Author: Chris Kodo

  • Your govt printed GHC54bn since you came to office – Ato Forson tells Akufo-Addo

    Your govt printed GHC54bn since you came to office – Ato Forson tells Akufo-Addo

    Minority Leader, Dr Cassiel Ato Forson, has alleged that the Akufo-Addo-led government printed about GHC 54 billion to fund its activities between the period 2022 and the first quarter of 2023

    He said this is one of the factors that have largely contributed to the economic crisis currently being experienced. 

    “Ghana is witnessing hyper inflation largely because Mr President your government allowed the Bank of Ghana to print GHC50 billion for the year 2022 and another GHC 4 billion in the year 2023 first quarter.

    “Mr President let it be noted that this expenditure financed public expenditure on your over bloated government expenditure,” he stated.

    Speaking on the floor of Parliament after President Akufo-Addo delivered the 2023 State of the Nation’s, the Minority Leader dismissed the government’s claim that the current economic crisis is not its doing.

    During his address, President Akufo-Addo had alluded that COVID-19 and the Russian-Ukraine war were the leading factors hampering economic development in the country. 

    Baffled by this claim, Cassiel Ato Forson , accused the government of plunging the country into an economic crisis. 

    “Our position is that Inflation is currently rising, monetary policy rate is at 280%. Ghana cedis has depreciated by 20% in January alone, Mr President unemployment is exceedingly high and as we speak, lending rate is at 40%. 

    “Our economy is in falters largely because it is self- Inflicted and your and government have failed to act and this is the true State of our nation,” he added.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • UK awakens to a snowy blanket and Frigid blasts

    UK awakens to a snowy blanket and Frigid blasts

    Early this morning, snow began to fall across London, the west of England, and south Wales. Further snow is expected.

    Yellow warnings are still in effect for a major portion of the UK, so the Arctic blast is expected to persist.

    Today may bring showers of snow, sleet, ice, and hail, with the northern shores of Scotland, south Wales, and southern England likely to be struck.

    The Met Office has issued a warning that commuters will experience travel delays over the next days and that power outages may occur.

    The weather may cut off rural areas in the north, and the British public has been urged to check on elderly relatives.

    Further warnings or updates are ‘very likely’, as some regions experience sub-zero temperatures through the coming week.

    The UK Health and Security Agency has already issued a Level 3 Cold Weather Alert for the whole of England.

    Image Licensed to i-Images Picture Agency. 08/03/2023. Tonbridge , United Kingdom. Snow in Tonbridge, Kent. Picture by Stephen Lock / i-Images
    Several inches of snow fell in Tonbridge, Kent
    ?? Licensed to London News Pictures 08/03/2023. Bromley, UK. Heavy snow this morning in Bromley in South East London. A Yellow weather warning is in place across the UK for snow and freezing cold temperatures. Photo credit:Grant Falvey/LNP
    A car is covered in Bromley, Greater London

    An early morning radar shows rain moving in from the south and west which increasingly turns to sleet and snow as it pushes north and east.

    Matthew Lehnert, chief meteorologist at the Met, said: ‘Snow, ice and low temperatures are the main themes of this week’s forecast, with the UK under an Arctic maritime air mass.

    ‘Snow could lead to some travel disruption, with a chance some rural communities in the north could be cut off.

    ‘The focus for the snow moves to southern England and South Wales and some may wake up to a few centimetres of snow, with the south coast and far south-west likely to see a mix of rain and sleet. 

    ‘Further snow and hail showers are also expected along northern coasts, especially in northern Scotland.’

    Through Thursday and Friday the snow risk spreads, to central and northern areas of the UK, Met Office deputy chief meteorologist Helen Caughey said.

    ‘Parts of Northern Ireland, Wales and northern England are expected to see the worst of the conditions develop from early on Thursday, with parts of Scotland and northern England then seeing snow arrive through Thursday afternoon’, she said.

    ‘Snow across the northern half of the UK will persist through much of Friday, while further south, any snow will turn back to rain through Thursday afternoon and evening.

    Snow falls in Berkshire
    Snow falls in the early morning, covering gardens in Berkshire
    Heavy snowfall in London
    People walk in Westminster, as a yellow weather warning for snow and ice is in place for large parts of the UK (Picture: Ben Cawthra/LNP)

    ‘Strong winds are also expected to develop through Thursday and Friday which may create drifting snow and blizzard conditions in places.’

    Pensioners and anyone with an underlying health condition should heat their home to at least 18C, head of extreme events and health protection at UKHSA, Dr Agostinho Sousa, has warned.

    Meanwhile, Dale Hipkiss, national network manager at National Highways, has urged people to pack extra provisions in vehicles in case they become stranded.

    ‘Keeping a kit of essential items like a torch and warm clothes, in your vehicle, can be vital in case you and your passengers become stranded in winter’, he said.

    ‘Freezing conditions bring so many hazards, such as snow and ice, and take every possible step to understand your journey in advance and allow lots of extra time when travelling to prepare for the unexpected.’

  • Graduate finally home as her arteries were sliced by a chiropractor, paralyzing her

    Graduate finally home as her arteries were sliced by a chiropractor, paralyzing her

    After nearly eight months of therapy after a chiropractor severed four of her arteries, Caitlin Jensen is now residing in a new home with handicap accessibility

    After eight months of treatment, a recent graduate who saw a chiropractor for lower back pain and left with four damaged arteries and paralysis has returned home.

    Caitlin Jensen, 29, experienced heart attacks and strokes following a visit with Dr. TJ Harpham on June 16 for back and neck problems brought on by long hours of studying.
    The Georgia Southern University alumna was released from a rehab center on February 16 after regaining the ability to move her head, arms, and legs.

    Her mother, Darlene Jensen, has shared photos of Caitlin’s long road to recovery on a GoFundMe page that raised enough money for a new, handicap accessible home for her. Despite her condition, Caitlin appears to be smiling in several pictures that show her in a wheelchair, in bed and doing physical therapy.

    ‘It struck me tonight that Caitlin will return home a week from today – exactly 8 months to the day from the morning she went to the chiropractor,’ Darlene wrote in a February 9 update.

    Caitlin Jensen was paralyzed after suffering strokes when a chiropractor severed four of her arteries
    Caitlin Jensen was paralyzed after suffering strokes when a chiropractor severed four of her arteries
    Caitlin Jensen was taken by ambulance from the chiropractor's office to the hospital
    Caitlin Jensen was taken by ambulance from the chiropractor’s office to the hospital

    ‘She will return to a different life, but the most important part in all of this is that she still has a life!

    ‘When she was laying in the Neuro ICU unit in June, we didn’t know if that would be the case, or what her cognitive capacity would be if she did make it. Bringing her home next week is a gift of hope.’

    Caitlin earned a degree in chemistry and biology and had spent more than a year working at the Sitka Science Center in Alaska with high career aspirations.

    After the chiropractor adjusted Caitlin’s neck, she quickly started feeling sick and was rushed by ambulance from the appointment office to a hospital. Tests showed that she had brain bleed. She had a stroke that caused cardiac arrest and lost her pulse for more than 10 minutes before being revived, according to the GoFundMe page.

    Caitlin Jensen has a new home that his handicap accessible after a GoFundMe fundraiser garnered more than $100,000
    Caitlin Jensen has a new home that his handicap accessible after a GoFundMe fundraiser garnered more than $100,000 (Picture: Facebook)

    Caitlin underwent surgery and doctors discovered that four of her arteries were dissected. They repaired some of the tears and put a stent in one of her arteries. She was in a neuro intensive care unit at a hospital in Savannah, Georgia, and was still in critical condition a month later.

    The GoFundMe, created on June 22, has raised more than $166,300 as of Tuesday evening. Darlene used the funds to buy a new home for Caitlin that has outdoor wheelchair rails and other accessibility elements.

    ‘Caitlin now has a space that is accessible for her, and is also lovely to be in. It is a home of healing, with space to put her equipment, and a space that will grow and evolve with her changing needs,’ wrote Darlene in a March 5 update.

    ‘It is also a space of streamlined function and practicality from a caregiver’s standpoint, all while being beautiful at the same time.’

  • GBA to hold boxing seminar for sports journalists

    GBA to hold boxing seminar for sports journalists

    The Ghana Boxing Authority (GBA) in collaboration with the Boxing Writers Association of Ghana (BWAG), will organise a one-day special seminar for sports journalists. 

    The seminar fixed for Thursday, March 9, would be held at the Mudor Conference Hall, Bukom Boxing Arena, Accra. 

    In an interview with GNA Sports, Mr. Mohammed Amin Lamptey Public Communication Manager of GBA, said he was convinced many people would be attending to learn the new trends and the terminologies applied in boxing. 

    He said since boxing was the number one sport that had achieved much at the World and Olympic Games level for Ghana, “it is time to recognize the main practitioners of the sport, including boxers, coaches, the GBA President and Executive Board members as well as the Boxing Supporters Union (GHABSU) and the media who spread the message and promote the game”. 

    He noted that participants would learn the skills and technology in scoring as well as the safety of boxers.  

    He said the first ten journalists would receive a special gift from Boxinghana.com. 

    He said, Nana Odiasempa Abena Ayebea Okani I Asumka hemaa Queen Mother of Adukrom Akuapim, a keen boxing enthusiast would be the special guest of honor.  

    Coacgh Ofori Asare the Head Coach of the National Boxing Team and Olympic Games Bronze Medal winner would be present to share experience with participants. 

    Also, the Executives of the BWAG would be introduced at the seminar. 

    The seminar is supported by Imax Boxing Promotions, Techno, Max Buy, TCL, Renault, Healthy Life, TT Brothers and Renault.  

    Others were the Ghana Olympic Committee (GOC) and the National Sports Authority, regulators of sports in Ghana.  

    The media partners include Max TV, Max Radio, Happy Sports, Daily Guide, Graphic Communications, Ghana News Agency (GNA), Ghanaian Times, Ghanaweb, Modernghana.com, Newsghana.com, amaghanaonline.com, Boxing Ghana, Ultimatesportsgh.com, African Sports Media Network, Asaaseaban.com, Kasapa FM, GTV Sports Plus and others.  

  • SONA 2023: Things are improving – Akufo-Addo

    SONA 2023: Things are improving – Akufo-Addo

     President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has said that Ghana has made enough progress in the past six years despite the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia war in Ukraine.

    He said this progress could be seen across the different sectors of the economy including infrastructure, health, security, agriculture, tourism, mining and the petroleum sector.

