vast potential that lies within their grasp. As the film industry continues to evolve, it is vital that countries seize these invaluable opportunities to flourish in the global arena.
Angela White is the first African-American woman to produce and own a production company that released a theatrically faith-based film, entitled “A Question of Faith,” featuring Kim Fields and Richard T. Jones.
Angela’s films have showcased some of today’s top Hollywood talent, including: “4Play,” featuring Tiffany Haddish; “The Last Letter,” starring Omari Hardwick; “The Sin Seer,” starring Isaiah Washington and Salli Richardson; and “My Favorite Five,” starring Brian White and Jay Ellis, among others.
Ghanaian musician and free spirit, Wanlov the Kubolor, recently shared insights into his unique perspective on life, including his choice of not wearing slippers.
According to him, this unconventional decision has played a role in his ability to withstand curses and has influenced his non-traditional approach to sexual encounters.
Wanlov the Kubolor‘s personal experiences and beliefs have shaped his resilience and unorthodox lifestyle, making him an intriguing figure in Ghana’s music scene.
In an interview with Sammy Kay, Wanlov, who is known for his distinctive style and thought-provoking statements, delved into topics ranging from curses to his approach to sexual encounters.
One of the most intriguing aspects of Wanlov’s conversation was his assertion that not wearing slippers has played a role in his ability to resist the effects of curses.
He stated that “Not wearing slippers has helped me sense that when people curse me, it doesn’t work. Some people don’t like me, but sexually, it has helped me.”
Although his statement may seem puzzling to some, it highlights the artiste’s unique perspective on the impact of curses.
Wanlov continued to elaborate on his sexual encounters, sharing a distinctive approach to intimacy.
He revealed that the duration of the first round of sexual activity is a significant factor in his ability to withstand curses.
“The number of rounds you can go when having sex is a part of the reason curses don’t work on me,” he explained.
While Wanlov admitted that he doesn’t particularly enjoy prolonged sexual encounters, he emphasized the longevity of the first round.
“I don’t really like going for long rounds, but the first round when having a sexual encounter with me is very long. I can go for 15 minutes if I want, or an hour. That was for the first round,” he revealed.
The artiste further shared his ability to extend the duration of the initial round, emphasizing that he can prolong it to his satisfaction.
“As for me, I can stretch it out, and by the time I am done with the first round, I sleep on the second round,” he added.
Ghanaian lawyer Richard Sena Hotor has said that individuals can initiate divorce proceedings in Ghana after being married for a period of two years. Hotor suggests that this timeframe serves as a legal requirement for filing a divorce petition in the country.
According to Richard Sena Hotor, it is possible for a couple to seek an annulment of their marriage within one year of their union. However, in order to file for a divorce in Ghana, the couple would need to wait for a minimum of two years from the date of their marriage before initiating the divorce petition.
Mr Hotor said this when he spoke to Joy News on matters concerning how one can start a divorce process legally in the country.
“If it is something that you’re going to annul, it must be within one year. But if you have just married, it must take at least 2 years before you can bring a divorce petition,” he said.
The process of divorce becomes easier when the decision is mutually agreed upon by both spouses.
Nonetheless, in cases where one party disagrees, the other is advised to hire a lawyer to support in filing the petition at any preferred court.
He said, “It’s advisable that you get a lawyer who will first listen to your story and then situate it within the seven facts proving that the marriage has broken down beyond reconciliation.”
Following the filing of the petition, the other spouse is required to file an answer. Where a party fails to file, the lawyer moves forward with alternate remedies to the problem.
“Once the petition is filed, it is the beginning of the end,” the legal practitioner added.
As to how long it takes a court to complete a divorce case, Mr Sena asserted that the process is dependent on how complicated the situation is.
He also noted that an individual can further appeal to the court if he or she feels the court has rendered an unfair judgement.
Gospel singer Piesie Esther has admitted she won’t divorce her husband if she learns he cheated and had a child as a result.
She claims that rather than filing for divorce from her husband, she will adopt the child and raise him or her as if they were her own children.
Piesie Esther made this known on Kingdom FM in an interview when asked what will be her reactions if she finds out that her husband has a child with another woman.
Speaking to Fiifi Pratt she replied s “What else can I do? It has already happened so I will adopt the child and take care of him or her. I’ll not divorce my husband.”
She further noted that, although her decision is to adopt the child, the situation would not be easy and could be a very challenging one.
“It won’t be easy. Such a situation will give you a shock; it will really give you a big shock”, she said adding that, ‘When you trust that your husband will not do such a thing and I get to realize something of that sort has happened I will be shocked,” she stressed.
Nigerian Afrobeats singer Tems has described her life as a testimony.
The musician made these assertions during her opening remarks at the 2023 Essence Festival, which took place on July 2nd in New Orleans, USA.
“You know, my life is a testimony. I guess, for those who don’t understand, I’m from Lagos, Nigeria,” Tems said amidst wild cheers.
The singer, thereafter, performed ‘Essence’; her record-breaking collaborative song with Wizkid who later joined her on the stage of the 29th Essence Festival.
The duo serenaded the crowd with their scintillating chemistry.
Tems hit superstardom after stealing the show as a guest on Wizkid’s ‘Essence’ which arrived on his album ‘Made In Lagos’ in 2020.
The song peaked at number 9 on the U.S Billboard Hot 100 chart after the release of a remix version with Canadian pop star, Justin Bieber in 2021.
Tems has worked with global heavyweights such as Rihanna, Drake, Future and Beyoncé.
Nigerian Singer Yemi Alade has reacted to a troll who tried to criticize her for a supposed wardrobe malfunction. Undeterred, she swiftly addressed the comment and shut down any attempts to undermine her.
Yemi had taken to her Twitter page to share a photo of herself wearing a short brown dress and a pop socks and describing herself as an angel.
She captioned the photo; “I’m Amazing, Extremely talented, kind and extraordinary .you would mistake me for an angel”.
Reacting to the photo, a Twitter user called out the singer for an error she spotted in the photo.
The photo showed the pop socks worn from the angle of the picture. In an attempt to share her thoughts on the error, she tweeted; “I’m the only one seeing this?”
Responding to the call out, the award-winning singer who didn’t hesitate to clapback said;
“This pic was posted 3 min ago and that was enough time for you to zoom in and tweet your ignorance. Imagine if you paid attention to the details of your life in this manner you would be in a better place by now. It’s open in both thighs since that area is your business.”
Several prominent figures, such as politicians, businessmen, and musicians, dressed in black attire, attended the one-week memorial service of Cynthia Quarcoo. The event took place on Tuesday at the Christ the King Parish in Accra.
Cynthia Quarcoo was a highly respected lawyer who served as the Founder and Managing Partner of CQ Legal & Consulting, passed away on June 21, 2023, in the United Kingdom. Her loss is deeply felt by the legal community and beyond.
At the event to commemorate one week of her passing, Samini, Sarkodie, and media personality Kofi Okyere Darko (KOD) were among the showbiz personalities present.
Photos from the event shared by blogger Kobby Kyei showed the likes of Kofi Amoabeng, CEO of UT Bank; Charlotte Osei, former chairperson of the Electoral Commission and Brigitte Dzogbenuku, 2020 presidential candidate of the Progressive People’s Party (PPP) were in attendance.
Cynthia Quarcoo was a well-respected lawyer and prominent figure in the legal field and represented some of the most well-known Ghanaian musicians, including Sarkodie, Samini, Shatta Wale, and Reggie Rockstone.
Her knowledge and counsel had a significant influence on these artists’ development and success.
Her family has announced that her final funeral rite will be held on Saturday, August 26, 2023, at Christ the King Parish, Accra.
Lawyer Godwin Edudzi Tamakloe has claimed that a senior government official associated with the Office of the President advised James Gyakye Quayson, the Member of Parliament for Assin North, to step down in order for the criminal case against him to be dismissed.
Edudzi Tamakloe, a member of the legal team of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), stated that the government’s actions had caused significant distress to the Member of Parliament (MP) to the point where he contemplated abandoning his fight to retain his position as an MP.
“They told him to resign for his prosecution to stop. That is why for some of us this criminal prosecution has not the ends of justice. It is purely politics; politics, politics, politics,” he said in a TV3 interview on July 4, 2023.
He added that the person who approached Gyakye Quayson was “very high up at the Office of the President”.
“I want to thank the almighty God for the grace to keep standing. The things Gyakye Quayson had gone through any ordinary person, possibly would be dead by now.
“The emotional blackmail, the torture, the mental agony that he has gone through. At a point, he was denied even MP’s common fund allocation, What was his crime?” he quizzed.
The MP, who was sworn in on Tuesday, is being prosecuted by the Office of the Attorney General for deceiving public officers to acquire state documents.
On February 12, 2022, the State charged James Gyakye Quayson with five counts; deceit of a public officer, forgery of a passport, knowingly making a false statutory declaration, perjury, and false declaration.
Energy Minister, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh, popularly known as “Napo”, is scheduled to receive an honorary award at the 14th MTN Pulse Africa Role Model Awards 2023 organized by the Young Professionals and Youth Coalition (YPYC).
To take place at the Great Hall of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology on Saturday, 8th July, 2023, the award is to recognize the Energy Minister’s position as “one of Africa’s MostDistinguished Role Models and Transformational Leaders in the corporate World; an elite listing of influential and inspiring leaders”.
The award was instituted by the leadership of YPYC in 2009 to recognize and honour exemplary leaders who serve as role models to young leaders in Ghana and Africa
In a statement signed by President of YPYC, Mr. Andy Osei Okrah, the award recipients constitute the finest selection of the most outstanding personalities who have truly excelled as transformational leaders and role models impacting society.
“The award winners are few and were carefully chosen on the back of several considerations”, the statement read.
Dr. Prempeh, who is also Member of Parliament for Manhyia South, after this award, joins the league of high-profile personalities who received same in the past like former Ghanaian leaders, His Excellency Jerry John Rawlings, His Excellency John Agyekum Kufuor and His Excellency John Dramani Mahama.
Other personalities in this category include HRM, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, Mr. Osei Kwame Despite, Hon. Dr. Kwame Addo Kufuor, Professor Rita Akosua Dickson, COP Kofi Boakye, among other influential personalities.
Renowned architect and recipient of the 2021 Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) Gold Medal, Sir David Adjaye, has addressed allegations of sexual misconduct made by three former female employees.
While admitting to having been involved in relationships with these women, Sir David Adjaye strongly refuted any allegations of sexual assault or harassment.
In a statement provided to the Financial Times, Sir David Adjaye expressed sincere regret for the blurred lines between his personal and professional lives and acknowledged his involvement in these relationships.
He admitted to feeling ashamed and vowed to seek immediate professional help to learn from his mistakes and prevent their recurrence.
Adjaye emphasized that all the relationships were entirely consensual, refuting any allegations of assault or harassment.
However, the architect acknowledged the distress caused and the negative impact on the careers and financial situations of the women involved.
The allegations, which were detailed in the Financial Times article, include claims of sexual assault and harassment that reportedly occurred at an airport in Johannesburg and at London’s Royal Academy of Arts.
Adjaye’s legal representative issued a response categorically denying all allegations of sexual misconduct, abuse, or criminal wrongdoing. The lawyer expressed that these claims were not only untrue but also deeply distressing for Adjaye and his family, contradicting the principles he upholds.
The report also mentioned the dismissal of two women from Adjaye’s Accra office, who alleged they were coerced into engaging in sexual activity with him. Adjaye vehemently denies these allegations.
The Financial Times article also raised concerns about Adjaye’s alleged controlling behavior towards a female employee in London, including comments about appearance and disparaging remarks towards dark-skinned black women.
Adjaye’s lawyer responded to this incident by stating that he had kissed the woman at the Royal Academy but strongly denies her version of events.
The lawyer referred to communications from that period, indicating that the interactions between Adjaye and the woman were consensual. They rejected any claims of abusive or controlling behavior.
The Ashanti Region Executives of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) have been expressing their satisfaction with meeting the expectations placed upon them after being elected into power.
Following their defeat in the Kumawu by-election, the executives of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the Ashanti Region, represented by 1st Regional Vice Chairman Captain (retired) John Kwame Jabari, have portrayed the Kumawu setback as a minor setback and an opportunity for the party to learn and grow at both the regional and national levels.