    Delivering the State of the Nation Address to Parliament on Wednesday, the President said although the present economic situation of the country was difficult, his government was determined and has taken the needed steps to quickly stabilize the economy and work it back to the period of rapid economic growth.

    “Things may be dire today, nonetheless, we must count our blessings. Our petrol stations have fuel, and we have been spared long, winding queues to fuel our vehicles.

    “Our markets and shops are, by the Grace of God, well-stocked, and we have not been faced with the prospect of the rationing of basic necessities such as fruits and vegetables. Our children’s schooling has not been interrupted. We have continued to provide Free SHS, Free TVET and pay teacher and nursing training allowances.

    “Our electricity supply has been consistent, and we have been spared the hardship of Dumsor during such a trying time. Our country continues to be stable and at peace,” he said.

    Below is the full text of the State of the Nation Address delivered to Parliament

    Mr Speaker, I am glad to be here in this august House to perform, once again, one of the most pleasant duties on the calendar of the President of the Republic, that is, to give Honourable Members and the Ghanaian people a Message on the State of the Nation, in fulfilment of article 67 of the Constitution.

    In accordance with protocol and convention, it is good to see that my wife, the First Lady Rebecca Akufo-Addo, Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia, Spouse of Mr. Speaker, Mrs. Alice Adjua Yornas Bagbin, Chief Justice Kwasi Anin-Yeboah, and Justices of the Supreme Court, Chairperson Nana Otuo Siriboe II and Members of the Council of State, Chief of Staff of the Office of the President, Hon. Akosua Frema Osei Opare, and officials of the presidency, Chief of Defence Staff, Vice Admiral Seth Amoama, the Inspector General of Police, Dr. George Akuffo Dampare, and the various Service Chiefs, are all present. Mr. Speaker, the House is also duly honoured by the welcome attendance of the former Presidents of the Republic, their Excellencies John Agyekum Kufuor and John Dramani Mahama, former First Lady, Her Excellency Nana Konadu Agyemang Rawlings, and the Dean and Members of the Diplomatic Corps.

    Mr. Speaker, it is the 8th of March today, and that means it is International Women’s Day, the day set aside globally to honour all women. Please allow me to acknowledge and appreciate the significance of the day, and heartily congratulate women all over the world, and especially women in Ghana, for the role they play in realising the dreams, cares and aspirations of humankind and of this great nation. The presence of women leaders, at both the local and national fronts, have advanced rights, enhanced equality, and, in general, improved the living standards and quality of lives of all concerned, including that of men. The theme for this year recognises and celebrates women who are championing the advancement of transformative technology and digital education.

    Mr Speaker, apart from my own personal fond memories as a member of this House, Parliament stands as a symbol of our democracy and its values. It stands as a reminder to all of us that our country has chosen to travel on the path of democracy, and at the heart of that journey is the idea that the government can only govern with the consent of the people.

    Mr. Speaker, it is important that we stress this point because after thirty years of democratic practice, we may be tempted to take it for granted. We need to remind ourselves that our compatriots, the majority of whom are in their early adulthood, have no personal recollection of the struggles that got us to this point in our development. In the same way that only a small percentage of our population can recall life under colonial rule, similarly the memory of dictatorship, one party rule and military rule is receding into the dim past, and the struggles that have brought us so far are disappearing into the recesses of history.

    However, because Parliament directly represents the citizens of our nation in this hallowed chamber, it will always be the reminder of those struggles. It is important we never forget that democracy is not a static achievement, but a process that needs continuous nurturing. Indeed, Mr Speaker, we must remind ourselves that, in our country’s political history, it is the restoration of Parliament to its proper place that has always symbolised the restoration of power to the people. And dare I say that when constitutional rule is interrupted, it is Parliament that is shut down, the other arms of government continue to operate.

    Thirty years ago, this House convened for the first time to mark the commencement of the Fourth Republic. The early years of the return to democracy were fraught with challenges, but the years have seen the deepening of our democratic culture to a point where a candidate of the minority side in Parliament, today, presides as the Speaker.

    This is no mean achievement. Given the way the numbers shaped up in this House after the 2020 elections, many cynics and sceptics predicted a doomsday scenario for this Parliament, but instead of a meltdown, we have witnessed considerable cooperation and unity of purpose among all parties and factions. This is to a large extent a measure of the maturity of our political culture and democracy. We will need even more of such bipartisan maturity to meet the challenges confronting us at this time.

    Today, we live in a country in which we enjoy complete freedom of expression, freedom of association, freedom of assembly, freedom of religion and political affiliation. Indeed, freedom of speech has now reached such heights that even members of the diplomatic corps feel able to join in our national discourse, and pronounce on matters that would be problematic for Ghanaian diplomats in their countries of origin. Nevertheless, Mr Speaker, it seems to me the important thing in our free speech environment is actually to try and hear each other, instead of raising the decibel level of our individual points of view.

    Mr. Speaker, to come before this House to deliver a Message on the State of the Nation is a symbol and practical demonstration of accountability, and I have always treated the occasion with utmost respect. This address offers us, as usual, the opportunity to provide an honest assessment of our country’s situation, and seek the support of all in addressing it with hope and confidence.

    Mr Speaker, when we make an assessment of what the state of our nation is, it would necessarily have to include what state it was in yesterday, the state it is in today and what state it would be in tomorrow, based on reasonable grounds of expectations.

    How far back should we be looking to make a judgement on the state of affairs today?

    Mr. Speaker, I believe that the issue, above all, that is, quite properly, dominating the concerns of all Ghanaians is the gravity of the economic situation of our country, and how we can quickly stabilise the economy, and work our way back to the period of rapid economic growth. Our currency has been buffeted, our inflation rate has been very high, and, for the first time in our lives, debt exchanges have become the language of everyday conversation.

    As such, Mr. Speaker, I wish to make a departure from the usual format of Messages on the State of the Nation, and concentrate, predominantly, on the economy, which will enable me, nonetheless, also to make some statements about the state of our agriculture, education, energy, health, infrastructure, mining, tourism and security. This is not to belittle the contribution of the other sectors to the growth of our country, but I believe the exigencies of the moment justify the position I am taking, particularly as all sector Ministers continue to provide official updates on happenings in their respective sectors.

    I have said, and many others, including the Managing Director of the IMF, have said that our economy was doing well until COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine took us off course.

    Maybe, because of the severity of the present difficulties, or maybe because it suits their preconceived agenda, some people are unwilling to accept that we were on a good trajectory until the arrival of COVID-19. The Ghanaian people, however, accepted this proposition, as evidenced in the results of the 2020 presidential election, which were unanimously endorsed and upheld by the seven-member panel of the Supreme Court.

    Mr Speaker, allow me to go back on a short trip down memory lane, and remind ourselves what things looked like back at the beginning of 2020, when I came to this House to give an account on the state of our nation.

    This is what I told this House on 20th February 2020, and I quote: “Mr. Speaker, in three years we have reduced inflation to its lowest level (7.8% in January 2020) since 1992. For the first time in over forty (40) years, we have had a fiscal deficit below five percent (5%) of GDP for three years in a row. For the first time in over twenty (20) years, the balance of trade (that is the difference between our exports and imports) has been in surplus for three (3) consecutive years.

    Our current account deficit is shrinking, interest rates are declining, and the average annual rate of depreciation of the cedi is at its lowest for any first term government in the Fourth Republic. Our economic growth has rebounded to place Ghana among the fastest growing economies in the world for three years in a row at an annual average of 7%, up from 3.4% in 2016, the lowest in nearly three decades.
    The international investor community has recognised this development, resulting in Ghana, today, being the largest recipient of foreign direct investment in West Africa. The sovereign credit ratings agencies have upgraded our ratings, and also improved the outlook for this year, notwithstanding the fact that it is an election year.”

    Mr Speaker, that was where we were at the end of February 2020.

    Three weeks after this speech, in which I expressed our sympathies and solidarity with China on the difficulties they were having with a new virus, our world changed. The virus, I referred to, arrived in our country and in the rest of the world with a vengeance.

    Within weeks, we were in the middle of a lockdown, our airports and land borders were closed. Schools and factories and even markets were closed. The hospitality industry was brought to its knees. Our economy, like much of the rest of the world, went into a tailspin.

    We took many decisions, we did many things which, according to the science, were the most reliable and trusted ways to save lives and livelihoods at the time, which may look strange and unnecessary today, but that is from the safe perspective of not waking up to check on the COVID-19 infection or death rate.

    Indeed, there were some who suggested that we cancel the national identification registration exercise, and even postpone the 2020 general elections.

    Who would have thought that, today, anybody will be questioning the fumigation of schools and markets? I recall, vividly, the straight talking I received from a group of our most eminent physicians and other scientists on the urgency of fumigating all public spaces, including offices, schools, hospitals, markets, churches and mosques. The few who could afford it fumigated their homes.

    Today, the science might be that such measures make no difference to the spread of the virus, but criminality or reckless spending cannot be ascribed to the decision to undertake such measures.

    Mr Speaker, you might remember that we could not produce veronica buckets fast enough. Today, it is not an obligatory item on anyone’s list of purchases.

    In dealing with the crisis generally, I did not meet anyone brave enough to suggest that considerations of money should be a hindrance to anything we needed to do in the fight against the virus.

    I was and I am grateful that the people of Ghana rose to the occasion and, together, we went through the crisis and came out well by defying the doomsday predictions about the inevitability of dead bodies on our streets. I am grateful that we saw the wisdom in helping each other, and I thank those who contributed their expertise, time and energy to the fight against the virus, and I thank those who contributed to the COVID-19 fund that was set up to help us meet some of the expenditures.
    The economic consequences from the pandemic have been devastating.

    Mr Speaker, it is precisely because the economic fallout from the pandemic is so widespread and long lasting that it is important to show clearly that the COVID funds were not misused. It is critical that we do not lose the confidence of the people that a crisis that they were led to believe we were all in together was abused for personal gain.

    Mr Speaker, it was Government that asked for the COVID funds to be audited, and I can assure this House that nothing dishonourable was done with the COVID funds. The responses from the Ministers for Health and Finance, on January 23 and 25, 2023, respectively, have sufficiently laid to rest the queries from the Auditor General’s report, and I believe any objective scrutiny of these statements from the Health and Finance Ministries would justify this conclusion.