He made the assertions while speaking to Julius Caesar Anadem on the Cup of Tea show on Ultimate FM monitored by MyNewsGh.com.
“We are a team and we are resilient to win 2024 for NDC and make John Mahama President again. We learnt a lot from the Kumawu by-elections and it’s a step up for our preparations. We didn’t fail in the Kumawu by-elections, it was a learning curve for both the national executives and the regional executives and we perfected the system in the Assin North elections”. He bragged.
He says the unique crop of executives the NDC in the Ashanti Region has is helping them to jell well and perform for the victory of the party.
“After the regional elections, we had eight new executives and old executives from the previous team.
“The old executives are seasoned; the Chairman, the Organizer, the Youth Organizer, the Women Organizer, and the communication executive are seasoned and experienced. The eight new are youthful, very strong and vibrant we have been jelling very well”, he observed.
A researcher and banking consultant, Dr Richmond Atuahene, has affirmed that international rating agencies have not displayed recklessness in their assessments of the Ghanaian economy.
In his statement, Dr Richmond Atuahene emphasised that the rating agencies have never unfairly downgraded the country’s economic status.
He noted that the problem instead with the Ghanaian economy is over-borrowing and the country’s inability to manage its finances properly.
Speaking in a JoyBusiness interview on July 2, the Banking consultant said: “We have received positive ratings over the past 60 years that have even enabled us to borrow consistently from the international market. At least the last one was in 2021, we borrowed 3 billion. It was rated as B+ by Fitch. So, the issue is that we have not managed our debts very well. Unfortunately, it seems that it’s either we have over-borrowed or refused to put the necessary measures in place.
“So, in 2020, we were downgraded 11 times by these 3 rating agencies [Fitch, Moody’s, and S&P], the last one came in when the government decided in December that it was going to suspend interest payments in addition to the domestic debts. Then the country was actually proclaimed to have defaulted,” he intimated.
Atuahene further added that per research he has conducted over the period from 2003 till date, there have been no inconsistencies in the ratings that have been meted out to Ghana.
“I have not seen anywhere that the rating agencies have been reckless,” he said.
He added that the agencies rate Ghana using the same metrics they use for other developing countries.
Earlier, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo stated that Africa’s problems have been exacerbated due to what he calls “reckless downgrades” by rating agencies.
According to him, the downgrades have impeded the chances of African countries to access financial assistance on the international market.
A man was guilty of killing the mother and her two young girls after setting fire to their neighbor’s flat and then idly watching as they begged for help.
Fatimah Drammeh and Naeemah Drammeh’s flat in Clifton, Nottingham, was set on fire by Jamie Barrow, 31, in November.
The fire claimed the lives of Mrs. Hydara, 28, Fatimah, 3, and Naeemah, 1 year old, all of whom perished from smoke inhalation on November 20.
Nottingham Crown Court heard Barrow had a ‘grievance’ over rubbish being left in an alleyway and watched the fire take hold while ignoring the desperate screams coming from inside.
Barrow had already admitted manslaughter but a jury of seven men and four women unanimously convicted him of murder on Tuesday after almost seven hours of deliberations.
He was also found guilty of arson being reckless as to whether life was endangered.
Some members of the victims’ family, to whom Barrow apologised while giving evidence and who have packed the public gallery throughout proceedings, wept after the verdicts were delivered.
Barrow remained silent throughout.
In a statement, the family of the victims said: ‘Words cannot quantify how much our family have suffered because of the horrific actions of one man.
‘Neither can we quantify the emotional, psychological, physiological and financial impact of the crime Jamie Barrow committed against Fatoumatta, Fatimah and Naeemah.
‘His actions were utterly heartless and cruel – and have caused a multigenerational trauma that we will never understand.
‘Fatoumatta was a caring daughter, wife, sister, mother and friend. If love and compassion could make a person immortal, she would have lived forever.
‘She had a pure heart and was greatly loved for her personality and qualities. She was the most incredible mother to Fatimah and Naeemah, two angels who deserved a beautiful childhood and a full life.
‘Nottingham and the rest of the world have been denied potential future teachers, civil servants, doctors – who knows what they could have been?
‘They lived a short but meaningful life, such was the joy and happiness they brought to us all.’
Prosecutor Simon Ash KC told jurors Barrow had drunk ‘seven or eight’ cans of San Miguel before pouring petrol from his motorbike through the letterbox and setting it alight using tissue paper.
He said he would have known his victims were home due to a pram being left outside the door and a light coming from the hallway.
Once the fire took hold, Barrow ‘did nothing to help’ those trapped inside the first-floor flat.
Giving evidence, Barrow said he ‘can’t explain’ why he chose to target the neighbouring flat but had formed the opinion that no one was inside as he had not seen or heard his neighbours in the days leading up to the fire.
He had been suffering from a ‘very, very low mood’ and was ‘wallowing in self-pity’ in the days and hours before his actions, caused partially by his emotionally unstable personality disorder.
Barrow claimed he did not expect the fire to take hold as rapidly as it did and said he was driven to admit what he had done to police officers due to ‘an immense amount of guilt’, telling officers: ‘I need to tell you something about the fire next door.’
The jury heard he found starting fires ‘cathartic’ and gave ‘zero’ consideration to the consequences of his actions, rejecting his assertion that he had not intended to harm anyone when starting the blaze.
Thanking the jury for their service, Mrs Justice Tipples said: ‘This has been a particularly distressing case in which three people died and in those circumstances, I am going to discharge you from jury service for life.’
Barrow will be sentenced on Friday at the same court.
Detective Inspector Kaz Smithson said: ‘Jamie Barrow committed the most despicable crime anyone could ever commit. He destroyed a whole family and took away their dreams of a happy life together in America.
‘Today, justice has been served for Fatoumatta, Fatimah and Naeemah and their family, all of whom have carried themselves with incredible dignity since the night of this truly awful crime.
‘Barrow denied the killings were deliberate but, thankfully, my investigative team was able to provide overwhelming evidence that this tragic event was indeed murder.
‘We saw through his lies and, thankfully, so did the jury.
‘Barrow knew Fatoumatta and the children were inside the property when he set fire to it and that they’d have no chance of surviving.
‘It beggars belief. In my opinion Barrow is an extremely dangerous man and I am pleased he is no longer walking the streets.
‘Finally, I want to thank the family for the dignity and incredible strength that they shown during the trial and hope they can draw some comfort from today’s verdicts.’
Investigations into four significant cases have been concluded by the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP).
The four prominent cases are; a case related to the Gaming Commission, Charles Adu Boahen, a former Minister of State at the Finance Ministry, a wealthy businessman involved in attempting to bribe Members of Parliament, and Charles Bissue, the former Secretary of the Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining.
The Office of the Special Prosecutor made this known in a Half Yearly Report.
Charles Adu Boahen
The Office has concluded investigation into a referral by the President of the Republic in respect of suspected corruption and corruption-related offences regarding Charles Adu Boahen, a former Minister of State at the Ministry of Finance.
The corruption allegations are contained in an investigative documentary titled, Galamsey Economy – published by Tiger Eye P.I. and the investigative journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas.
According to the Special Prosecutor, he will issue directives and further action on the matter in due course.
Unnamed Wealthy Businessman
The Special Prosecutor has indicated that he will issue directives and further action on the matter in due course.
The OSP expressed its gratitude to the Rt. Hon. Speaker of Parliament and his staff for their cooperation and assistance during the investigation.
Gaming Commission of Ghana
The Office has concluded investigation into suspected corruption and corruption-related offences in respect of the procurement and the award of a contract to Turfsport Ghana Limited by the Gaming Commission of Ghana.
According to the Special Prosecutor, he will issue directives and further action on the matter in due course.
Charles Bissue
The Office has concluded investigation into allegations of the use of public office for profit against Charles Bissue, during his tenure as Secretary to the erstwhile Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining (IMCIM), arising from an investigative documentary titled Galamsey Fraud Part I published by Tiger Eye P.I. and the investigative journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas.
This investigation is a subset of a wider investigation on illegal mining and the activities and operations of the IMCIM.
The Special Prosecutor will issue directives and further action on the matter in due course.
Ongoing Investigations
Electricity Company of Ghana Limited Investigation is ongoing in respect of suspected corruption and corruption-related offences regarding the termination of a Distribution, Loss Reduction and Associated Network Improvement Project contract between the Electricity Company of Ghana Limited and Beijing Xiao Cheng Technology (BXC).
Illegal Mining Investigation is ongoing in respect of suspected corruption and corruption-related offences regarding illegal mining – referred to as Galamsey.
The investigation targets some officials of the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources and the Forestry Commission. It also targets the activities and expenditure of the dissolved Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining (IMCIM), especially in respect of the seizure and management of excavators, machinery, road vehicles, and gold nuggets.
The investigation further targets the activities of Akonta Mining Limited and other companies; nationals of foreign countries allegedly involved in illegal mining; and allegations of corruption and corruption-related offences against some Municipal and District Chief Executives.
National Sports Authority
Investigation is ongoing in respect of suspected corruption and corruption-related offences regarding contracts awarded by the National Sports Authority for the provision of goods and services to the following entities:
• Acoma Green Consult • Tabee Gh. Limited • Wanschie Car Rentals • Obiri Car Rentals • No Farmer No Fortune • STC Clinic • Bobina Solutions • Mum & Sons Signature
Ghana Water Company Limited
Investigation is ongoing in respect of suspected corruption and corruption-related offences regarding contracts awarded by Ghana Water Company Limited for the provision of goods and services to the following entities: • Nayak 96 Enterprise • Dencom Construction Works • Edmus Limited • Jomaks • Espab Construction Limited • Roger More Construction Limited • Velech Enterprise • Intermec Gh. Limited • A.J.I. Trading & Construction Limited
Customs Division of Ghana Revenue Authority
Following the publication by the Office of an investigation report on 3 August 2022 in respect of a complaint against Labianca Company Limited and the Customs Division of Ghana Revenue Authority, the Special Prosecutor directed the commencement of a wider investigation into the issuance of customs advance rulings and markdowns of benchmark values.
Investigation is also ongoing in respect of suspected corruption and corruption-related offences regarding the auction sales of vehicles and other goods by the Customs Division between 1 July 2016 and 15 August 2022.
Airbus SE
Investigation is ongoing in respect of alleged bribery by Airbus SE, a European multinational aerospace corporation, regarding the sale and purchase of military aircrafts for the Republic. The Office is engaged with INTERPOL and the central authorities of the United Kingdom and the United States under the mutual legal assistance regime.
Bank of Ghana
Investigation is ongoing in respect of the banking and financial sector crisis that precipitated the collapse of some banks and financial institutions and the financial sector clean up and recapitalisation reforms.
The investigation targets alleged corruption and corruption-related offences perpetrated by some officials of the Bank of Ghana, banks, specialised deposit-taking institutions, and financial holding companies.
Ghana Police Service
Investigation is ongoing in respect of suspected corruption and corruption-related offences in regarding the recruitment exercise of Course 51 of Cadet Officers Training at the Ghana Police Academy.
The investigation targets specific cases of alleged corruption and corruption-related offences and acts of the use of office for profit, abuse of office, abuse of power, favouritism, nepotism, victimisation and the selection of unqualified persons.
Estate of Kwadwo Owusu-Afriyie alias Sir John
Investigation is ongoing in respect of alleged improper acquisition of state protected land at the Achimota Forest enclave and the Sakumono Ramsar site by the deceased former Chief Executive of the Forestry Commission.
Following the refusal by the High Court, Accra to affirm the freezing order issued by the Special Prosecutor, the Office appealed to the Court of Appeal, Civil Division, Accra for a reversal of the decision of the High Court to facilitate the investigation and the final resolution of the matter.
Other Cases
The Office is also investigating one hundred and fifty (150) other cases at various levels of consideration. These would be publicised if the Special Prosecutor determines that they are within the mandate of the Office and that they should be moved past the preliminary investigation stage.
This is a policy intended to protect the privacy of individuals and the business operations of institutions and companies, and to avoid unnecessary stigmatisation.
A hopeful candidate for the New Patriotic Party (NPP) flagbearer position, Kwabena Agyepong, has conveyed his confidence in leading the party during the upcoming 2024 general elections.