    We provided five hundred and eighteen million cedis (GH¢518 million) of grants and loans to micro, small and medium-scale enterprises (MSMEs) through the NBSSI, now the Ghana Enterprise Agency, in which three hundred and two thousand, five hundred and fifteen (302,515) enterprises benefitted, of which sixty percent (60%) were women-owned. These were MSMEs that were in distress as a result of the pandemic. For some traders, the receipt of one thousand cedis (GH¢1,000) made the difference between the ruin of the household and survival.

    In addition, fifty-eight thousand and forty-one (58,041) health workers were employed to supplement the existing health sector workforce. Subsequently, all of them have been absorbed as permanent workers in the health sector. Frontline health workers were also granted fifty percent (50%) tax relief for the period. Was that something to regret? We should be forever grateful for the work that so many people did to keep all of us safe. All households enjoyed free water supply and huge discounts on electricity bills, because access to water was a necessity to ensure people adhered to hygiene practices, and access to electricity was important as everybody was encouraged to stay at home. It also provided an economic cushion to protect lives and livelihoods at a time of difficulty. Today, the government support for utility bills is being projected by some as a waste or to use that word, so beloved of some commentators, profligate.

    Mr Speaker, the government took a deliberate decision to try and keep the inevitable disruptions across all our lives down to a minimum in the education sector, by opening schools and education institutions as soon as it was made safe to do so. It was an expensive undertaking and not universally popular.
    But faced with the prospect of a whole generation of our children losing irreplaceable years of education, and the real likelihood of many of them dropping out of school forever, we took the brave decision to open the institutions.

    Even then, it is worth pointing out that the school year has not fully returned to the predictable pre-covid calendar. After the event, some might be tempted to forget the volumes of sanitizer and other logistics it took to keep the schools open and safe, in much the same way as some might now choose to forget the vitriol that came from some who should have known better, threatening hell and damnation when, according to them, the children start dying in the schools.

    Mercifully, we did not lose a single child to COVID in school. I would like to suggest that, with the best will in the world, Mr Speaker, no auditor can put a figure on the cost of keeping the children in school safely during that crisis, nor the continuing cost of the effect of the pandemic on our young people; not the financial cost, not the emotional cost, and certainly not the social cost. But we must thank the Almighty that we have survived to repair the damage, and begin to rebuild our economy.

    Beyond the use of COVID funds, there are legitimate questions being asked about how the country’s debt situation got where it is.

    Mr Speaker, let me state emphatically that we have not been reckless in borrowing and in spending. It is worth noting that the debts we are servicing were not only contracted during the period of this administration.

    Mr Speaker, we have spent money on things that are urgent, to build roads and bridges and schools, to train our young people and equip them to face a competitive world. Considering the amount of work that still needs to be done on the state of our roads, the bridges that have to be built, considering the number of classrooms that need to be built, the furniture and equipment needs at all stages of education, considering the number of children who should be in school and are not, considering the number of towns and villages that still do not have access to potable water, I daresay no one can suggest we have over borrowed or spent recklessly.

    Yes, I have been in a hurry to get things done, and this includes massive developments in agriculture, education, health, irrigation, roads, rails, ports, airports, sea defence, digitisation, social protection programmes, industrialisation and tourism. We can be justifiably proud of the many things we have managed to do in the past six (6) years. As I go around the country, I hear the pleas for roads, schools, hospitals, and, as the rainy season comes, I wish, as every other Ghanaian does, that we would have built more drains than we have. And I wish we had the resources to do more.

    But, Mr Speaker, I am proud of the amount of work that we have done, especially in the road sector. Roads constitute the largest number of questions asked in this House by Members of Parliament; a large amount of the monies we borrow are for road construction. Shall we dare stop constructing roads?

    Mr Speaker, I would like to state categorically that this Government has built more roads than any government in the history of the 4th Republic, and Mr. Speaker, the details of all these roads are attached in the annex to this Message. I have done so because, last year, when I made a similar pronouncement, I was met with howls and gasps of incredulity from the Minority benches, and so I thought it appropriate, this time, to present it as an annex to the Statement, which will be part of Hansard.

    Beyond the construction of roads, Mr Speaker, this NPP administration has implemented successfully a National Identification System with the Ghanacard; constructed more railways than any other government in the Fourth Republic; established the Zongo Development Fund to address the needs of Zongo and inner-city communities; and under their auspices, we have constructed more infrastructure in the Zongo Communities than any other government in the Fourth Republic; constructed more NCA licensed fibre optic cable than any other government in the fourth republic (93% of total); increased the proportion of the population with access to toilet facilities from 33% to 59%; increased the number of public libraries from 61 from independence until 2017 to 115 in 2022; provided more equipment (vehicles, ammunition, etc) to security services than any other government in the Fourth Republic.

    We have successfully implemented the digital address system; improved significantly the financing of governance and anti-corruption MDAs like the Ministry of Justice and Office of the Attorney General, NCCE, CHRAJ, EOCO etc.; implemented One District, One Factory Initiative.

    In four years, 106 companies are in operation under 1D1F. 148 factories under construction. This is the largest expansion of that sector since independence; constructed more fish landing sites than any other government in the Fourth Republic; established Africa’s first national scale electronic pharmacy platform; provided free Wifi to 700 senior high schools, the 46 Colleges of Education, 260 district education offices, and an initial successful pilot of 13 public universities; introduced drones in the delivery of critical medicine, vaccines and blood to people in remote parts of the country and today, Ghana has the largest medical drone delivery service in the world with six Zipline Distribution Centres in Omenako, Mpanya, Vobsi, Sefwi Wiawso, Kete Krachi and Anum; and overseen an improvement in revenue collection, with the introduction of an e-VAT and e-Invoicing System.

    For example, figures from nineteen (19) taxpaying companies onboarded unto the e-Vat system revealed total recorded monthly sales increasing from two hundred and twenty-two million cedis (GH¢222 million) in November 2021 to seven hundred and twenty million cedis (GH¢720 million) in November 2022. Again, in December 2021, total monthly sales of two hundred and eighty-four million cedis (GH¢284 million) also saw a huge increase to one billion cedis (GH¢1 billion) in December 2022.

    Indeed, the evidence of how state funds have been used to improve our society is all over the country. No district or constituency has been left out. And I believe there are many Ghanaians who will vehemently disagree when some say there is nothing to show for all the funds that have been at my government’s disposal.

    Mr. Speaker, I would like, at this stage, to brief the House on how the talks with the International Monetary Fund have been going since the announcement on 1st July 2022 of our intention to engage the IMF for a funded Programme.

    Mr. Speaker, having reached the Staff Level Agreement on 12th December, 2022, after five (5) months of intense negotiations, and completion of most of the prior actions required under the Agreement, we are on course for the IMF Staff to present to the IMF Executive Board Ghana’s Programme request for a three billion dollar (US$3 billion) Extended Credit Facility by the end of the month.

    Mr. Speaker, the 3-year IMF Programme, anchored on Government’s Post COVID-19 Programme for Economic Growth (PC-PEG), aims at restoring macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability, whilst protecting the vulnerable. It is a strong reform programme, which relies on frontloaded fiscal measures to increase domestic resource mobilisation and streamline public expenditures to support inclusive growth and enhance social protection.

    Mr. Speaker, I thank the House for its support throughout this process, including the passage of key revenue laws. However, a few more of these measures, namely Income Tax (Amendment) Bill, Excise Duty & Excise Tax Stamp (Amendment) Bills, as well as the Growth and Sustainability Levy Bill, are outstanding, which need the urgent attention of the House and passage to complete the prior actions. This will put us in readiness for our presentation to the Fund Board, and, more importantly, bolster our domestic revenue mobilisation efforts.

    Mr. Speaker, it is clear that, given the extent of the fiscal and debt sustainability issue we are addressing, fiscal adjustment and structural reforms are not sufficient for restoration of debt sustainability. A critical component of the measures we are implementing to address the current economic crisis is the debt operation, involving both domestic debt and external debt. The debt operation is aimed at returning the country to debt sustainable path by 2028, by reducing the debt-to-GDP ratio on a general classification basis and, in present value terms, from one hundred and three percent (103%) in 2022 to fifty-five percent (55%) by 2028; and reducing the external debt service-to-revenue ratio from twenty-nine percent (29%) in 2022 to eighteen percent (18%) by 2028.

    Mr. Speaker, in order to achieve these goals, the decision was taken to execute a Domestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP), in addition to fiscal adjustment, external debt operation and structural reforms.

    The participation rate of eighty-five percent (85%), representing tendered bonds of eighty-three billion cedis (GH¢83 billion) out of the total eligible bonds of ninety-seven point seven billion cedis (GH¢97,749,624,691), constitutes significant success for the DDE Programme. The eighty-three billion cedis (GH¢83 billion) bonds that were successfully tendered, also, represents sixty-four percent (64%) of the outstanding domestic debt stock of one hundred and thirty billion cedis (GH¢130 billion) at the end of December 2022, as pension funds have been expressly exempted from the DDEP.

    I want to take this opportunity to thank organised labour, pensioners, pension fund managers, the Ghana Association of Banks (GAB), Ghana Securities Industry Association (GSIA), Ghana Insurers Association (GIA), the Individual Bond Holders and Retirees Forum, and all others who have contributed to make the Domestic Debt Exchange Programme a success.

    Mr. Speaker, I know it has been said over and over again in the past few weeks, but the voluntary nature of the DDE Programme bears repeating, as is the fact that the Government is committed to honouring all coupon payments and maturities in respect of both old bonds and the new bonds in line with Government fiscal commitments.

    Mr. Speaker, we are also making progress on the external debt negotiations since the Government announced an external debt service suspension on 19th December 2022 for certain categories of external debt, to ensure an orderly restructuring. This suspension is an interim emergency measure toward a comprehensive external debt operation which will contribute to the restoration of our debt sustainability in line with our request for a debt treatment under the G20 Common Framework. I want to express our appreciation to the members of the Paris Club and to the Peoples’ Republic of China for the co-operation they have so far exhibited to us in attempting to reach an agreement, and in their attempt to establish an Official Credit Committee.
    We look forward to their fast-tracking the needed financing assurances for IMF approval. We are confident that, with their co-operation, we will reach our March deadline for going to the Fund.

    Mr. Speaker, we remain resolute in our vision to restore macroeconomic stability and promote inclusive growth.

    Mr Speaker, Government recognises that sustained growth must be deliberate, especially in a global landscape marked by forces of technology, trade, and intense competition. It requires a combination of leadership, social cohesion, and deep investments in core capabilities of people, firms, and institutions to harness our opportunities. This is why together with our private sector counterparts, we are anchoring Ghana’s medium-term growth drivers on competitiveness, integration, adaptation and digital innovation, all aimed at raising per capita GDP from the current two thousand, five hundred dollars (US$2,500) to four thousand, five hundred dollars (US$4,500) (aligning with the Ghana Beyond Aid Charter) by 2030.