During a press interaction on July 4, 2023, following the second day of the party’s vetting process, Kwabena Agyepong expressed his appreciation for the favorable response his campaign message has garnered. He emphasized his vision of bringing a promising new era of hope to the people of Ghana.
He further called for a collective mindset and urged his followers to embrace a collegial mentality to work together to materialize his vision for a “new Ghana.”
He added that there is a need to recalibrate the nation’s values, stressing on the importance of public service, dedication, nationalism, and patriotism in shaping the said new Ghana he deems to bring on board.
“I am very confident, in this country a lot of people have resonated positively with my message of ushering a new dawn, a new direction, and a new dimension for this country. For after 30 years, we have to take a critical look at ourselves, understanding public service, dedication, nationalism, and patriotism. We need a new Ghana, we need to recalibrate our values and get back to what is good, a collegial mentality, the public good, that is what all politics is about, it is the welfare of the society…all of you not only we the politician that is why I am running,” he said.
The National Presidential Vetting Committee, chaired by Evans Nimako, announced the commencement of the vetting process for NPP presidential aspirants. The process, which began on July 3 and is set to continue until July 6, aims to evaluate the visions, policies, and plans of the candidates for the country’s development.
On the first day of the vetting, July 3, three aspirants were vetted by the committee. These included Alan John Kyerematen, former Minister for Trade and Industry, Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, and Kwadwo Poku.
The second day, July 4, sw three more candidates appearing before the committee: Boakye Kyeremateng Agyarko former Energy Minister, himself, and Kennedy Ohene Agyapong.
The vetting process will continue on July 5 and 6 for the remaining candidates who will have the opportunity to present their visions and plans to the committee.
The NPP’s presidential primary election is scheduled to take place on November 3, 2023, where the party will ultimately select its flagbearer for the upcoming general elections.
Member of Parliament for Assin Central constituency, Kennedy Ohene Agyapong, and a potential New Patriotic Party (NPP) flagbearer, declined to participate in interviews after his appearance before the presidential aspirants’ vetting committee.
He did not indicate his reasons but he was heard telling the journalists that there would be “no interview.” He emphasised this by shaking his head and making hand gestures while he made his way out of the vetting hall.
The incident occurred on July 4, 2023, the second day of the vetting process, when Kennedy Agyapong, accompanied by a multitude of enthusiastic supporters amid fanfare went to the party’s headquarters in Accra.
Some individuals around him echoed his sentiment, reinforcing his decision not to engage with the media by repeating “he said no interview”
The National Presidential Vetting Committee, chaired by Evans Nimako, announced the commencement of the vetting process for NPP presidential aspirants. The process, which began on July 3 and is set to continue until July 6, aims to evaluate the visions, policies, and plans of the candidates for the country’s development.
On the first day of the vetting, July 3, three aspirants were vetted by the committee. These included Alan John Kyerematen, former Minister for Trade and Industry, Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, and Kwadwo Poku.
The second day, July 4, was scheduled for the vetting of three more candidates: Boakye Kyeremateng Agyarko, former Energy Minister, Kwabena Agyei Agyepong, a former NPP General Secretary, and Kennedy Ohene Agyapong himself.
The vetting process will continue on July 5 and 6 for the remaining candidates who will have the opportunity to present their visions and plans to the committee. However, after the first round of vetting, only five aspirants will advance to the next stage.
The NPP’s presidential primary election is scheduled to take place on November 3, 2023, where the party will ultimately select its flagbearer for the upcoming general elections.
Russian soldiers may have put “objects resembling explosives” on the roofs of some buildings of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power facility in southern Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelensky has warned.
On Tuesday, he suggested it in his nightly speech and added a warning about the dangers of radiation at the facility in the event of an explosion.
‘Different countries have their own intelligence and other capabilities to know exactly what is going on and who is to blame,’ cautioned Zelensky, adding that radiation “affects everyone.”
‘Now we have information from our intelligence that the Russian troops have placed objects resembling explosives to the roof of several power units of theZaporizhzhia nuclear power plant perhaps to simulate an attack on the plant.
‘The only source of danger to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is Russia and no one else.
‘Unfortunately there was no timely and large-scale response to the terrorist attack on the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant and this may incite the Kremlin to commit new evil.
‘It is the responsibility of everyone in the world to stop it, no one can stand aside as radiation affects everyone.’
Ukraine accused Russia of destroying the Kakhovka dam while Russia blamed Ukraine for destroying it at the beginning of June.
The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has been under Russia’s control since March 2022 (Picture: Reuters)Zelensky is worried about the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant (Picture: Telegram/Zelensky Official)
The devastation meant hundreds of towns and villages were flooded.
Satellite images released at the time showed the extent to which flooding water had impacted the surrounding areas.
Hundreds of animals had to be saved by volunteers following the catastrophic dam explosion.
The Zaporizhzhia power plant was captured by Russian forces in March 2022.
It was feared at the time Russian forces would destroy the plant to deter Ukraine’s advance.
Despite these fears, the nuclear power plant has stayed in operation under Russian energy company Rosatom.
The plant’s reactors were put into ‘cold shutdown’ mode in September 2022.
This was to prevent possible damage during the war, but explosions at the plant could still cause a nuclear meltdown, which would spread radiation.
Just last week, Zelensky warned the occupied plant remains under ‘serious threat’.
Special Prosecutor, Kissi Agyebeng, has once again emphasised the need for sufficient budgetary allocation to support the office’s efforts in combating corruption.
In the Half Yearly Report, concluding in June 2023, the Special Prosecutor expressed concern over the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) operating without a defined budget.
“We continue to emphasise the need for the State to pay particular attention to the funding needs of the Office,” Mr Agyebeng stated in the report.
He said the Office had proven that with sufficient funding, it was best placed to prevent and reduce the menace of corruption and corruption-related activities.
“It is in our collective interest to build a resilient, independent, and technologically advanced Office of the Special Prosecutor to stay ahead of and effectively repress corruption and corruption-related actors,” he said.
In the half year report, the OSP is pursuing four criminal cases in court, conducting investigations into nine suspected corruption and corruption-related offences, concluded four investigations, with 150 other cases at various levels of consideration.
The criminal cases include, the Republic versus Sumaila Abdul-Rahman, Stephen Yir-Eru Engmen, Patrick Seidu, and Andrew Kuundaari, who are facing 11 counts of corruption and corruption-related offences on procurement.
In the case of the Republic versus Issah Seidu, Mr Seidu, an official of the National Insurance Commission (NIC) has been charged with failing to comply with a directive to declare his income and property.
Mr Seidu and three others are also being investigated for their roles in suspected corruption in the importation of 10,000 bags of rice.
There is also the Republic versus Adjenim Boateng Adjei and another, where the former Chief Executive of Public Procurement Authority and his brother-in-law are being tried on procurement issues by using public office for profit.
Mr Adjei has been charged with eight counts of using public office for profit and nine counts of directly and indirectly influencing the procurement process to obtain an unfair advantage in the award of public contracts.
His brother-in-law has been charged with one count of using public office for profit.
The fourth criminal case before the court involves Mr Alexander Kwabena Sarfo-Kantanka, the President’s nominee for the position of Chief Executive of Juaben Municipal Assembly in the Ashanti Region, who have been charged with 26 counts of corruption in respect of a public election.
One of the cases that the OSP has concluded investigations into involves Mr Charles Adu Boahen, a former Minister of State at the Ministry of Finance.
It is over corruption allegations arising from an investigative piece “Galamsey Economy”, published by Tiger Eye P.I. and investigative journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas.
The OSP said it had also had concluded investigation into allegations of the use of public office for profit against Charles Bissue, during his tenure as Secretary to the erstwhile Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining (IMCIM).
It also arose from an investigative documentary titled “Galamsey Fraud Part I” published by Tiger Eye P.I. and investigative journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas.
Investigations into allegations of attempt to bribe members of majority caucus of Parliament by unnamed and wealthy businessman has also been concluded, the OSP stated in the half year report.
It has also concluded investigations into suspected corruption and corruption-related offences in respect of the procurement and the award of a contract to Turfsport Ghana Limited by the Gaming Commission of Ghana.
Former Minister of Trade and Industry and aspirant for the New Patriotic Party (NPP) flagbearer, Alan Kyerematen, has stated that Ghana could have prevented its reliance on the International Monetary Fund (IMF) by implementing his proposed ideas.
However, failure of the country to heed to his advise ended the country up at the Bretton Woods institution.
During his recent tour of Greater Accra delegates, Alan Kyerematen emphasised the potential of President’s Special Initiatives (PSI) introduced during the previous administration of John Agyekum Kuffour. He stated that if the nation had embraced this transformative concept, it could have significantly altered Ghana’s economic trajectory.
Reflecting on his contributions to the country, he expressed a sense of regret, stating, “The amount of work I have done for this country, sometimes I even feel ashamed talking about it.”
He emphasized his role in introducing the President’s Special Initiatives during President John Agyekum Kufuor’s administration and suggested that had Ghanaians embraced his ideas, the country would not have resorted to seeking assistance from the IMF, he is quoted to have said.
The strategic intent of the PSIs, according to the NPP government, was to move Ghana’s economy beyond HIPC status and reduce the country’s over-dependence on aid and donor support and a few commodity exports by finding new pillars of growth.
A total of 10 NPP presidential candidate aspirants had picked up nomination forms as of Thursday, June 1, 2023, and had paid a non-refundable nomination fee of GHC50,000.
The 10 include; Vice- President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, a former Minister of Trade and Industry, Alan Kwadwo Kyerematen, MP for Assin Central, Kennedy Ohene Agyapong, a former Minister of Justice and Attorney General, Joe Ghartey, a businessman and energy expert Kwadwo Poku, a former Minister of Energy, Boakye Agyarko, a former NPP General Secretary, Kwabena Agyei Agyepong, a former MP for Mampong, Francis Addai-Nimoh, a former Minister of State, Dr. Kofi Konadu Apraku and a former Minister of Food and Agriculture, Dr. Owusu Afriyie Akoto.
As the city of Hami, in the country’s northwest, was struck, enormous, menacing dust clouds built a 300-foot-high wall of sand.
Locals in China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region captured footage of the apocalyptic-looking storm as it suddenly swept in.
According to Sky News, footage showed the dust storm rising above the city’s tallest structures.
Then it totally obscured everything, turning the foggy sky orange.
A yellow weather warning had been issued for the area, which is the second lowest alert on the four-tier scale and means there is a ‘moderate’ risk of danger.
After the terrifying plumes arrived in the city, the storm reportedly lasted for around an hour-and-a-half before it eventually dissipated.
Other videos filmed by local residents also showed high speed winds amid the height of the blizzard.
Hami lies just to the west of the Gobi Desert which spans 500,000 square miles across northern China and Mongolia.
Sandstorms, also known as haboobs, are intense storms that are carried on the wind in desert regions of the world, according to EarthSky.
According to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), they are usually ‘caused by thunderstorms – or strong pressure gradients associated with cyclones – which increase wind speed over a wide area’.
The weather experts say: ‘These strong winds lift large amounts of sand and dust from bare, dry soils into the atmosphere, transporting them hundreds to thousands of kilometres away.’
Visibility was completely hampered by the huge storm (Picture: Sky News)
Haboobs can pose a serious risk to human health, both externally and internally.
Dust and sand particles can cause skin and eye irritations, such as conjunctivitis, according to the WMO, while finer particles can cause problems for the respiratory system and organs.
People with underlying health issues or suffering from asthma can be severely affected by a sandstorm, with residents always urged to stay inside if one strikes.
It also causes a danger to drivers and the National Weather Service says: ‘A dust storm usually arrives suddenly in the form of an advancing wall of dust and debris which may be miles long and several thousand feet high.
‘They strike with little warning, making driving conditions hazardous. Blinding, choking dust can quickly reduce visibility, causing accidents that may involve chain collisions, creating massive pileups.’
In 2021, a freak sandstorm caused a 22-car wreckage which claimed the lives of eight people, including children, in Utah, USA.
Last year, one person was killed and dozens were injured when a 50mph sandstorm caused a stage to collapse at a festival near Valencia in Spain.
As a recent abortion controversy swirls around renowned Ghanaian artists Sarkodie and Yvonne Nelson, mental health experts are voicing concerns about the potential negative effects on the well-being of these celebrities. In an recent interview, a prominent psychologist has shed light on the possible emotional and psychological repercussions that such a publicized issue can have on individuals’ mental health.
Dr. Isaac Newman Arthur, a medical doctor and clinical psychologist, says the social media outburst arising from Sarkodie and Yvonne Nelson impasse could worsen their mental wellbeing and not heal them emotionally.
The release of Yvonne Nelson’s memoir has sparked social media conversations, especially after Sarkodie’s damning “Try Me” response over their relationship that took place some years ago.
According to Dr Newman Arthur, who is also the Acting Director of University of Professional Studies Medical Directorate, the exposure of such sensitive issues regarding their private lives had repercussions for not only the celebrities involved but their children as well as people who look up to them.
“One of the most ‘dangerous’ places to express your emotions and failures is on social media. When you do that, you lose control of what people will say or do to you.
“People’s responses on social media can add on to the pain and worsen their mental wellbeing. The safest place to heal is in a professional setting with the right professional. They both need to heal. Really, we all need healing,” he said.
When asked to share his opinion about the actions of both celebrities, Dr. Newman Arthur said: “I am not sure exactly why Yvonne Nelson put it out there, whatever the reason was, it expressed how she felt, and also, Sarkodie’s response expressed how he also felt.
“Unfortunately, the masses are divided on who did the right thing. This shows that there was something basically wrong. As for the impact on people, it may set a negative or positive precedence on issues regarding sensitive issues like abortion, relationships, trust, and confidentiality, depending on how people will evaluate what was put out there.”
Dr Arthur expressed concern about the repercussions it could have on their kids, especially when they grow up.
“Whatever we put out there never goes away. For the kids, it may affect the value they place on themselves and lead to identity crises, anxiety in social settings, and depression if they don’t receive the right help,” he stated.
In Chongqing, southwest China, torrential downpours and flooding have killed at least 15 people, and four more are still missing, according to local authorities and state-run news agency Xinhua.
Since Monday, as southwest China has been hammered by heavy rains, the deaths have been reported. As a result, four counties in Chongqing have issued the highest level red alert warnings.
Residents are seen being rescued in videos from the vast metropolis as workers attempt to drain the streets of floodwater.
Neighboring Sichuan province has also been hard hit, with more than 460,000 residents affected by the heavy rain – but no casualties reported so far, according to the provincial government. More than 85,000 Sichuan residents have been displaced, state-run broadcaster CCTV reported Tuesday.
At least 400 emergency teams have been dispatched to help rescue and relief operations in the area, according to state media.
Chinese leader Xi Jinping has ordered authorities to “give top priority” to keeping residents safe and minimizing losses, according to Xinhua. He also told various government ministries, including flood control and emergency management authorities, to coordinate the response effort.
This summer has already seen heavy rain, with four people killed and three missing in Sichuan last week after landslides triggered by rainstorms and flash floods, Xinhua reported.
And videos emerged on Monday of the dramatic rescue of a couple trapped on their car roof after a riverbed flooded in central Henan province. Rescue workers used a drone to deliver rope and life jackets to the couple, who huddled on their car amid rushing brown water before being “dragged” to the river bank by a crane, according to CCTV.
Heavy flooding in China trapped couple on top of car. See what happened next
The floods come as other parts of China battle intense heat waves in yet more examples of extreme and unpredictable weather that experts say is a sign of the climate crisis’ impact.
Earlier this week, the country registered the highest number of hot days over six months since records began, according to authorities.
China has already experienced four regional heat waves so far this summer, which arrived earlier and have been more widespread and extreme than in previous years, according to the National Climate Center.
Northern China, a heavily populated region with hundreds of millions of residents, has been particularly hard hit, with more heat waves expected in coming weeks.
Following the discovery of sexually graphic content on the phone of a guy detained in Sydney by Australian authorities, sixteen reportedly mistreated children in the Philippines have been rescued.
According to a joint statement issued Wednesday by the Australian Federal Police and the Philippine National Police (PNP), the youngsters were discovered last month when the PNP carried out several warrants at four sites in the Metro Manila area and one province in the Northern Philippines.
The Australian Border Force detained a Queensland man, 56, who was travelling back to Sydney from the Philippines in January, starting the inquiry, according to the statement.
After searching his phone, the ABF found child abuse material and messages detailing his intent to pay a facilitator who would enable him to sexually abuse children in the Philippines.
The man was charged with three offenses including grooming and possession of child abuse material, which carry a potential maximum sentence of 15 years in prison.
However, the suspect failed to attend a scheduled court appearance on May 30 and a warrant has been issued for his arrest.
“This case highlights how vital it is for law enforcement agencies to share intelligence and resources globally, because predators are not confined by borders,” said the AFP’s senior officer in Manila, Detective Superintendent Andrew Perkins.
“However, these children’s lives have been irrecoverably damaged and we know there are too many other children still at risk,” he added.
The children have been placed into the care of the Philippine Department of Social Welfare and Development and investigators are still trying to find other suspected victims.
Police Colonel Portia Manalad, chief of the Philippine National Police Women and Children Protection Center, said the PNP could not tackle this crime alone.
“We must collaborate with our international partners, such as the AFP, to arrest offenders and rescue child victims,” she said.
As of June 29, 611 victims have been rescued from child abuse and 127 facilitators arrested since the Philippine Internet Crimes Against Children Center (PICACC), a joint effort between the Philippines, Australia, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands, was established in 2019.
In his first public appearance since facing an armed uprising late last month, Vladimir Putin tried to convey a message of strength on Tuesday before a virtually assembled group of international leaders who support Moscow.
The remarks were made days after Putin put down the uprising led by the Wagner mercenary group during a speech to leaders at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit, which was hosted by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
After more than a year of his bungling invasion of Ukraine, the events were largely regarded as the greatest challenge to Putin’s authority he had ever faced. Both allies and foes began to question just how tightly in control the tyrant actually was.
Putin used his moment to speak at the one-day summit to give his answer to that question.
“The solidarity and high responsibility for the fate of the fatherland was clearly demonstrated by Russian political circles and the entire society by coming out as a united front against the attempted armed rebellion,” he said via video link.
“I would like to take this opportunity to thank my colleagues from the (SCO) countries who have expressed support for the actions of the Russian leadership,” Putin told the attending leaders, who included China’s Xi Jinping, Belarus’ Alexander Lukashenko and Iran’s Ebrahim Raisi.
In reference to the impact of his war on Ukraine, Putin also said Russia was withstanding “sanctions and provocations” and “steadily developing.”
Many of the leaders in virtual attendance, Russia-friendly nations who share borders, diplomatic aims or strong economic ties with Moscow, could be significantly impacted by changes in Putin’s fate.
Founded in 2001 and spreadheaded by China and Russia, the SCO also includes India, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan and accounts for a sweeping portion of Eurasia and, with the inclusion of the world’s two most populous countries, around 40% of the global population.
Tuesday’s summit also provided an opportunity for the grouping to extend its reach – with Iran approved as a full member – the second expansion in the organization’s more than two decade history. Staunch Moscow ally Belarus also took a step toward gaining full membership, expected next year.
Both Moscow and Beijing view the group as an alternative to Western-led blocs and a key vehicle for their bid to push back against what it sees as a US-led world order.
But while many members may support a world with more dispersed global power, SCO contains an tangled web of interests and allegiances, which members must navigate as they aim to enhance regional security and cooperation more broadly.
Modi in opening remarks praised the SCO as an “important platform for peace, prosperity and development in the entire Eurasia region.”
“We do not see the SCO as an extended neighborhood, but an extended family. Security, economic development, connectivity, unity, respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity, and environmental protection are the pillars of our vision for SCO,” he said.
But this year’s event was a toned down affair for the group, compared to last year’s gathering. That event stretched over two in-person days in Samarkand, Uzbekistan and featured a number of sideline meetings between attending leaders.
India announced last month that its leaders’ summit would be held virtually, without specifying why. An online summit can cut time spent together – and reduce the optics of solidarity between participants.
Modi is hosting the gathering days after being welcomed for a state visit in the US by President Joe Biden, who is keen to cultivate New Delhi as a partner in its growing competition with China.
In his address to the summit, Chinese leader Xi called for regional leaders to strengthen their coordination and resist the influence of external forces in the region – employing language typically used by Beijing to decry what it claims are aims of American foreign policy.
“We must be highly vigilant against external forces inciting a ‘new cold war’ in the region and creating confrontation between camps, (and) resolutely oppose any country’s interference in internal affairs and instigation of ‘color revolutions,’” Xi said, using a term to refer to government-toppling political movements.
Member countries should “formulate foreign policies independently based on the overall and long-term interests of the region … and firmly hold the future and destiny of our country’s development and progress in our own hands,” he added, according to a transcript from China’s Foreign Ministry.
The grouping adopted a declaration and two joint statements, one on cooperation countering “radicalization leading to separatism, extremism and terrorism” and a second on cooperation in the field of digital transformation, India’s Ministry of External Affairs said following the close of the summit, which lasted roughly three hours.
Russia has become more dependent on China since Ukraine war began. Here’s how
Putin’s on-going war in Ukraine casts a long shadow over the broadly Russia-friendly gathering, especially as China and India have been under pressure from the West to limit support for Moscow or even push Putin toward peace.
A joint statement between Modi and Biden late last month saw the two express concern over the conflict in Ukraine and “coercive actions and rising tensions” in the India-Pacific region – statements that did not directly name Russia or China, but appeared to point their way.
Putin and Modi spoke via phone last week, with the Indian leader “reiterating his call for dialogue and diplomacy,” New Delhi said.
At last year’s SCO summit, Modi told Putin in “today’s era is not an era of war.”
And India has its own friction with neighboring China.
Beijing remains deeply suspicious of a US Indo-Pacific security grouping known as the Quad of which India is a part, and the two nuclear-armed neighbors have a simmering conflict along a contested border, which has erupted into violence in recent years.
The group also brings together India and Pakistan – another pairing of two nuclear-armed neighbors with a long history of fractious relations.
In May, Pakistani Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari became the most senior-level official to visit India in seven years, when he joined a SCO foreign ministers meeting.
Iran’s entry into the grouping comes after it signed a memorandum of obligations at last year’s summit. Belarus, a close Russian partner, took that step toward full membership this year, India’s Ministry of External Affairs said after the close of the Tuesday’s meeting.
Aspiring SCO member Belarus played a key role in navigating Putin’s crisis, claiming to have brokered a deal allowing Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin to safely leave Russia for Belarus.
Pakistan and India were the most recent countries to join, gaining full membership in 2017. Fourteen countries hold dialogue partner status, while another three are observers, according to New Delhi.
A day after incursions that resulted in the deaths of at least 10 persons between the ages of 16 and 23 and the injury of about 100 others, Israeli soldiers carried out military operations in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin for a second night.
According to Palestinian officials, thousands of people left their houses at the refugee camp overnight after electricity and water facilities there were severely damaged.
In a joint statement released Tuesday morning, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) claimed that they had engaged in “counter-terrorism activities in Jenin and Jenin Camp” using information from the Israel Securities Authority (ISA) and Israel Border Police.
The operation was continuing on the same day a car-ramming and stabbing attack in Tel Aviv left at least eight people injured.
The military operation remained ongoing Tuesday morning with Israeli forces searching for 10 remaining primary targets in the Jenin refugee camp, according to the IDF. At least 120 people have been detained, the Israeli force said.
IDF chief spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari said on Twitter that there “is no point in the [Jenin] camp” that they have not entered, including the center.
Hagari said the IDF has carried out a “large number of raids, ambushes, destruction of laboratories, and explosives” and that so far, “non-combatants” have not been killed.
“We allowed all the women and children to leave the camp on their own initiative,” Hagari said.
Ten Palestinians have been killed so far, with more than 100 injured. The IDF previously acknowledged civilians are among the injured.
Thousands of Palestinians evacuated the camp overnight, according to the Palestinian Red Crescent.
Video from Tuesday morning in Jenin shows torn-up streets, which the IDF said was to disarm IEDs, and smoke rising over the refugee camp, where the Israeli military operations took place.
The IDF said Tuesday it located and neutralized an “underground shaft used to store explosive devices in the heart of the Jenin Camp” and IDF soldiers “located and dismantled two operational situation rooms belonging to terrorist organizations in the area.”