    Mr Speaker, concluding the arrangements with the Fund will not restore our fortunes overnight, but it will set us on the road to recovery. With fiscal discipline, we will regain the trust and confidence of our business partners and the investor community, which will give us space to continue our productive plans and policies.

    However, in addition to our engagement with the Fund, we are also seeking and implementing some original and innovative ideas to try to solve our problems. For example, the Gold Purchase Programme by the Bank of Ghana and the Gold for Oil Policy are creative uses of our resources, which are already bearing fruit. These policies are aimed at achieving two results that are critical to the health of our economy. Firstly, they will help us preserve foreign exchange, especially the US dollar, and secondly, they will enable us to stabilise the price of oil products such as petrol and diesel on the domestic market. We have already seen some success on both fronts with the price of US dollars and petroleum products falling since we announced the policy and began to implement it.

    The average price of petrol at the pump, which had risen to twenty (20) cedis a litre, in the middle of December 2022, is now thirteen cedis and eighty pesewas (GH¢13.80) a litre. The price of diesel had risen to more than twenty-three cedis and seventy pesewas (GH¢23.70) a litre and is now selling on the average at thirteen cedis and eighty pesewas (GH¢13.80) a litre, which is a reduction of almost ten cedis a litre. We expect this trend of falling fuel prices to reflect soon in our daily lives, since transport fares affect the price of everything. I hope the trend of prices going up and coming down become a regular feature of our retail economy as is being demonstrated in the fuel prices. Because, as we all know, prices, especially of petroleum products, used only to go up in our country.

    I do worry about the extraordinary expenditure on security at our borders but we do not have a choice but to spend resources to keep our borders safe. We dare not compromise on the safety and security of our nation, and my first responsibility as your Commander-In-Chief is to keep all of us safe. The foundation for all development is the safety and security of our nation and its people.

    The reality of the state of affairs in our neighbourhood demands that the government goes to great lengths to ensure the security, safety and stability of our nation. The threats of terrorism and violent extremism surrounding us require that we pay maximum attention to protecting our borders, and working in collaboration with our neighbours to keep our country and the Region safe. This is the prime motive for the Accra Initiative, which is already yielding results.

    Mr. Speaker, I am able to cite here some of the equipment we have provided the military to help them protect us all. Allow me to list a few. The Army has received one hundred and four (104) armoured personnel carriers; seventy (70) utility troop carrying vehicles; twenty (20) armoured vehicles; eighty-five (85) assorted Toyota vehicles; fifty (50) Ankai buses; forty (40) Jeep J8 vehicles; some Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) equipment; large quantities of communication/surveillance equipment; varying quantities of weapons and four (4) un-maned aerial vehicle systems; and the Ghana Navy has taken delivery of four (4) offshore security vessels and four (4) Zodiac boats.

    We have also continued the process of upgrading the housing needs of the security services. The Barracks Regeneration Project Phases I and II, the Military Housing Project Phases I and II and the Ghana Military Academy Infrastructure project are expected to be completed and handed over by the end of May this year.

    Mr Speaker, we continue to pay attention to the Police Service. We can now see more of the police on our streets in the urban areas. Ever so gradually, driving on our roads is becoming more orderly. I note that even motorbike riders now stop at traffic lights. Things are improving. Five hundred and four (504) housing units, comprising seventy-two (72) one (1) bedroom and four hundred and thirty-two (432) self-contained units have been completed for the Police Service. Recently, I delivered one hundred (100) pickups, six hundred (600) motorbikes and six (6) armoured personnel carriers to the Police Service to boost operational capacity. For the first time in our nation’s history, the Police Service has dedicated helicopters to help with their operations.

    Mr. Speaker, I must share some good news with the House. I am particularly proud of the dramatic intervention Government has made to tackle the long lasting and utterly disgraceful problem of dilapidated and inadequate number of courts in our country. Many of the courts have not been fit for purpose, and do not provide suitable facilities for the efficient administration of justice. The inadequacy means that people have to travel long distances to gain access to courts. As someone who for years earned my living as a practising lawyer, I have first-hand experience of the unacceptable state of court houses around the country and I am glad to inform the House that we are resolving this problem. Through the Ministry of Local Government and the District Assembly Common Fund, Government has embarked on the construction of one hundred and twenty (120) courthouses with accompanying accommodation for judges across the country. Indeed, sixty (60) have been completed, and the others are at various stages of completion. For the first time ever, we have the happy situation of purpose-built courthouses with accommodation that are waiting for judges to be appointed to put them to use.

    Six new Regional High Courts, fitted with judges’ residences, are also being constructed in the new regions, i.e., Ahafo, Bono East, North East, Oti, Savannah and Western North. Three of the courts, that is those in North East, Oti, Savannah have been completed and commissioned. Those in Ahafo, Bono East and Western North Regions will be completed by April.

    Mr. Speaker, I had the pleasant duty on 17th October 2022, to commission a new, modern Court of Appeal complex in Kumasi, together with twenty (20) townhouses and a guesthouse to serve as permanent residences for Court of Appeal Judges based in Kumasi, who are mandated to handle appeals from the northern part of the country. The Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, who generously gave the land, was present at the ceremony. It is a truly magnificent site and I recommend it to Honourable Members who go to Kumasi to pay a visit and see it for themselves.

    In addition, two hundred and ten (210) vehicles were, earlier in 2022, distributed to all judges in the Supreme Court, Court of Appeal, High Court and Lower Courts.

    Mr. Speaker, it is a well-known fact that, in this administration, TVET and STEM feature frequently in all conversations about education. Technical and vocational education is being given the place of honour they deserve. Since the re-alignment and introduction of free TVET, enrolment in TVET schools has increased from thirteen thousand (13,000) in 2021 to forty-seven thousand (47,000), and all the indications are that this is a trend that will continue. In 2022, the TVET service recruited three thousand, four hundred (3,400) staff, the highest in the history of TVET in Ghana, to accommodate this development.

    I was told last week about one young person who was placed in Achimota School in the current school placement exercise, and has turned it down to go to a STEM school. I think we are making progress. The strides we are making in education are already changing lives and changing the narrative. As at this year, nearly two million young people have benefitted from the free SHS policy. Predictions that the policy would lead to a lowering of standards proved wide of the mark. On the contrary, the results under the free SHS have shown a systematic improvement and as a result 2 million young people have either found a pathway to further education, training, apprenticeships or employment because of the free SHS policy.

    I am proud of the additional infrastructure in education, especially the provision of ultra-modern classroom blocks for several schools, which are equipped with laboratories, ICT centres and libraries; the establishment of ten (10) STEM centres across the country including one in Accra to aid the study of engineering and robotics. Construction has started of the University of Agricultural Science in Bunso in the Eastern Region.

    Mr. Speaker, apart from the enhancement of revenue and the judicious use of resources, we are all agreed that we need to do something about our huge import bill. Last year, I set up a five-member ad hoc Cabinet committee to work on a policy to enhance domestic production and export development with a four-fold strategy to: (1) reduce the country’s import bill in the short-, medium- and long-term; (2) enhance domestic productive capacity in selected products; (3) generate widespread employment opportunities; and (4) diversify and expand our export capacity to Africa and beyond, especially through the vehicle of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

    In 2021, Ghana’s total import bill was put at US$13.7 billion, according to GRA/ICUMS. On the evidence of existing local productive capacity, we have identified a list of twenty (20) priority products in the categories of primary agricultural products, processed foods, and manufactured goods, where we can confidently enhance domestic production. Amongst these are rice, fish, poultry, fruit juice, sugar, tomatoes, vegetable oils, oil palm, fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, soaps and detergents, insulated wire, ceramic products, corrugated paper and paper board, cement/clinker, and motor vehicles.

    The report on the implementation modalities to enhance domestic productive capacity in these products has been prepared and, once confirmed, the new Minister for Trade & Industry will roll-out urgently a series of initiatives to implement the policy.

    I want, at this stage, to make mention of one particular programme that has been introduced by the Government to address the needs of the youth and women, the YouStart programme. This programme seeks to support young entrepreneurs to gain access to capital, market, training and technical skills, compliance and quality assurance support and business development support services that will enable them start, build and grow their own businesses.

    Mr. Speaker, the YouStart programme was successfully piloted in 2022 with seventy (70) youth-led businesses benefiting from the initial GH¢1.98 million. Subsequently, a total of two hundred and eighty-eight thousand, eight hundred (288,800) applications have been received and are being processed by the Ghana Enterprise Agency for full operation.

    Mr. Speaker, Government remains committed to infrastructure development. Working with the private sector, we continue to explore the use of Public-Private Partnership arrangements as a financing alternative to the delivery of critical public infrastructure, such as the Accra-Tema Motorway Extensions, Accra-Takoradi Motorway, and Sogakope-Lome Transboundary Water Supply Projects.

    In addition, Mr. Speaker, the seven hundred- and fifty-million-dollar ($750 million) AFRExim Bank facility, which has been secured, will make it possible for us to construct many other roads and interchanges, including the long-awaited four-tier Suame Interchange.

    Mr. Speaker, we have now reached the point where we feel the impact of technology as an irreversible way of life. We have digitised many processes; the Ghana Card has become a one-stop shop for Ghanaian identity and its usages.

    We are fully convinced that our embrace of, and investment in information technology and the digital infrastructure will help us to redefine our traditional concepts of time, space, speed and nature of conducting business within our society, economy and culture. Information technology helps all segments of society to be integrated and transformed through connectivity, in facilitating the production, distribution, and consumption of information within the whole economy and society.

    We have integrated many processes within the digital environment, and for this we have to recognise the efforts of many component parts of the government, such as the Ministry of Communications and Digitalisation, the National Identification Authority, and especially the Vice President, Dr. Alhaji Mahamudu Bawumia, who, I understand, has been nicknamed E-Bawumia. Our need for technological reinforcement within all our structures and spaces is unending, and we will continue to push the frontiers of our engagement with the technologies of information, economic development and human transformation.

    We must be cheered by the improvements being made in the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) to make access easier. The scheme is currently one of the better-digitalised institutions, and I hope they get the public support that they need. I note, in particular, with satisfaction, that they have developed a self-enrolment mobile application (My NHIS App) that allows Ghana Card holders to self-enrol in the scheme and this application enables registration and renewal for oneself and others by linking NHIS cards to Ghana cards. In 2022, over 5 million members’ data was linked to their Ghana card to enable them to access healthcare using the card.

    The National Health Insurance Authority has also improved its claims management processes with an emphasis on e-claims and paperless systems at all four Claims Processing Centres. In the year under review, electronic claims processing was about seventy percent (70%) of all claims submissions. As of 31st December 2022, the scheme paid a total claim of GH¢1.014 billion to health service providers.

    Mr Speaker, our drone delivery service is firmly established and Ghana now has six (6) centres for Zipline drone services, making Ghana the largest aerial logistics distribution network in the world. Zipline, through the national-scale drone delivery services, has delivered some 14.8 million (14,809,463) units of life-saving medicals, vaccines, and blood products to health facilities in Ghana by the end of 2022. Childhood vaccines top the list with the delivery of 8.3 million doses, followed by 2.05 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines.

    Mr. Speaker, I must say, however, that the current shortage of some childhood vaccines in the country has concerned me greatly. This shortage, if prolonged, will affect negatively Ghana’s Childhood Immunisation Programme, which has been recognised as one of the most successful in the world. The WHO has only recently expressed worry about a steady decline in measles vaccination coverage globally, because of the concentration on the fight against COVID-19.

    In accordance with our desire not to become part of this global trend, Government has taken steps to ensure that stocks of these vaccines are procured and supplied, as a matter of emergency. The Ghana Health Service has developed an elaborate programme to catch up on children who have missed their vaccinations immediately stocks arrive.

    Mr. Speaker, I want to encourage all parents and caregivers to ensure that eligible children are vaccinated, once this programme begins. No child should be denied access to vaccination. Mercifully, so far, not a single child has died as a result of the outbreak.

    This House has already passed into law the National Vaccine Institute Bill, which is yet to be brought for my assent. In the near future, this Institute will ensure that, no matter what happens to the global vaccine supply chain, we can produce our own vaccines locally.

    Mr. Speaker, government continues to prioritise agriculture as one of the driving forces for economic transformation. The experiences and lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine conflict justify sufficiently our increased investment in the agricultural sector. Indeed, the sector recorded significant successes, with an average growth rate of 6.28% from 2017 to 2021. The consistent growth over the period has translated into improved food security, job opportunities along agricultural value chains and availability of raw materials for industry.

    To address the vexed issue of post-harvest losses, we have constructed some sixty-five (65) warehouses, with the remaining fifteen (15) at advanced stages of completion. This intervention is adding some eighty thousand metric tonnes (80,000mt) to national grain storage capacity. US$29.9 million worth of machinery and equipment have been procured from Brazil to boost mechanisation. Government will, this year, commence preparatory works for establishing a Tractor and Backhoe Loader Assembly Plant in the Ashanti Region, and continue capacity building of operators to ensure effective management and prolong the lifespan of agricultural machinery.

    Mr. Speaker, the impact of climate change and variability on global agricultural activities is a call to us, and, indeed, all countries, to adopt appropriate technologies and other innovative practises for sustainable agriculture and resilience against food insecurity. Government’s response has been to continue to invest in irrigation infrastructure both large and small scales across the country. In 2022, government completed the rehabilitation and modernisation of large-scale irrigation schemes at Tono, Kpong and Kpong Left Bank projects. The three schemes are expected to provide six thousand, seven hundred and sixty-six hectares (6,766ha) of irrigable land for all-year-round crop production. Phases I and II of the Tamne Irrigation Project have also been completed, with Phase III of the project at fifty-seven percent (57%) completion.

    Mr. Speaker, we are now at the most difficult stage of electricity provision around the country. The parts that are left are the very difficult to access areas. The National Electricity Access rate increased from 79.3% in 2016 to 88.54% in 2022, making us amongst the top six (6) in Africa, and we are still expecting to achieve the ninety percent (90%) universal electricity access rate by 2024. To reduce transmission system losses and voltage fluctuations and to improve the overall quality of power supply, old lines are being replaced on the Western, Eastern, Coastal and Middle corridors. It is worth noting that three (3) new sub-stations have been commissioned between 2021 and 2022 thereby improving reliability and efficiency.

    Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to inform the House that the Electricity Company of Ghana, has since the last quarter of 2022, embarked on an aggressive digital transformation programme.

    In the first phase of this programme, set to be completed by end of April 2023, the focus is on creating a cashless and efficient payment system. I am pleased to announce that, on 1st March 2023, all ECG District Offices became cashless. This is a major achievement by all standards. Since the start of this transformational programme, we have so far seen a twenty-five percent (25%) increase in the monthly revenues. The second phase of the programme will see the digitisation of postpaid bills, and the digital tagging of all metres.

    In our estimation, these initiatives should increase the monthly revenues of ECG by some forty percent (40%) before the end of this year. I firmly believe that the initiatives, which have been so boldly rolled out by ECG, will make revenue leakage a thing of the past, and address consumer pain points in their interactions with ECG.

    Mr. Speaker, we continue the fight against galamsey with the support of the security agencies, in the short-term. However, we are determined to promote responsible small-scale mining through Community Mining Schemes. So far, sixteen (16) of these Schemes have been commissioned, with three (3) more to be commissioned by the end of this year. All these Schemes are supported with Gold Katchas, pieces of equipment designed to help small-scale miners to extract gold from the ore without the use of mercury.

    In 2021, I launched the National Alternative Employment and Livelihood Programme. The Programme employs several youth in the production of seedlings and reclamation of degraded mined lands. Currently, reclamation is ongoing over one thousand hectares (1,000ha) of degraded lands in Ashanti, Eastern and Western North Regions.

    Mr. Speaker, on the international front, I should state that having gained a seat as a non-permanent member of the Security Council for the years 2022 and 2023, Ghana, as one of three Non-Permanent African Members, is working vigorously to push the Africa agenda, which includes the fight against terrorism, and the reform of the UN Security Council. I am pleased to state that good progress is being made on the reform of the UN Security Council. A US President, for the first time, in the person of President Joe Biden, and the French President, Emmanuel Macron, have both embraced the Reform process. It is our hope that the leaders of the three other P5 Members of the Security Council will soon do the same, and help bring about this much needed reform that will bring greater effectiveness to the work of the United Nations and the Security Council in the maintenance of international peace and security.

    We continue to be active members of the African Union and ECOWAS, and support strongly measures both bodies have taken against unconstitutional changes in government in our Region. We are working with our partners in the Region to strengthen regional co-operation in the fight against the terrorist menace in West Africa, hence our commitment to the Accra Initiative.

    Mr Speaker, our decision to prioritise tourism, as a key policy for economic diversification, job creation and growth, is clearly paying off. The World Economic Forum Report 2021 Travel Index ranks Ghana as the number one tourism destination in West Africa. The potential contribution of tourism and the arts to GDP is, therefore, one that we must nurture and emphasise.

    Both domestic and international tourism are rebounding significantly from the severely disruptive impact of COVID on the travel and tour industry. International arrivals nearly trebled last year, from a low of three hundred and fifty-five thousand, one hundred and eight (355,108) in 2020, to over nine hundred and fifteen thousand (915,000). Domestic visits to tourist sites are also up by over 55.7% during the period. All these have been made possible by deliberate marketing initiatives and upgrades of tourist infrastructure by the Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture and its Agency, the Ghana Tourism Authority.

    “Beyond The Return” initiative, which I launched in 2019 as a sequel to the Year of Return, has re-ignited excitement about Ghana as the hub and a Mecca for the Global pan-African, a home every person of African descent must visit at least once in their lifetime. A few days ago, at a historic ceremony in Washington DC, we conferred Ghanaian citizenship on Mother Viola Fletcher (108 years) and her brother Uncle Red (102 years), two of the only three living survivors of the Tulsa Massacre of 1921. In May this year, I will be chairing a Tourism Stakeholder Retreat on “Rethinking Tourism for National Development & Job Creation”. I have tasked the Ministry and its Agency, the Ghana Tourism Authority, to work on the modalities to bring together all the stakeholders within the industry. Over the next couple of years, my government will deepen even further our efforts to make tourism a strong primary source of growth for the economy.

    Mr Speaker, Monday was 6th March, our Independence Day, and this year we had the main celebrations in the Volta Region.

    I made the decision to rotate the Independence Day anniversary celebrations in order to enhance the cohesion and unity of our nation, and to make it clear to all segments of our population that we are all part of the “One Ghana Project”. I am glad to inform the House that it was a happy and grand event, set against the breathtakingly beautiful background of the Adaklu mountains.

    Mr. Speaker, sixty-six (66) years since our independence, Ghana has taken steady strides to becoming a more developed country. The Ghana of 1957 is not the Ghana of 2023. We have come a long way since the days of our six million population, with very few modern amenities for its people, to today’s population of thirty-two million, with a growing stock of modern infrastructure, spanning drones to supply our medicines, to the Ghanacard which identifies each of us as proudly Ghanaian. As President, I have championed the innovation of policies and the execution of projects that have helped improve the quality of life of the Ghanaian people. And, God willing, I will continue on a path that brings the most benefit to the people of Ghana.

    Things may be dire today, nonetheless, we must count our blessings. Our petrol stations have fuel, and we have been spared long, winding queues to fuel our vehicles. Our markets and shops are, by the Grace of God, well-stocked, and we have not been faced with the prospect of the rationing of basic necessities such as fruits and vegetables. Our children’s schooling has not been interrupted. We have continued to provide Free SHS, Free TVET and pay teacher and nursing training allowances. Our electricity supply has been consistent, and we have been spared the hardship of Dumsor during such a trying time. Our country continues to be stable and at peace.

    Throughout history, there are many instances of nations going through periods where dark clouds create shadows that momentarily shield the yearned-for vision from sight. Such moments should not be ones in which despair takes over. Such moments call for strength of character, sense of purpose and an abiding commitment to the general good.

    Fellow Ghanaians, let us believe in ourselves, and in our capacity to overcome the problems that are before us. This is a phase, and, with every fibre of my being, I am certain that this too shall pass. We have done it before, and we will do it again.

    May God bless us all, and our homeland Ghana, and make her great and strong.

    Mr. Speaker, I thank you for your attention.

  • A charity executive resigns temporarily due to mistreatment

    A charity executive resigns temporarily due to mistreatment

    Ngozi Fulani, the head of a charity, resigned due to the abuse she received following her argument with Lady Susan Hussey about race.