Its soldiers also confiscated weapons, explosives and military equipment in Jenin and “neutralized a grenade launcher,” according to the IDF.
A military source said Monday the operation is the largest military operation in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin in more than 20 years.
Striking “terrorist infrastructure,” the IDF on Monday carried out around 10 airstrikes using drones, and hundreds of soldiers targeted what it said was a militant “command and control” center as well as weapons and explosive manufacturing sites. Its goal, the IDF said, was to dismantle Jenin as a “safe haven” for militants.
In pictures: Israel launches massive raid in West Bank city
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Discussing the first day of the Israeli military operation, Jenin resident Lina Amouri, 35, said her family hid from the gunfire until they heard mosques announcing the evacuation.
“We were all hiding in one apartment that didn’t have windows so we don’t risk anyone getting hit by a bullet. Three women and six children aged 1 to 9, since 5 a.m., with no electricity or internet connection. It was a horrifying day,” she said.
“The children were crying all day and we didn’t know how to calm them down, the only thing we could do is to pray together while we hear explosions and bulldozers outside.”
Amouri also compared the scene to a natural disaster.
“When we first went out to see what’s happening it was a totally different place, all streets were plowed, water and sewage pipes were broken, electricity poles were down, cars were piled one on the other. It felt like a storm with earthquake have just passed by.”
Duha Turkman, a 16-year-old Jenin resident, said they heard an announcement form the mosque loudspeakers saying they had two hours to evacuate. It’s unclear where the directive came from, the IDF told CNN no one was asked to leave the camp.
“We ran out with people from the camp, so many children walked with their parents while terrified and crying, they didn’t understand what was happening to them and why,” she told CNN. “Many were missing; families were looking for members that they couldn’t get in contact with due to the electricity cut.”
Turkman told CNN that before evacuating, her family’s home was taken over by Israeli forces as the operation got underway, leaving the apartment “upside down.”
“They invaded our house in the early morning, they locked us all in one room, five women and two children in one room, and in another room, they locked five men – my father, brothers and uncles,” she said.
“They took the house as snipers’ position to attack the camp, meanwhile we couldn’t use a toilet, get to the kitchen or do anything but sit in the room and listen to the explosions outside.”
CNN cannot independently verify the accounts of these two eyewitnesses.
Jenin deputy mayor Mohammed Jarrar said homes and infrastructure had been destroyed, cutting off electricity and water in the refugee camp.
Aid agencies accused Israeli forces of obstructing access to the camp and impeding the medical response, claims the IDF denies.
The Palestinian Red Crescent said some crews were prevented from operating within the camp, according to the director of the Palestinian Red Crescent society in Jenin, Mahmoud al-Saadi. And the international medical aid organization Doctors Without Borders (MSF) also accused Israeli forces of impeding access to medical care in Jenin. The IDF said ambulances had a “free pass” in the camp.
On Tuesday morning, the Palestinian Ministry of Health said the body of the 10th Palestinian person to be killed was discovered in Jenin. Earlier, the ministry said five of those killed in the attack were teenagers and of the 100 wounded, 20 were in serious condition.
Hagari, the IDF spokesperson, acknowledged on Monday that civilians were among the injured, but insisted the operation only meant to target “terrorists.”
“It’s not an invasion on Jenin, it’s not against the Palestinian Authority. It’s not against innocent, innocent Palestinians. It’s against terrorists in this camp,” he said.
The incursion sparked immediate condemnation. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas called the large-scale Israeli military operation “a new war crime” while Egypt called the Israeli incursion an act of “aggression.”
Militant group Hamas called on all its cells in the West Bank and Jerusalem to strike Israel “by all available means,” a statement by its military wing said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the military acted “against terrorist strongholds in Jenin.”
“In recent months, Jenin has become a safe haven for terrorists. Terrorists perpetrated savage attacks, murdering Israeli civilians, men, women, and children, as many children as they could find,” Netanyahu said at a US embassy event in Jerusalem on Monday evening.
Israeli authorities reported that a car driver crashed into pedestrians close to a Tel Aviv shopping centre before getting out to stab bystanders, injuring eight people.
The assault occurred a day after raids left at least 10 persons between the ages of 16 and 23 dead and about 100 others injured. Israeli soldiers had been conducting military operations in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin for a second night when the incident occurred.
In a statement, Hamas claimed responsibility for the assault and stated that it was in retaliation for Israel’s continuing operation in Jenin.
A police spokesperson described the car ramming on Pinchas Rosen Street in northern Tel Aviv as a “terror attack,” and told CNN the driver was killed by an armed civilian.
The chief of staff of the Israel’s Medical Emergency Service, Uri Shacham, outlined how the attack unfolded. “This terror attack was combined, both of the vehicle hitting pedestrians, and then the driver, leaving the car, going outside, and stabbing innocent civilians,” he said.
“Magen David Adom [the emergency service] deployed tens of ambulances, mobile intensive care units and motorcycles emergency motorcycles to the scene.”
One of the injured, a 46-year-old woman, is in serious condition, the Magen David Adom said.
Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) also praised Tuesday’s attack, saying it’s the “response of the resistance to what is happening in Jenin,” a statement said.
The PIJ did not claim responsibility for the attack in the statement.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the ramming and stabbings in Tel Aviv a “heinous terror attack.”
Netanyahu added: “Whoever thinks that such an attack will deter us from continuing our fight against terrorism is mistaken. He is simply unfamiliar with the spirit of the State of Israel, our government, our citizens and our soldiers.”
The Israeli military raid in Jenin is “not over” until the IDF declares it, IDF Chief International Spokesperson Richard Hecht told CNN after the IDF issued a statement saying its forces were withdrawing from the Jenin camp.
“Final hours I hope, but it’s not over yet till we declare it. There’s movements in the camp, forces are leaving the camp. It could still change,” Hecht said.
Video obtained by CNN also showed Israeli military vehicles starting to withdraw from the occupied West Bank city, as other vehicles are seen entering.
Human rights groups have expressed deep concern regarding the surge in violence in Jenin. UNICEF reported that at least three children lost their lives, while many others sustained injuries amid ongoing clashes, its Middle East and North Africa regional director Adele Khodr said on Tuesday.
While visiting the republic in southern Russia, Elena Milashina, a well-known Russian journalist who exposed the horrifying crackdown on homosexual men there, was attacked together with a lawyer.
Milashina and her lawyer, Alexander Nemov, were attacked as they travelled to Grozny, the regional capital of Chechnya, to witness the sentencing of a human rights activist.
She explained that she thinks her assailants meant to intimidate her and obtain access to her and Nemov’s equipment when she indicated that they “knew what they were doing” and were “in a hurry.”
“They beat us up two times,” Milashina said in a recorded interview with her employer Novaya Gazeta. “They were very specific, they knew what they wanted, knew what their limits were, beyond which they could not go.”
In the video interview Milashina is shown visibly bruised, her head shaved off and painted green.
“They did this,” she says when asked about her hair. “I don’t have any wounds, thank God, just bruises,” she added, going on to explain she believes Nemov and her were targeted for their professional activity,.
Nemov was beaten and stabbed with a knife, but he still planned on attending the court hearing, according to the Novaya Gazeta.
The newspaper reported that the perpetrators are unknown, also noting that Milashina and Nemov were asked to give a statement to police at the hospital but refused.
Milashina and Nemov were attending a court ruling in the case of Zarema Musaeva – the mother of Chechen activists, the Yangulbaev brothers, who are vocal critics of Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov. Musaeva was sentenced to five years and six months in prison on charges of fraud and violence against a police officer, TASS said.
The Kremlin called it “a very serious attack” that required investigative actions and serious measures to be taken. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russian President Vladimir Putin was informed of the attack and the incident is being handled by Russia’s human rights ombudsman.
Russia’s Investigative Committee has launched an investigation into the attack.
Russia’s human rights commissioner, Tatyana Moskalkova, “agreed to intervene in the situation on the request of the editorial office,” Novaya Gazeta said. CNN has reached out to Russia’s Human Rights Commissioner for comment.
In a statement to Russian state media RIA Novosti, Moskalkova confirmed that the pair were attacked by unknown people and that Milashina’s fingers were broken. Moskalkova also said she asked the Commissioner for Human Rights in Chechnya to ensure the safety of the journalist.
Human rights groups have condemned the violent assault, calling for a swift investigation.
Sergey Babinets, the head of the Russian human rights organization the Crew Against Torture, said that the attackers had mentioned Milashina’s work and previous court reporting while beating the pair. “This is clearly not a gangster attack, this is a direct attack for their work,” he said in a statement
“Amnesty International condemns this cowardly assault in the strongest terms and calls on the Russian authorities to swiftly bring the perpetrators to justice and ensure the safety of those who seek truth and justice,” Amnesty International’s Eastern Europe and Central Asia director, Marie Struthers, said.
Milashina has been previously threatened for her journalism. Following her reporting on a crackdown on gay men in Chechnya in 2017, Muslim clerics in Chechnya called for “retribution” against her and other journalists. She faced death threats and was temporarily forced to flee the country.
The 2017 crackdown saw hundreds of men allegedly held and tortured in detention.
At the time, one witness who fled Chechnya after being arrested told CNN that hundreds of gay men like him were being rounded up by the authorities and held in appalling conditions in at least three detention centers.
The detentions prompted heavy international criticism of Russia. The country has a checkered record on gay rights, breaking up gay pride marches and passing anti-gay propaganda laws.
But the allegations of detention camps and torture emerging from Chechnya were unprecedented. In response, Chechen leader and Kremlin-backed strongman Kadyrov said there were no gay people in his republic, and that if there were any they should be taken away from the region
In just a few years, the number of child care centres has decreased by over a quarter, showing government efforts to stimulate more births but to no avail.
New government statistics released on Friday show that there were more than 40,000 child care facilities in 2017; at the end of 2016, that number had decreased to about 30,900.
The number of ageing facilities has increased as well, from 76,000 in 2017 to 89,643 in 2022, according to the nation’s health and welfare ministry.
Elderly facilities include senior care homes, specialized hospitals, and welfare agencies that help the elderly navigate social services or protections. Meanwhile, the child care facilities listed include public services as well as private and corporate ones.
The shift illustrates a years-long problem South Korea has thus far failed to reverse. It has both one of the world’s fastest aging populations and the world’s lowest birth rate, which has been falling continuously since 2015 despite authorities offering financial incentives and housing subsidies for couples with more babies.
Experts attribute this low birth rate to various factors, including demanding work cultures, stagnating wages, rising costs of living, the financial burden of raising children, changing attitudes toward marriage and gender equality, and rising disillusionment among younger generations.
By the late 2000s, the government had begun warning that policy measures were needed to encourage families to grow. Last September, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol admitted that more than $200 billion has been spent trying to boost the population over the past 16 years.
But so far nothing has worked – and the effects have been increasingly visible in the social fabric and day-to-day life.
Many elementary, middle and high schools are closing around the country due to a lack of school-age children, according to Korean news agency Yonhap, citing the education ministry. Figures from the country’s official statistics body show the overall number of middle and high schools have remained stagnant for years, only rising by a few dozen since 2015.
In Daejeon, south of Seoul, one such abandoned school has become a popular spot for photographers and urban explorers; images show eerily empty hallways and a school yard overgrown by wild grass.
Similar crises have been seen in other East Asian countries with falling birth rates. One village in Japan went 25 years without recording a single birth. The arrival of a baby in 2016 was heralded as a miracle, with elderly well-wishers hobbling to the infant’s house to hold him.
Meanwhile, South Korea’s expanding elderly population has meant an explosion in demand for senior services, placing strain on a system scrambling to keep up.
South Korea has the highest elderly poverty rate among the OECD nations (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), with more than 40% of people over 65 years old facing “relative poverty,” defined by the OECD as having income lower than 50% of median household disposable income.
“In Korea, the pension system is still maturing, and current generations still have very low pensions,” the OECD wrote in a 2021 report.
Experts point to other factors such as global economic trends, the breakdown of old social structures that saw children looking after their parents, and insufficient government support for those struggling financially.
That means a number of homeless elderly people – part of a generation that helped rebuild the country after the Korean War – having to seek assistance from shelters and soup kitchens.