    A organization she started to aid Afro-Caribbean women experiencing domestic abuse, Ms. Fulani stated she is temporarily stepping down from her position as CEO.

    We, the Sistah Space charity, have suffered as a direct result, she said on ITV’s Good Morning Britain (GMB).

    “When you consider that this incident was supposed to be about violence against women and girls, the Palace hasn’t stepped in, even though I believe they could have.

    ‘So, what I’ve had to do, I’ve now temporarily stepped down as CEO of Sistah Space.

    ‘I’m announcing that now because the service users and the community can’t access us properly.

    ‘This whole thing has cost us a fortune because we had to pay our own PR to stop the press from coming up, it was horrible.’Ngozi Fulani slams latest Palace apology following Susan Hussey race row

    Lady Susan Hussey getting off a London bus.
    Lady Susan was a senior lady-in-waiting for Queen Elizabeth II and is Prince William’s godmother
    Lady Susan Hussey using staff entrance at Buckingham Palace.
    Lady Susan Hussey was seen using the staff entrance at Buckingham Palace in February

    The race row made headlines since last November, when Lady Susan, who was a close friend of the late Queen and is Prince William’s godmother, repeatedly asked Ms Fulani where she was ‘really from’.

    Ms Fulani said she felt ‘violated’ after Lady Susan refused to accept her answer that she was British.

    Lady Susan later apologised in person to Ms Fulani for the distress her comments had caused and resigned from her honorary role, but was reportedly seen back performing royal duties last month.

    Ms Fulani said she and her family received ‘horrific online abuse’ from those who felt Lady Susan was being treated unfairly in the aftermath of going public with what happened.

    She said: ‘Incidents like this not only cause emotional harm to those involved but do also have wider repercussions within the community.

    ‘I have experienced first-hand what happens when a black woman faces adversity and has to overcome additional barriers when trying to report it.’

  • Our crisis is self-inflicted – Ato Forson tells Akufo-Addo

    Our crisis is self-inflicted – Ato Forson tells Akufo-Addo

    The Minority Leader has taken strong exception to the government’s position that the current economic crisis being experienced is not it’s doing.

    A peeved Cassiel Ato Forson was baffled by President Akufo-Addo’s State of the Nation Address presented to Parliament on Wednesday.

    In the Address, the President among other things said the NPP administration was judicious in borrowing and spending.

    President Akufo-Addo stated that allegations of profligate spending are untenable.

    “The debts we are servicing were not only contracted during the period of this administration,” he added

    After the President’s address, the Ajumako-Enyan-Esiam MP was invited to second the motion for House’s adjournment.

    He enumerated some issues which he says reflect the actual state of the country but are not captured in the day’s address.

    “Our economy is in its worst shape in decades. In fact, Ghana’s economy is bankrupt or insolvent. We are currently unable to repay our debt. Ghana has officially defaulted in the repayment of our debt since January 2022. Yet, Mr President, your government is failing is cut down on the size of government and public expenditure.

    He accused the President of supervising this inefficiency and hardship suffered by Ghanaians.

    “Mr President, our country is in tatters largely because it is self-inflicted, your government inflicted it on us and failed to act.

    “Mr President, this is your scorecard… and this is the true state of the nation,” he added.

  • SONA 2023: Akufo-Addo has a short memory – Sam George

    SONA 2023: Akufo-Addo has a short memory – Sam George

    Ningo-Prampram MP, Samuel Nartey-George, has slammed President Akufo-Addo for claiming that the country has enjoyed complete free speech under his reign. 

    President Akufo-Addo during the 2023 State of the Nation’s Address, lauded his government for championing free speech in the country.

    He mentioned that: “Today, we live in a country in which we enjoy complete freedom of expression, freedom of association, freedom of assembly, freedom of religion and political affiliation. Indeed, freedom of speech has now reached such heights that even members of the diplomatic corps feel able to join in our national discourse, and pronounce on matters that would be problematic for Ghanaian diplomats in their countries of origin.”

    But reacting to this, the vociferous MP disputed the claim, maintaining that free speech has been stifled under the current administration.

    “This is a President who starts his speech by saying that we have the highest level of Freedom of Speech. The President has a short memory. His memory is failing him because if the President’s memory is not failing him, he will remember that on the 31st of January last year, he summoned the diplomatic corps to Peduase and warned them that they should stop engaging in local issues and dabbling in local discourse,” Mr George said. 

    The Ningo-Prampram MP also commented on the issues of Military men invading Ashaiman following the murder of one of their colleagues.

    He was baffled over the President’s silence on the issue during the 2023 State of the Nation’s address, thus, accused Mr Akufo-Addo of endorsing the violence. 

    “The President is commander of the Ghana Armed Forces, your taxes, my taxes were used to fuel an air force helicopter, fuel armoured personnel carriers and carried men of the Ghana Armed Forces to go and wreak havoc on innocent citizens of Ashaiman and the President doesn’t think it is necessary to speak on that matter. In fact he endorses the violence and this is a man who was touted as a defender of Human and civil liberties,” he said.

    He thus concluded that the title of a Human and Civil Liberties defender cannot be conferred on the President due to some of these issues.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • IWD : I am here for you – Alban Bagbin assures women 

    IWD : I am here for you – Alban Bagbin assures women 

    As today, March 8, 2023 marks International Women’s Day, Speaker Alban Bagbin has extended heartfelt wishes to all women.

    Addressing the House after the President’s State of Nation Address on Wednesday, Mr. Bagbin told the ladies in the House that, “I am here for you.”

    “Honourable members, today is International Women’s Day. I want to take this opportunity to congratulate all our beautiful ladies here and all ladies in the world for partnering with men to get us this far,” he added.

    Speaker Bagbin further entreated women parliamentarians as part of the IWD celebration to reach out to all women.

    This, according to him is part of the 30 years celebration of Parliament.

    He also urged the men to partner with women in order to make an impact in 2023.

    International Women’s Day is a global holiday celebrated annually on March 8 as a focal point in the women’s rights movement, bringing attention to issues such as gender equality, reproductive rights, and violence and abuse against women.

    This year’s celebration is under the theme “DigitALL: Innovation and technology for gender equality”

    It highlights the role of innovative technology in promoting gender equality and meeting the health and developmental needs of women and girls.

  • IWD: ASWIM urges govt to pass Affirmative Action Law

    IWD: ASWIM urges govt to pass Affirmative Action Law

    The Association of Women in the Media (ASWIM) has entreated the government and parliament to see to the passing of the Affirmative Action Law.

    The group in a statement signed by the president, Mavis Kitcher indicated that the Affirmative Action Law, which has been pending for a decade, when passed, will “help make women’s contributions count even better for the building of a dynamic and balanced society in the interest of all.”

    The Affirmative Action Law seeks to remove the historically low representation of women in all decision-making spaces while promoting democracy and development through the effective participation of all citizens.

    In addition, it seeks to promote women’s representation to a minimum of 40% in all policy-making spaces.

    ASWIM made this call on March 8 as the world marks International Women’s Day (IWD).

    The theme for this year’s celebration is “DigitALL: Innovation and technology for gender equality.”

    As part of the celebration, ASWIM further urged the government to employ strategies based on equity to increase the participation of Ghanaian girls and women in the space to thrive.

    This, they explained, is because advancement for every nation today is propelled by Science, Innovation and Digital Technology.

    Equity interventions, ASWIM believes, should be pursued over those of equal opportunities, to create fairness for girls and women in STEM school enrolment, capacity-building programmes, incubation and start-ups of businesses and access to financing in this space. 

    Additionally, ASWIM supports the call of the UN Secretary-General for action on online education, removal of systemic barriers and a proactive approach to increase women’s participation and leadership in science and technology to address the imbalance.

    The group used the opportunity to celebrate Ghanaian women for their immense contribution towards achieving an inclusive society in our nation’s quest to attain sustainable national development.

    “On this momentous occasion, ASWIM affirms that it embraces Equity for the advancement of women and girls’; and wishes all Ghanaian women “Ayekoo” for their diverse contributions to sustaining our Motherland,” a part of the statement reads.

  • Beijing faces regional unification due to China’s “attacks”

    Beijing faces regional unification due to China’s “attacks”

    In an exclusive interview with CNN on Wednesday, the US ambassador to Japan stated that Washington and its allies in Asia are strengthening their military connections in light of Beijing’s hostile actions toward several of its neighbors.

    “You look at Japan, the United States, Canada, Australia, the Philippines, India, the United States, and the Philippines.
    China has engaged in military or other types of conflict with every nation in the previous three months alone.
    Then they are astonished to learn that several nations are taking their own precautions to safeguard themselves through deterrence.
    What did they believe they would do?
    In an interview at his Tokyo home, Ambassador Rahm Emanuel made the following statement.

    The US envoy listed a string of what he said were aggressive military actions by China, including “attacks” against India along their shared Himalayan border, Chinese coast guard ships aiming lasers at Philippine vessels in the South China Sea, the firing of missiles into Japan’s exclusive economic zone and the harassment of US, Canadian and Australian aircraft by People’s Liberation Army ships and planes.

    Beijing has denied being an aggressor in all those instances and accused Washington of being the primary instigator of heightened tensions in the region.

    On Tuesday, China’s new Foreign Minister Qin Gang warned that “conflict and confrontation” with the US is inevitable if Washington does not change course.

    “The US claims it seeks to compete with China but does not seek conflict. But in reality, the so-called ‘competition’ by the US is all-round containment and suppression, a zero-sum game of life and death,” he said during his first news conference in the new post.

    “Containment and suppression will not make America great, and the US will not stop the rejuvenation of China,” Qin said.

    Emanuel countered on Wednesday that military buildups and exercises by the US and its partners in the Indo-Pacific are not acts of containment, as Beijing charges, but acts of deterrence against further – and possibly more dangerous – Chinese aggression.

    “They’ve come together to realize that (Chinese aggression) can’t continue as is,so every country is taking steps, both within an alliance (and)also within their own self-interest of creating a comprehensive coalition of deterrence. That’s what’s going on,” Emanuel said.

    He praised Japan for doubling its defense budget and taking on a leadership role in the region, citing plans for it to operate joint South China Sea patrols with the Philippines and its agreement with South Korea just this week to settle grievances dating back to before World War II concerning Japan’s colonial rule in Korea.

    And he praised both Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol for putting the future before history and taking a stance that has prompted domestic backlash in both Tokyo and Seoul.

    “I do think that both leaders showed a braveness and a boldness to look to the 21st century and make the most of that rather than being tied by 20th century,” Emanuel said.

    “To me the test of leadership is to be idealistic enough to know why you’re doing what you’re doing. And then tough enough to get it done,” he said, adding that both Kishida and Yoon had passed that test.

    The US ambassador also contrasted the countries Japan has been partnering with, including South Korea, the Philippines, Australia, India and even the United Kingdom, with countries with whom China works, including Russia, North Korea and Iran.

    “There’s a phrase in America, you’re known by the company you keep,” Emanuel said.

    Over the past 18 months, the Biden administration has been keeping good company, too, he said, noting its record in uniting allies and partners.

    Emanuel cited multilateral agreements like the Quad – the informal alliance of the US, Japan, Australia and India – and the AUKUS deal for nuclear-powered submarines between the US, Australia and the UK as well as other economic, diplomatic and military initiatives.

    “I think that has given our allies confidence, like Japan, to increase the defense budget, to be more active on the diplomatic arena and stage,” he said, giving credit to Tokyo for getting eight of the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to vote to condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in a March 3 United Nations General Assembly vote.

    Countries around the world will respond to Japan, or South Korea, or the US for a simple reason that China doesn’t understand, “the gravitational pull of freedom,” Emanuel said.

    “A rules-based system that upholds respect both for the individual and in trying to uphold freedom has its own, I don’t know how else to say it, but seductive gravitational pull.”

  • David Oscar thrills reggae fans in Germany

    David Oscar thrills reggae fans in Germany

    Reggae fans in Mainz, Germany were treated to a sensational live performance by Ghanaian Reggae artiste David Oscar Dogbe on Saturday, March 4, 2023. The artiste, who has been making waves in the Ghanaian music industry, brought his unique sound to Germany, thrilling the audience with his catchy tunes and infectious beats.

    The concert, which was held at Mainz Kastel, Reduit was a night to remember for the fans who had eagerly waited for months to see David Oscar Dogbe perform live. From the moment he stepped on stage, the artiste had the crowd on their feet, dancing and singing along to his hit songs.

    David’s music is known for its positive message, and his performance on Saturday night was no exception. He used his platform to spread messages of love, unity, and hope, urging his fans to embrace each other and work together towards a better world.

    In addition to his catchy tunes and inspiring lyrics, David’s performance was also visually stunning. His energetic stage presence and vibrant costume choices added to the overall experience, creating a dynamic and engaging show that had the audience begging for more.

    Speaking to this reporter after the concert, he expressed his gratitude to the fans who had come out to support him. “It was an amazing experience to perform in Mainz,” he said. “The energy from the crowd was electric, and I could feel the love and support from everyone in the room. I can’t wait to do this again with you guys.”

    David looks forward to replicating Mainz experience in other countries in Europe over the coming months.

    With his unique sound and inspiring message, David Oscar Dogbe is sure to captivate audiences wherever he goes, cementing his position as one of Ghana’s most exciting and talented Reggae artists.

  • No guy has mustered courage to propose to me yet – Sista Afia reveals

    No guy has mustered courage to propose to me yet – Sista Afia reveals

    Ghanaian songstress Sista Afia has said that none of the male artists have mustered the courage to propose marriage to her.

    Sista Afia has been trending on social media since she opened up about her relationship status and why she is still unmarried.

    During an interview with Doreen Avio on Daybreak Hitz, Sista Afia stated that growing up as a young woman, she has always wanted to get married at age 21 but marriage these days are tasteless.

    “I was a young girl and I remember telling myself that I would get married at the age of 21; I’d have twins at the age of 24, and another set of twins later.”

    “I was very young and I was very naïve and I didn’t know much about marriage and life, but now I do I’m not in a rush”, she said.

    Speaking about marriage now, she said her earlier comments about not marrying a male star have been rescinded because she’s now matured and understands life better.

    According to her, she’s now ready to marry or date an industry person but unfortunately, none of the male musicians have mustered the courage to propose marriage to her.

  • SONA 2023: Government to submit program for $3 billion facility from IMF by end of  March – Akufo-Addo

    SONA 2023: Government to submit program for $3 billion facility from IMF by end of March – Akufo-Addo

    In the latest development on the government’s engagement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), President Akufo-Addo has disclosed that the government will submit a program for the $3 billion facility being secured from the IMF by the end of March. 

    He made this known during the 2023 State of the Nation’s address held in Parliament on March 8, 2023. 

    During the address the president indicated that the government is making progress with the deal. 

    “Mr. Speaker, we are also making progress on the external debt negotiations since the Government announced an external debt service suspension on 19th December 2022 for certain categories of external debt, to ensure an orderly restructuring. This suspension is an interim emergency measure toward a comprehensive external debt operation which will contribute to the restoration of our debt sustainability in line with our request for a debt treatment under the G20 Common Framework. 

    “I want to express our appreciation to the members of the Paris Club and to the Peoples’ Republic of China for the co-operation they have so far exhibited to us in attempting to reach an agreement, and in their attempt to establish an Official Credit Committee. We look forward to their fast-tracking the needed financing assurances for IMF approval. We are confident that, with their co-operation, we will reach our March deadline for going to the Fund,” he said.

    Government is still in talks with the IMF to secure a financial bailout for the country. According to the government, discussions with the Bretton Wood institution are far advanced, however, a few outstanding measures have hampered the government from securing the bailout. 

    “Mr. Speaker, having reached the Staff Level Agreement on 12th December, 2022, after five (5) months of intense negotiations, and completion of most of the prior actions required under the Agreement, we are on course for the IMF Staff to present to the IMF Executive Board Ghana’s Programme request for a three billion dollar (US$3 billion) Extended Credit Facility by the end of the month,” he said.

    “I thank the House for its support throughout this process, including the passage of key revenue laws. However, a few more of these measures, namely Income Tax (Amendment) Bill, Excise Duty & Excise Tax Stamp (Amendment) Bills, as well as the Growth and Sustainability Levy Bill, are outstanding, which need the urgent attention of the House and passage to complete the prior actions. This will put us in readiness for our presentation to the Fund Board, and, more importantly, bolster our domestic revenue mobilisation effort,” he said. 

    Addressing the House, the President acknowledged that given the extent of the fiscal and debt sustainability issue currently being addressed, it is clear that fiscal adjustment and structural reforms are not sufficient for restoration of debt sustainability.

    “A critical component of the measures we are implementing to address the current economic crisis is the debt operation, involving both domestic debt and external debt. The debt operation is aimed at returning the country to debt sustainable path by 2028, by reducing the debt-to-GDP ratio on a general classification basis and, in present value terms, from one hundred and three percent (103%) in 2022 to fifty-five percent (55%) by 2028; and reducing the external debt service-to-revenue ratio from twenty-nine percent (29%) in 2022 to eighteen percent (18%) by 2028.  

    In order to achieve these goals, the President said a decision was taken to execute a Domestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP), in addition to fiscal adjustment, external debt operation and structural reforms.

    Touting the progress government has made with the DDEP, he thanked organised labour, pensioners, pension fund managers, the Ghana Association of Banks (GAB), Ghana Securities Industry Association (GSIA), Ghana Insurers Association (GIA), the Individual Bond Holders and Retirees Forum, and all others who have contributed to make the programme a success.

    “The participation rate of eighty-five percent (85%), representing tendered bonds of eighty-three billion cedis (GH¢83 billion) out of the total eligible bonds of ninety-seven point seven billion cedis (GH¢97,749,624,691), constitutes significant success for the DDE Programme. The eighty-three billion cedis (GH¢83 billion) bonds that were successfully tendered, also, represents sixty-four percent (64%) of the outstanding domestic debt stock of one hundred and thirty billion cedis (GH¢130 billion) at the end of December 2022, as pension funds have been expressly exempted from the DDEP,” he said.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • I’m the only Gh musician touring the world after Osibisa – King Ayisoba

    I’m the only Gh musician touring the world after Osibisa – King Ayisoba

    Ghanaian traditional musician, King Ayisoba born has bragged about his ability to tour around the whole because of his music.

    King Ayisoba has bragged saying that after the legendary Highlife music group Osibisa, he is the only musician left who is touring every part of the globe with music.

    According to King Ayisoba, he has been consistent and has a unique style of unadulterated African traditional music which he fuses alongside the Kologo.

    He has played at almost every big festival around compared to his colleagues confined to Ghana

    “When we talk of a Ghanaian musician, who tours the world and plays at festivals around the world then it’s me. First, it was Osibisa, but after Osibisa I don’t think there is anybody.” King Ayisoba said this in an interview with Bryt TV.

    The musician also claims that his group is the one selling Ghanaian music to the world.
    “I want you to say that we are the ones selling Ghana to the world”, King Ayisoba told the host MC Yaa Yeboah on the show “BRYT Extra”.

  • We have built more roads than any govt in the 4th republic -Akufo-Addo

    We have built more roads than any govt in the 4th republic -Akufo-Addo

    President Akufo-Addo has announced that his government has constructed more roads than any other government in the history of the 4th Republic. He made this statement during his first State of the Nation Address (SONA) for 2023.

    As part of the ruling government’s developmental goals, Akufo-Addo declared 2022 as the third “Year of Road” to improve the construction works on major parts of the nation’s roads. Roads are regarded as one of the essential infrastructures upon which a nation’s development and expansion depend.

    Addressing the nation, he said, “I am proud of the amount of work that we have done, especially in the road sector. Roads constitute the largest number of questions asked in this House by Members of Parliament, and a significant amount of the monies we borrow are for road construction. Shall we dare stop constructing roads? I would like to state categorically that this Government has built more roads than any government in the history of the 4th Republic.”

    The government, in its 2022 budget statement, highlighted some of the major road projects that began in 2022, including the Accra-Kumasi Dualisation, Kumasi South and Western Bypass, Kumasi Outer Ring Road, Mamfe-Koforidua and Oyibi-Dodowa-Somanya-Akuse junction road.

    Other projects include the Accra Outer Ring Road, Asutuare Junction-Volivo Bridge, Eastern Corridor Road (Gbintiri-Kulungugu), Sawla-Wa, Buipe, Yapei and Daboya Bridges, Adawso-Ekyi Amanfrom Bridge, Obuasi, Juanayilli and Nawuni Bridges, and the construction of five interchanges in the Greater Kumasi Metropolitan Area (including Suame, Santasi and Airport Roundabout).