The rapid rise in elderly facilities in recent years may help alleviate some of these problems. But longer-term concerns remain about the future of Korea’s economy, as the number of young workers – who are crucial in propping up the health care and pension systems – slowly dwindle.
Two fundraisers were organised after a French policeman killed unarmed 17-year-old Nahel Merzouk during a traffic stop in Paris last week. One, to assist the mother of the teenager. The other was given to the victim’s killer police officer’s family.
Early on Wednesday morning, more than €1.6 million ($1.7 million) had been raised for the police officer’s benefit, while more than €400,000 ($450,000) had been raised for Nahel. Just over 21,000 people had contributed to Nahel, compared to over 85,000 for the police officer.
Why does this difference exist? What does it reveal about French politics, if anything?
The fundraiser for the police officer, who has been charged with voluntary homicide, was set up by French media personality and former politician Jean Messiha.
Having previously stood as a candidate for the National Rally – the far-right party led by Marine Le Pen – Messiha later worked as spokesperson for the party of Eric Zemmour, another far-right candidate in last year’s presidential election, whose platform was more extreme than Le Pen’s.
French lawmakers have criticized the fundraiser and questioned the motives of the organizers.
“Everyone can express their feelings and contribute to a fund… But I think, in this case, that it doesn’t go in the direction of appeasement,” Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti said in an interview with France Inter on Monday.
“I ask myself if behind all this there isn’t an instrumentalization (of the killing),” he added.
Despite the criticism, host website GoFundMe has refused to remove the campaign.
“Currently, this fund complies with our terms of use because the funds will be paid directly to the family in question. The family has been added as a beneficiary and therefore the funds will be paid directly to them,” said a GoFundMe spokesperson to CNN affiliate BFMTV.
On Tuesday evening, Messiha announced on Twitter that the fundraiser would close at midnight local time (6 p.m. ET), but urged that its supporters continued the “national momentum” the campaign had built.
The killing of Nahel, who was of Algerian origin, and the riots his death incited, provoked a “typical, traditional far-right” reaction, according to Philippe Marliere, a professor of French politics at University College London.
Many far-right sympathizers took the protests as proof that the rioters “disrespect France, they hate it, they don’t want to integrate, they’re riff-raffs,” and as another example of how “France’s multiculturalism has failed,” Marliere told CNN.
But while this rhetoric proliferated online, the fundraiser itself used more measured language.
“Support for the family of the Nanterre police officer, Florian.M, who did his job and is now paying a high price. MASSIVELY support him and our police forces!” it read.
This language “is designed to appeal to a much broader audience than typical far-right voters. This sort of statement could appeal to a majority of French people – and most of them would never contemplate voting for the National Rally,” Marliere said. The fundraiser is hence helping to bring the politics of the far right into the mainstream, he added.
Le Pen also tempered her rhetoric in response to this crisis, in what Marliere said was an attempt to appeal to more middle-of-the-road voters. Rather than capitalizing on the traditional far-right rallying calls of “riots, ethnic minorities, rebelling against public authority, the police, burning down public buildings,” and more, she has adopted a more moderate tone than she has in the past, and far more so than Zemmour.
While Zemmour called the rioters “scum” and called for some of their requests for French nationality to be refused, Le Pen spoke more sympathetically about the victim. “The death of a young man of 17 cannot leave anyone indifferent,” she said in a tweet.
According to Marliere, Le Pen’s “low-key” response to the crisis is part of a “long-term strategy of coming across no longer as a far-right politician, but as someone who eventually – in four years’ time – could be seen as a credible replacement for Macron.”
Since Le Pen lost the presidential election to Emmanuel Macron in 2022, French politics has grown increasingly fractious. Macron faced huge protests in March and April over his controversial pension reforms, and there is a sense that he has struggled to regain his domestic footing since then.
Many have noted that Le Pen’s decision to temper her rhetoric echoes that of Italian Prime Minister Georgia Meloni. Both politicians, attempting to cast a sheen of electability over their far-right parties, have used a more moderate tone to appeal to the mainstream.
“The Meloni strategy is very much what Le Pen is trying to follow in France,” Marliere said.
“This is politics: You instrumentalize a political event, a tragic political and social event, and you try to score political points with it.”
But, for the message to resonate, it has to be grounded in the public’s experience.
Joseph Downing, a senior lecturer in politics and international relations who has lived in Marseille for more than a decade, says he has witnessed the decline of security in the city, which has left whole areas virtually unpoliced.
According to Downing, the success of the fundraiser for the police officer shows “the key reason why Le Pen, and to a lesser extent Zemmour, were both successful in the presidential election campaign, because they spoke about security.”
“If you speak to people on the ground, they constantly complain about the deterioration of safety in French cities. This has been something that’s been taking place over the last decades,” Downing told CNN.
In some areas of France, police simply “don’t exist,” he said. In their place, gangs armed with Kalashnikovs have been allowed to proliferate.
“Nanterre (the Paris suburb where Nahel was killed) is a good example of this. The police themselves are scared. And the police know, in Nanterre, in Clichy-sous-Bois, in the northern quarters of Marseille, there are people that are armed. And there are people that are armed with bigger guns than they have,” Downing said.
While the absence of police is felt most keenly in Marseille, Downing says the feeling of insecurity has started to trickle into Paris.
“On French voters’ minds – and it’s not being addressed unfortunately by the mainstream – is the question of a banal, day-to-day insecurity,” Downing said.
He thinks the police officer’s fundraiser reveals some of these feelings of insecurity. The riots that rocked several French cities were a short burst of anguish whose peak has passed, according to comments made Tuesday by Macron. But the fundraiser was growing at a rapid rate before Messahi’s announcement, pulling in more than €500,000 (€545,000) since Monday afternoon.
The difference between the two fundraisers also shows the different levels of organization across the French political spectrum. Those who took to the streets to protest police violence “might use Snapchat, but they wouldn’t be aware of a GoFundMe,” said Downing. Meanwhile, the cause of law and order has appealed to the “more engaged” right. “The right is much more mobilized and is much richer generally in France,” he said.
Having faced two huge waves of protests this year, Macron has been left weakened. While the nature of the two crises were very different, both have contributed to the growing image of a president detached from his people, who feels more comfortable before a global audience than a domestic one.
“It’s easier to grandstand on the international stage than it is to try to sort out very complex, intractable problems at home,” Downing told CNN.
Following clearance from the United Nations‘ nuclear inspector for a contentious plan that comes 12 years after the Fukushima nuclear catastrophe, Japan will soon start discharging treated radioactive water into the ocean.
The environment minister stated in 2019 that there were “no other options” because to the limited amount of space available to store the hazardous material. The proposal to release wastewater has been in development for years.
The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Grossi, came in Japan on Tuesday to tour Fukushima and provide Prime Minister Fumio Kishida the IAEA’s safety assessment.
But the UN’s approval has done little to reassure rattled residents in neighboring countries, and local fishermen who still feel the impact of the 2011 disaster.
Some have cast doubt on the IAEA’s findings, with China recently arguing that the group’s assessment “is not proof of the legality and legitimacy” of Fukushima’s wastewater release.
Here’s what you need to know.
The devastating 2011 earthquake and tsunami damaged the Fukushima nuclear plant’s power supply and cooling systems – causing the reactor cores to overheat and contaminate water within the plant with highly radioactive material.
Since then, new water has been pumped in to cool fuel debris in the reactors. At the same time, ground and rainwater have leaked in, creating more radioactive wastewater that now needs to be stored and treated.
The state-owned electricity firm Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) has built over 1,000 massive tanks to contain what is now 1.32 million metric tons of wastewater – enough to fill more than 500 Olympic pools.
But space is quickly dwindling. The company says building more tanks isn’t an option, and it needs to free up space in order to safely decommission the plant – a process that involves decontaminating facilities, dismantling structures and fully shutting things down.
Radioactive wastewater contains some dangerous elements, but the majority of these can be removed from the water, said TEPCO.
The real issue is a hydrogen isotope called radioactive tritium, which cannot be taken away. There is currently no technology available to do so.
But Japan’s government and the IAEA say the contaminated water will be highly diluted and released slowly over decades.
That means the concentration of tritium being released would be on par or lower than the amount other countries allow, and meet international safety and environmental regulations, they say.
TEPCO, Japan’s government, and the IAEA also argue that tritium occurs naturally in the environment, from rain to sea water to tap water, and even in the human body – so releasing small amounts into the sea should be safe.
In the IAEA report, Grossi said discharging treated water into the sea would have a “negligible radiological impact on people and the environment.”
But experts are divided on the risk this poses.
The Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission says tritium itself is too weak to penetrate the skin – but can increase the risk of cancer if consumed in “extremely large quantities.” Meanwhile, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission acknowledged that “any exposure to radiation could pose some health risk” – but added that “everyone is exposed to small amounts of tritium every day.”
Robert H. Richmond, director of the Kewalo Marine Laboratory at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, is among a group of international scientists working with the Pacific Island Forum to assess the wastewater release plan – including visits to the Fukushima site, and meetings with TEPCO, Japanese authorities and the IAEA. After reviewing the details of the plan, Richmond called it “ill-advised” and premature.
One concern is that diluting the wastewater might not be enough to reduce its impact on marine life. Pollutants like tritium can pass through various levels of the food chain – including plants, animals, and bacteria – and be “bioaccumulated,” meaning they will build up in the marine ecosystem, he said.
He added that the world’s oceans are already under stress from climate change, ocean acidification, overfishing and pollution. The last thing it needs is to be treated like a “dumping ground,” he said.
And the potential risks won’t just affect the Asia-Pacific region. One 2012 study found evidence that bluefin tuna had transported radionuclides – radioactive isotopes like the ones in nuclear wastewater – from Fukushima across the Pacific to California.
First, the wastewater will be treated to filter out all the removable harmful elements. The water is then stored in tanks and analyzed to measure how radioactive it still is; much of it will be treated a second time, according to TEPCO.
The wastewater will then be diluted to 1,500 becquerels of tritium – a unit of radioactivity – per liter of clean water.
For comparison, Japan’s regulatory limit allows a maximum of 60,000 becquerels per liter. The World Health Organization allows 10,000, while the US has a more conservative limit of 740 becquerel per liter.
The diluted water will then be released through an undersea tunnel off the coast, into the Pacific Ocean. Third parties including the IAEA will monitor the discharge during and after its release.
“This will ensure the relevant international safety standards continue to be applied throughout the decades-long process laid out by the government of Japan and TEPCO,” Grossi said in the report.
Fukushima 10 years later: Struggles to rebuild continue (2021)
The plan has met a mixed reaction, with support from some corners and skepticism from others.
The US has backed Japan, with the State Department saying in a 2021 statement that Japan had been “transparent about its decision” and seems to be following “globally accepted nuclear safety standards.”
Taiwan’s Atomic Energy Council said the amount of tritium being released is estimated to be “below the detection limit, and the impact on Taiwan will be minimal.” The island is located southwest of Japan.
But there is more resistance from Japan’s closer neighbors.
In March, a prominent Chinese official warned the wastewater could cause “unpredictable harm to the marine environment and human health,” adding: “The Pacific Ocean is not Japan’s sewer for discharging its nuclear contaminated water.”
The Secretary General of the Pacific Islands Forum, an inter-governmental group of Pacific islands including Australia and New Zealand, also published an op-ed in January voicing “grave concerns.”
“More data is needed before any ocean release should be permitted,” he wrote. “We owe it to our children and grandchildren to work toward ensuring that their futures are secured and safe.”
South Korean Prime Minister Han Duck-soo showed support for the plan in June, saying he could drink the wastewater after it had been treated to meet international standards, according to Yonhap – a statement ridiculed by the country’s opposition leader.
Many bodies, including the IAEA, point out that nuclear plants around the world routinely and safely release treated wastewater containing low levels of tritium.
A spokesperson from the US’ Nuclear Regulatory Commission, a government body, confirmed to CNN that “virtually all nuclear plants in the US discharge water containing low levels of radioactivity to the waterway on which they are located.”
“Tritium cannot be filtered out, but a member of the public would have to ingest a significant amount of it for there to be even the possibility of a health concern and radioactive water released is greatly diluted by the flows in the waterway,” the spokesperson added.
Many scientists aren’t reassured. Tim Mousseau, a biological sciences professor at the University of South Carolina, pointed out that even if this is common practice among nuclear plants, there just isn’t enough research into the impact of tritium on the environment and on our food items.
Richmond, from the University of Hawaii, added that “other people’s bad behavior” was not an excuse to continue releasing wastewater into the ocean. “This is an ultimate opportunity for (Japan and the IAEA) to change the way in which business is being done for the better,” he said.
There has been much more skepticism from residents in the region – prompting some shoppers to stock up on seafood and sea salt, for fear these products may be impacted by the wastewater release.
In South Korea, sea salt prices have jumped, with store owners saying their sales had doubled recently, Reuters reported. It cited a viral tweet in Korean that claimed to have bought three years’ worth of seaweed, anchovies and salt.
The Korean fisheries authority also said it would ramp up efforts to monitor salt farms for radioactivity, and maintain a ban on seafood from waters near Fukushima, Reuters reported.
Members of the Korean public have also staged protests against the plan, with some donning gas masks outside the Japanese embassy in Seoul.
Opinion is mixed among the Japanese public, too. A survey by Asahi Shimbun in March found that 51% of 1,304 respondents supported the wastewater release, while 41% opposed it. Earlier this year, residents in the capital Tokyo took to the streets to protest the plan.
In Fukushima, the prefecture where the disaster occurred, local fishermen have been vocal against the plan from day one. For many years after the meltdown, authorities suspended their fishing operations and other countries introduced import restrictions.
Even after the surrounding water and fish returned to safe levels, consumer confidence was never fully restored, and Fukushima’s fishing industry is now worth just a fraction of what it once was.
The release of wastewater could further damage Fukushima’s global and regional reputation – once again hurting fishermen’s livelihoods, many argue. Earlier this year, one told CNN: “It really feels like they made this decision without our full consent.”
Member of Parliament for Assin North, James Gyakye Quayson, has been sworn in for the second time as MP for his constituency in a momentous event that seems to have marked the climax of a fierce battle for his seat in Parliament.
The memorable occasion took place on July 4, 2023, in Parliament. Speaker Alban Bagbin led Mr Quayson to swear both the Oath of Allegiance, which affirms his loyalty to the Republic of Ghana, and the Oath of Member of Parliament, which specifically relates to his role as a legislator.
Key members of the party, including former President John Dramani Mahama, who is also the flagbearer of the party, National Chairman Johnson Asiedu Nketiah, General Secretary Fiifi Kwetey, running mate for John Dramani Mahama in the 2020 election Prof Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang, Mr Joshua Alabi and others, were all present to grace the occasion.
His fellow MPs on the Minority side, all clad in white, were also present in their numbers to support Mr Quayson, who has become the party’s ‘darling boy’ following the matters that have arisen over his citizenship. Parliament reverberated with jubilation as the Minority MPs cheered him on while he took the oath of office.
However, most MPs on the Majority side (i.e. NPP MPs) did not turn up for the event. Their absence highlights the party’s position on the MP’s re-election while still entangled in a legal battle over his citizenship.
His swearing-in gives him an opportunity to fully resume his parliamentary duties, despite the ongoing legal tussle spewing from his just ended dual citizenship case.
For the past two years, Mr Quayson has been in court standing trial for possessing dual citizenship. The court case was triggered by one Richard Takyi-Mensah, a teacher and a resident of Yamoransa in the Central Region, who sued the MP for failing to renounce his Canadian citizenship at the time he picked nomination forms to contest the Assin North Constituency election in 2020.
The Supreme court by a majority decision of 5-2 on Wednesday, April 13, 2022, ordered the MP to stop holding himself as a lawmaker following a Cape Coast High Court’s earlier ruling that James Gyakye Quayson was not eligible to contest December 7, 2020, Parliamentary Elections because he bore dual citizenship before picking nomination forms from the Electoral Commission, Ghana.
The legal team of the embattled MP subsequently filed for a review of the Supreme Court ruling that stopped him from carrying himself as a lawmaker.
However, on May 18, 2023, the Supreme Court directed Parliament to expunge him from their records. This led to a by-election which he eventually won.
Meanwhile, the MP is still in court facing charges of perjury and deceiving a public officer after the Supreme Court nullified his election as MP for Assin North for holding Canadian citizenship and being a Ghanaian when he filed his nomination to contest the election in 2020.
The renowned Ghanaian comedian Kwaku Sintim-Misa, better known by his stage name KSM, has made a shocking admission about his early radio days.
In a recent interview on Citi TV, KSM shed light on his unconventional path to success in the radio industry.
He revealed that upon his return to Ghana from the United States, he saw an opportunity in the emerging private radio sector and set his sights on Vibe FM, a prominent radio station at the time.
Recalling the pivotal moment that would shape his career, KSM explained, “When I came to Ghana, at that time private radio had started coming up, and there was this radio station, Vibe FM.”
He added that he boldly approached the station and expressed his desire to host a talk show, and an appointment was arranged for him to meet Michael Cooke, the manager or owner of Vibe FM, who ultimately played a significant role in his journey.
During their meeting, Cooke inquired about KSM’s prior radio experience, and he admitted to his deceit, KSM humbly stated, “I said, ‘Oh yeah, radio?’ I am sorry to Ghanaians, but I lied. Now he knows. I told him. I was so confident.”
Despite the admission, KSM continued to recount the circumstances that led to his employment at Vibe FM.
He mentioned that the reason behind Cooke’s decision to hire him was his response to a crucial question during the interview.
KSM explained, “According to him, the reason he hired me was the answer I gave to the question he asked me regarding what I think about radio presenters and hosts, something like that, and I said, ‘There is nothing like a dull program but dull presenters.”
While reflecting on his past actions, KSM expressed remorse for the lie he told to secure the job.
He sincerely apologized to Ghanaians, stating, “I’m sorry to Ghanaians, but I lied. Now he knows. I told him. I was so confident.”
Anita Brown the alleged side chick of Afrobeats artist David Adeleke, popularly known as Davido, has strongly cautioned the singer to convey a serious message to his followers.
The American businesswoman instructed Davido to inform his fans that she doesn’t care about him and asks them to respect her space in a tweet posted on her Twitter page.
Anita claimed that the superstar had given his fans her phone number and that she found the act offensive.
Anita, who described Davido’s followers as “wack,” claimed that the topic was irrelevant to her and that she didn’t care about anything involving the musician.
She wrote: “Yo @davido tell your wack ass fans I don’t give a FCK about you bro This is annoying You gave out my number It’s annoying cause i don’t care for you. This shit is Irrelevant We both know my body Idc about nothing having to do with you.”
A deputy youth organiser aspirant in the Amenfi East of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), in the Western Region has died after he was allegedly knocked down by a vehicle.
According to reports, the deceased, Maclean Jacob Asaah, died on the spot after being hit by a vehicle while riding his motorcycle back from a campaign.
The report stated that the deceased was on a motorbike with another party member who is currently in critical condition at the hospital.
The NDC’s Western Regional Communication Director, Richard Kirk Mensah, confirmed the tragic news to journalists, stating that the deputy youth organizer aspirant died on the spot after being knocked down by the car.
“The deceased was on a motorbike with another party member, and they were returning from a campaign when the unfortunate incident happened on Sunday, July 2, 2023,” he said.
It will be recalled that the election of the NDC’s constituency officers in the Amenfi East Constituency was postponed due to internal party issues.
After resolving the issues, the party decided to hold the election on Monday, July 3, 2023, only for this tragic incident to hit the party.
However, the newspaper reported that the election went ahead as planned, but the positions for which the deceased was running, Deputy Youth Organiser and Youth Organiser, were postponed until further notice.
In recognition of their contributions to the music industry, Ghanaian Afropiano sensation King Vudumane expresses admiration for Hiplife pioneers such as Obrafour,Tinny, Skrewfaze, and other trailblazers, emphasizing their significant role in elevating Ghanaian music to global prominence in previous years, and he firmly believes that with adequate support, these talented artists have even more to offer.
In a recent viral video, King Vudumane vented his frustrations about why these music pacesetters in the country are not being given the recognition and benefits they deserve.
In the video, King Vudumane expresses his disappointment at the lack of recognition and benefits given to these musicians and calls for a change in the way they are treated.
“I want to know why musicians are not being treated fairly. Unlike the USA or UK, where musicians live off of their royalties, what is the system like in Ghana? I’m concerned.
“It is time for the music industry in Ghana to recognise the contributions of these music pacesetters and to ensure that they are given the recognition and benefits they deserve.
“Only then will they be able to manage a sustainable brand in the entertainment industry and be able to benefit financially from their work,” Vudumane said.
He also advocated that these veteran musicians should be given the royalties due them so they could manage and sustain their careers in the music industry.
Rejection is an unavoidable aspect of the dating process, as individuals have distinct preferences and reasons for accepting or declining romantic advances.
Despite the importance of respecting a woman’s choice, it can be useful to be aware of some typical reasons why she might say ‘no’ to a man outright.
Here are three potential reasons:
Lack of Compatibility:
A woman rejecting a man is frequently done for the perception that they are incompatible.
In order to be compatible, two people must share similar values, interests, aspirations, and lifestyles. A woman might decide it is best to reject a man’s advances if she senses that they do not align with her core values and beliefs.
This can include divergent political or religious beliefs, aspirations for the future, or even dissimilar hobbies and interests.
A relationship can only succeed if the two people involved are truly compatible and have common interests.
Absence of Physical or Emotional Attraction:
Relationships between two people are significantly influenced by their emotional and physical attraction. If a woman does not have a true attraction to a man, she might reject him.
Personal preferences, unique tastes, and chemistry can all have an impact on physical attraction.
Similar to physical attraction, emotional attraction entails a deeper bond based on shared beliefs, a feeling of emotional empathy, and respect for one another.
In order to avoid leading a man on or getting into a relationship without real feelings, a woman may decide to reject a man’s advances if she does not feel any of these attractions toward him.
Prioritizing Independence and Personal Goals:
Many women in contemporary society place a high value on their independence, personal development, and professional goals.
Before settling down in a romantic relationship, some women may decide to give their attention to their own needs, objectives, and personal growth.
In these situations, a woman might decline a man’s advances because she wants to put her own journey first and is not yet ready or willing to devote her time and energy to a romantic relationship.
It is important to respect a woman’s choice and give her the room she requires to pursue her individual goals.
Ghanaian comedian OB Amponsah has highlighted the financial difficulties experienced by comedians, despite the impressive attendance at comedy shows, attributing these challenges to the considerable expenses associated with production, logistics, and taxes, which often hinder comedians from generating substantial profits from their events.
OB in an interview with Joy Entertainment said comedians incur significant debts while organizing shows, only to be further burdened by tax obligations imposed on their earnings.
He expressed his frustration, stating, “You incur a lot of debts and when you are done, you have to go and pay GRA [Ghana Revenue Authority] from your debts. I think it is tough. That is when we start asking what the government has done for us.”
While acknowledging that stand-up comedy is a growing industry, OB Amponsah admitted that breaking even is a challenge for most comedy shows.
However, he remains optimistic about the future and believes that with perseverance, the situation will improve gradually.
OB Amponsah appealed to the relevant authorities to show leniency towards the showbiz industry when it comes to tax payments.
He called for some form of tax relief, especially in cases where grants are not provided to support the sector.
OB’s plea reflected the need for a supportive environment that encourages the growth of the entertainment industry in Ghana.
In response to concerns raised about taxes on complimentary tickets and the request for a tax holiday for emerging entertainment companies, Beatrice Nyawuto, the Principal Revenue Officer at the Debt Management Compliance and Enforcement unit of the GRA, suggested that stakeholders in the creative industry collectively petition the Commissioner General of the GRA to address these issues.
OB Amponsah is known for organizing his comedy specials, while other Ghanaian comedians such as DKB, Comedian Warris, Jacinta, MJ the Comedian, Romanus, Lekzy DeComic, and Putogo, among others, have also played a vital role in keeping the comedy culture alive through their periodic events.
Recently, OB Amponsah and Lekzy DeComic collaborated to stage a show titled ‘Journey to the South’ at the National Theatre on July 1, 2023.
The event showcased their comedic talents and provided an opportunity for comedy enthusiasts to enjoy a night of laughter.
The discussion on taxation in the creative industry, including OB Amponsah’s insights, can be watched in the provided link, where stakeholders in the industry explored the challenges faced by creatives in fulfilling their tax obligations and sought ways to address them.
MOG Beatz, a well-known music producer, has expressed his dissatisfaction and worry about the escalating conflict among his fellow producers in the music business.
The issue came to light after fellow producer Wei Ye Oteng accused a junior producer of sampling songs without giving proper credit, sparking a heated exchange on social media.
In response to a tweet by Wei Ye Oteng that has since been deleted, MOG Beatz, who considers the veteran producer a senior and someone he highly respects, expressed his disappointment.
He stated that this type of behavior is one of the significant reasons why the entertainment industry is facing the challenges it currently does, calling the division among producers ‘appalling.’
MOG Beatz tweeted, “Coming from a veteran music producer and someone I consider a senior… this is very disappointing, tbuh. One of the biggest reasons why our industry dey as e dey. This division amongst fellow producers is appalling!!”
Wei Ye Oteng’s initial tweet shed light on his frustration with lazy producers who engage in stealing and claiming others’ work as their own without giving proper credit.
While he didn’t mention any names, his message highlights the issue of authenticity and plagiarism in the music industry and also encouraged up-and-coming producers to focus on developing their unique styles and not resort to copying others.
Wei Ye Oteng’s tweet read, “Lazy producers all over town, stealing and claiming they are cooking beef. Dude, you stole a whole kitchen to help some cook beef? Just a copy, nothing extra. Give credit. Upcoming producers, keep being original, it pays. Just a matter of time. Shouts to Nathaniel Mensah.”
This comes after Yvonne Nelson released her memoir titled ‘I am Not Yvonne Nelson’, which accused Sarkodie of impregnating the actress and asking her to get an abortion.
Generating anticipation among Ghanaians for rapper Sarkodie’s response, he eventually released a diss track titled ‘Try Me’, produced by MOG Beatz, in which he addressed Yvonne’s accusations of pregnancy and denial.
Luck evaded thirteen illegal miners who were operating in the Bonsa River in the Western Region, as they were all arrested by the Forestry Commission in an operation to clamp down on illegal mining activities, otherwise known as ‘galamsey‘.
The arrest was carried out by the Forestry Commission’s Rapid Response Team (RRT), upon intelligence gathering.
As per reports, the group of suspects consisted of seven individuals from Ghana and six individuals from China.
The arrested Ghanaian suspects have been identified as Halidu Salam, 32; Haruna Sule, 28; Atta Penyin Ayoma, 33; Kofi Taller, 43; Paul Agidi, 32; Amoako Emmanuel, 33; and George Addo.
The Chinese suspects on the other hand are Lua Lin Sie, Lui Chan Nai; Mo Nai Kong, Son Sin; Wei Jia Ping and Niu Wai Sing.
Currently, the suspects are in police custody, according to the Forestry Commission for legal proceedings.
The Rapid Response Team (RRT), made of twenty-one men drawn from four RRTs stationed in Tarkwa, Prestea, Samre conducted an operation in the neighboring communities of Epieso and Atwereboada, which are located on the outskirts of the Bonsa Reserves.
It was within that particular neighborhood that the compartment belonging to Samartax Company Limited was located, serving as the operational base for the suspects.
Aside from the arrest, five excavators and two motorcycles were destroyed by the RRT. The team also destroyed two long housing units and several fuel deposits.
In the interim, the Forestry Commission and the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources have jointly urged the Ghana Police Service to expedite the legal processing of the perpetrators, while also requesting the judiciary to impose stricter penalties on them in accordance with the relevant legislation.
The RRT who embarked on the operation were made up of twenty-one men who drowned from four RRTs stationed at Tarkwa, Prestea, Samreboi and Takoradi.
Afrobeats legends King Promise and Mr. Eazi have endorsed prodigy Olivetheboy to cap off an incredible week for the 20-year-old hitmaker, who was recently named Ghana’s Most Streamed Artiste of 2023 so far.
A video, which has been watched thousands of times already on social media, shows the iconic duo partying away to Goodsin by Olivetheboy on repeat, and singing the song’s famed lyrics word for word each time at The Republic Bar & Grill in Accra.
It is perhaps the most ringing endorsement yet of the rookie singer’s fledgling career.
Back in May 2023, Olivetheboy’s hit single Goodsin broke the internet after a viral challenge on TikTok before going on to become the fastest Ghanaian song by a rookie to hit 10 million streams.
See the video of King Promise and Mr. Eazi endorsing Goodsin by Olivetheboy below:
Ghana’s young star Yaw Tog has boasted about the accomplishments he has made since beginning his music career as he gains wider recognition following the release of “Sore” in 2021.
The 20-year-old rapper claims that he has accomplished some things in life that he cannot boast about having compared to his coworkers and peers his age.
In a video shared by thosecalledcelebss on Instagram, Yaw Tog bragged that looking at his age and the things he has achieved so far, he is grateful because some of his friends haven’t reached that height yet.
“I have acquired a lot of things that my age mates do not have. I am 20 years and I have certain things my mates do not have. I feel like God has been so good to me; he has helped me achieve some things in life”, he said.
Some of the achievements the singer said he has acquired which some of his age mates haven’t attained yet include a music career, his own record label, and the Tog Life Foundation, with the latter, which he uses to reach out to the poor and needy.
“I have something that I cherish and appreciate. I have my music career; I have a lot. I have my record label which is Tog Life Music and I have the Tog Life Foundation, which focuses on helping the needy. Recently we distributed books to some public and private schools so we just helping people”, he said.
Yaw Tog appeared in the music scene in 2019 and some of his released songs include, ‘Sophia’, ‘Y33gye’, ‘Fake Ex’ and the popular song, ‘Sore’ remix which featured Ghana’s very own, Kwesi Arthur and British rapper, Stormzy.
The young rapper’s works have been recognised in the music industry and as a result of that, he took home the ‘Best Hip-Pop Song of the Year award at the 2021 Vodafone Ghana Music Awards (VGMA) event.
The Ghana Police have arrested Nuhu Sulley, a scrap dealer who gained instant notoriety after stealing the iPhone of American rapper Meek Mill during his visit to Ghana for the Afronation Concert in December 2022.
According to a report by Adomonline.com, Sulley was arrested for stealing a phone valued at GH¢4,000 from a medical officer at Madina.
He was charged with conspiracy to steal and stealing at the Adentan Circuit Court but pleaded not guilty before the court.
Prosecutors reveal that Sulley was not alone in the act, his accomplice identified as Junior, is currently at large.
Sulley has been granted bail in the sum of GH¢100,000 with three sureties, and he is expected to reappear in court on July 20 while the police continue their search for the accomplice.
If readers would recall, Nuhu Sule was granted a bail of GH¢50,000 with two sureties who are supposed to be public officers after he stole an iPhone 14 pro max from Meek Mill.
He was arrested after he returned the iPhone 14 pro max which went missing during the hip-hop artist’s visit to Ghana during the Christmas season.
Though the victim expressed disinterest in the matter, the state charged Nuhu Sule with counts of stealing.
Ghanaian rapper, Sarkodie has announced he is taking some time off.
In a Twitter post on July 3, 2023, the Try Me hit rapper, revealed that he is taking time off. In the tweet, Sarkodie wrote; “Time off”.
The tweet from Sarkodie did not explicitly state why he is taking time off or from what he is taking time off, but subsequent posts on Twitter by both he and his wife Tracy Sarkcess suggest that the couple may be travelling and spending time with their families.
Watch video of Sarkodie and Tracy having a good time
The rapper has recently been in the news following the publication of ‘I Am Not Yvonne Nelson’, a memoir by famed actress, Yvonne Nelson which she opened up about aborting a child, she conceived with Sarkodie, and also for his response to her explosive memoir through his song, ‘Try me’.
Sarkodie’s declaration was met with mixed feelings as most of his many fans had a lot of questions for him. While others were wondering why he is taking time off, a section of them wanted answers as to why his music ‘Try Me’ has been taken off some relevant music streaming platforms.
‘Game of Thrones’ alums Kit Harington and Rose Leslie have welcomed baby number two.
“They’re delighted to have welcomed a little girl into the family,” the actor’s rep told PageSix.
The couple have been together since meeting and falling in love on the set of the HBO show in 2011.
The co-stars dated on and off until Harington, 36, got down on one knee in 2017.
The duo tied the knot in June of the following year.
While the couple has remained private throughout their relationship, Leslie, also 36, confirmed in September 2020 that they were starting a family.
(WireImage)
The news came one year after Harington entered rehab for stress and alcohol use, a decision he later confirmed he felt “really happy” about.
“You feel that there’s no way out. That’s just who you are,” the Golden Globe nominee told the Sunday Times in August 2021. “And getting sober is the process of going, ‘No, I can change.’”
Harington became a dad earlier that same year, but he and Leslie have yet to disclose their baby boy’s name.
The duo have been married since June 2018. Getty Images
In February, the Emmy nominee revealed that his wife was pregnant with baby No. 2 during a “Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” interview.
“The reality check comes much shorter,” he said. “You get practical real quick.”
Although his little one didn’t “conceptually” understand that he was about to “get a brother or sister,” Harington and Leslie were trying to prepare him for “the shock of his life.”
The “7 Days in Hell” star explained, “We point to Rose’s tummy and we say, ‘Mommy’s baby.’ And he points at his tummy and says, ‘My baby.’”
A video of the late James Lutterodt, a notable contestant in the 2021 National Science and Math Quiz (NSMQ), has left social media users in tears.
In the video, James and his friends were in a hostel enjoying a box of pizza.
The deceased, who had the box on his lap, was heard giving a shout-out as his colleagues cheered him on amidst laughter and screams.
This follows the untimely demise of the brilliant young student on Monday.
Though the exact cause of death has not been made known publicly, there are speculations he died of food poisoning.
James, along with his teammates Francisca Lamini and Bright Senyo Godzo, represented Keta Senior High School (Ketasco) in the competition and captivated viewers with their exceptional performance throughout the contest, leading them to the finale.
Ghanaians who have been left in shock have poured in tributes to honour James for the memories he left especially in the NSMQ.
Watch video video
A video of James Lutterodt with his roommates…the guy was very friendly May his soul rest in peace 💔🕊️ pic.twitter.com/G2mLKJz0D3
National Democratic Congress (NDC) stalwarts on Tuesday, July 4, 2023, set aside all other engagements to gather at Parliament and offer their resolute support to their ‘darling boy’, James Gyakye Quayson, as he was being sworn-in in Parliament
Former President John Dramani Mahama who is also the flagbearer of the party, National Chairman of the party, Johnson Asiedu Nketiah, General Secretary, Fiifi Kwetey, among others, were all present to grace the occasion. Their presence was announced by the Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin.
The MP in the past few years had been entangled in a legal battle over his failure to revoke his dual citizenship prior to the conduct of the December 7, 2020 general elections.
On May 13, 2023, the Supreme Court directed Parliament to expunge Mr Gyakye Quayson from the records of the house, and declare his seat vacant.
The directive led to a by-election, which Mr Quayson eventually won.
As he was being sworn in on Tuesday, his fellow MPs on the Minority side were in their numbers to support him.
The NDC MPs, all clad in white, greeted the re-elected MP for Assin North with exuberant cheers and resounding applause as he prepared to take his oath of office in Parliament on Tuesday, July 4, 2023.
However, most members on the Majority side did not show up for the event.
Meanwhile, the MP is still in court facing charges of perjury and deceiving a public officer after the Supreme Court nullified his election as MP for Assin North for holding Canadian citizenship and being a Ghanaian when he filed his nomination to contest the election in 2020.
Francisca Lamini, a former student of Keta Senior High Technical School, has spoken out about the passing of James Lutterodt, a friend and former classmate, whose untimely death was reported on Monday, July 3.
In an Instagram post, she shared an old photo of the Keta SHTS 2021 NSMQ team with the caption ‘James why”.The photo was’ accompanied by a broken heart emoji
James and Francisca both competed on behalf of Keta SHTS in the National Science and Maths Quiz, where they made school history by becoming the first students ever to advance to the finals.
Prior to the tragic event, James Lutterodt, a level 200 student majoring in computer science at the University of Ghana, was said to have won a scholarship to Howard University in the United States.