  • I almost became a prostitute at 13 when I lost my dad – Veteran Actress Omotola

    I almost became a prostitute at 13 when I lost my dad – Veteran Actress Omotola

    Seasoned Nigerian actress Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde has admitted that when she was a teenager, she considered becoming a prostitute.

    In a recent encounter with broadcaster and lawyer Chude Jideonwo, Omotola made this claim while relating a childhood memory.

    The seasoned actress claimed that after her father passed away when she was 13 years old, she became so desperate that she tried to trade her body.

    Sharing this aspect of her lif which is unbeknownst to hee fans, the veteran actress said; “When I was 13, they came to pick me up from school, I knew something was wrong and prayed that nothing had happened to my dad.

    “When I got home, I realized my dad was dead, so going through that mental process, I did not know how to react and I did not know how I was feeling, I was just silent, but now that I am older, I think I really understand everything.

    “There’s nothing anyone says to me that can move me, I’m so confident in who I’m, and I don’t fear anyone. I don’t fear for my life, probably I would’ve become a prostitute today.

    I was very desperate to do anything and said I would rather sell my body than for anybody to take my younger brother apart.”

  • SONA 2023: I’m concerned about the shortage of childhood vaccines – Akufo-Addo

    SONA 2023: I’m concerned about the shortage of childhood vaccines – Akufo-Addo

    President Akufo-Addo has expressed worry about the current shortage of some childhood vaccines. 

    According to him, the shortage if not addressed immediately will affect negatively Ghana’s Childhood Immunisation Programme. 

    He explained that the shortage is due to the concentration of the Covid-19 fight. 

    Delivery the 2023 State of the Nation Address on Wednesday, March 8, President Akufo-Addo said the government has developed an elaborate programme to secure some of the vaccines. 

    President Akufo-Addo said this has been treated as an emergency situation for the country. 

    “Mr Speaker, I must say, however, that the current shortage of some childhood vaccines in the country has concerned me greatly. This shortage, if prolonged, will affect negatively Ghana’s Childhood Immunisation Programme, which has been recognized as one of the most successful in the world. 

    “The WHO has only recently expressed worry about a steady decline in measles vaccination coverage globally, because of the concentration on the fight against COVID-19.

    “In accordance with our desire not to become part of this global trend, Government has taken steps to ensure that stocks of these vaccines are procured and supplied, as a matter of emergency. 

    “The Ghana Health Service has developed an elaborate programme to catch up on children who have missed their vaccinations immediately stocks arrive.”

    Meanwhile, President Akufo-Addo also insisted that no child has died due to the shortage. 

    “I want to encourage all parents and caregivers to ensure that eligible children are vaccinated, once this programme begins. 

    No child should be denied access to vaccination. Mercifully, so far, not a single child has died as a result of the outbreak,” he added. 

    Already, over 100 children in the northern part of Ghana are suspected to have contracted measles.

    This is according to the President-elect for the Paediatrics Society of Ghana, Dr Hilda Mantebea Boye.

    The figures come amid the shortage of baby vaccines nationwide.

    Ghana ran out of essential BCG and OPV vaccines as a result of the Ministry of Health’s failure to secure procurement of these vaccines since the year began.

    The BCG vaccine is primarily needed to prevent the occurrence of tuberculosis in babies, while the OPV is to prevent polio infections.

    Other essential vaccines to prevent diseases such as measles, whooping cough, etc. are also in short supply.

  • You must be a tough skin to date me – Kuami Eugene

    You must be a tough skin to date me – Kuami Eugene

    Kuami Eugene has announced that he is yet to find a girlfriend, however, any woman who wishes to be in a relationship with him must have tough skin and the ability to withstand hatred from a section of the public.

    He added that being his girlfriend does not come easy. According to the popular singer, he loves to be cared for just like a mummy’s boy.

    “I am not dating… Right now, I know dating me will be very difficult. You should have tough skin to date me,” he disclosed on ‘Stripped by Sika Osei’.

    The Ghanaian hitmaker hammered that his girlfriend must also be prepared to make some sacrifices to ensure the growth of their relationship.

    “Currently, women, girls, everyone including men want to have one person to themselves…If you wanna have me to yourself, it’s gonna take some sacrifices because people won’t just allow you to. They won’t allow you to have Kuami all for yourself. You’ll get a lot of hatred… people are gonna hurt you, they will come at you,” he hammered.

    Kuami Eugene added that people will be quick to pollute the mind of every woman who comes in his life in an attempt to break their love life.

    “Everybody wants a piece of me. It is what it is…

  • The Ukrainian government ignored involvement in the damage of the Nord Stream pipelines

    The Ukrainian government ignored involvement in the damage of the Nord Stream pipelines

    After a media report suggesting fresh information that a “pro-Ukrainian gang” may have been behind last year’s attack against Russia’s gas exports to Europe, Ukraine has denied any involvement in the destruction of the Nord Stream pipelines.

    A top Ukrainian official was fired on Tuesday in reaction to a New York Times piece that referenced fresh intelligence that had been examined by US officials.

    Mykhailo Podolyak, the top advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, stated on Twitter that “(Ukraine) has nothing to do with the Baltic Sea mishap and has no information about (Ukraine) pro-sabotage groups,” despite the fact that he enjoys gathering entertaining conspiracy theories about the (Ukrainian) government.

    The New York Times said the new intelligence reviewed by US officials suggested a group loyal to Ukraine but acting independently of the government in Kyiv were involved in the operation.

    Mystery has surrounded who might be responsible for the brazen sabotage last September which damaged two pipes transporting Russian gas into the European Union and targeted a crucial source of revenue for Moscow. Both pipelines were closed at the time of the attack, which came months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    A source familiar with the US intelligence told CNN the assessment was not made with high confidence and is not the predominant view of the intelligence community, and that the US has not yet identified a culprit for the attack.

    There is a section of the US intelligence community that believes that pro-Ukrainian actors would have had the motive to sabotage the pipelines because of how Russia was weaponizing them against Ukraine and Europe.

    The intelligence community has no evidence, however, that Ukrainian leaders, including Zelensky, had any knowledge of or involvement in the pipeline sabotage, the source said.

    German defense minister Boris Pistorius on Wednesday warned of drawing conclusions too hastily following the report. In an interview with public radio station Deutschlandfunk (DLF), he added that the chance of a false flag operation was within the realm of possibilities.

    “It could just as well be, and this has also been made clear in the reports, that it was a false flag action (operation), in other words, to blame pro-Ukrainian groups and make it look that way, the probability of one or the other is equally high, so we must now wait and see how things develop,” he told DLF.

    “It does not help us to think about the impact this would have on our support for Ukraine on the basis of such research, which has undoubtedly been done painstakingly and meticulously.”

    NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg also said no perpetrator had yet been identified. “We have not been able to determine who was behind [the sabotage],” he said, adding, “There are ongoing national investigations and I think it’s right to wait until those are finalized before we say anything more.” 

    The incident, in which underwater explosions occurred before the pipelines burst in several places, remains a major point of contention between Russia and the West.

    The pipelineswhich link Russia and Germany via the Baltic Sea to funnel gas from Russia into the European Union were controversial long before the Kremlin waged war on Ukraine, largely because of fears around European reliance on Russian energy.

    Their damage became yet another twist in the energy standoff that erupted after the invasion as Europe sought to wean itself from Russian fuel.

    Russia, which has in the past publicly denied it was involved in striking the pipelines and blamed the West for the explosions, also pushed back on the latest assessment surfacing in the media.

    A Kremlin spokesman described the report as “obvious misinformation campaign coordinated by the media.”

    “Clearly, the authors of the attack want to divert attention. This is an obvious misinformation campaign coordinated by the media,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Russian state media RIA Novosti on Wednesday.

    Multiple investigations by European authorities are on-going.

    Swedish prosecutors in November confirmed the blasts at the pipelines were an act of sabotage after investigators uncovered evidence of explosives at the sites, but their preliminary investigation had yet to determine any charges.

    Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, US National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications John Kirby referred questions to investigating Europeans authorities and said he was “not going to get ahead of that investigative work.”

    “Several our European partners – in fact, three of them in Germany, Sweden and Denmark – have already opened investigations into what happened with the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, and those investigations are not closed. They’re still hard at work on that,” Kirby said.

    The German prosecutors’ office told CNN Wednesday they searched a boat in January that was suspected of carrying explosives used in the Nordstream 1 and 2 explosions. It said investigations were ongoing, and reliable statements cannot be issued yet, particularly as to whether there was any state involvement.

    In the days following the incident, sightings of Russian vessels operating in the area where the leaks occured raised suspicions about the potential involvement of Russia, which at that time drew attention from both European and US officials as the only actor in the region believed to have both the capability and motivation to deliberately damage the pipelines.

    So far, no evidence has been presented to the public as to which parties are responsible.

    During a meeting of G20 Foreign Ministers in New Delhi earlier this month, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov insisted on the necessity of a “fair and prompt investigation” into the explosions.

  • SONA 2023: Nothing dishonourable was done with Covid-19 funds – Akufo-Addo

    SONA 2023: Nothing dishonourable was done with Covid-19 funds – Akufo-Addo

    President Akufo-Addo has refuted claims that there was mismanagement of resources meant to facilitate the Covid-19 fight.

    Delivering the 2023 State of the Nation Address on Wednesday, March 8, President Akufo-Addo said the accusations are unfounded as the government did what was necessary to prevent the spread of the virus.

    “I can assure this House that nothing dishonorable was done with the COVID funds,” he said

    He further outlined a number of measures implemented by his administration that justify the sums of money expended during the pandemic.

    “The responses from the Ministers for Health and Finance, on January 23 and 25, 2023, respectively, have sufficiently laid to rest the queries from the Auditor General’s report, and I believe any objective scrutiny of these statements from the Health and Finance Ministries would justify this conclusion.”

    This position is however contrary to the Auditor-General’s Report on Ghana’s Covid-19 expenditure.

    The report indicates that the country lost over GHS1 billion through various irregularities including unapproved and illegal payment of allowances.

    Meanwhile, the President explained that the measures during the pandemic were necessary to save lives and also keep the country afloat.

    “No auditor can put a figure on the cost of keeping the children in school safely during that crisis, nor the continuing cost of the effect of the pandemic on our young people; not the financial cost, not the emotional cost, and certainly not the social cost,” the President added.

    According to Article 67 of the 1992 Constitution., the President shall deliver a message on the State of the Nation to Parliament at the start of each session and before the dissolution of Parliament.

  • SONA 2023: Akufo-Addo defends borrowing from IMF, denies recklessness

    SONA 2023: Akufo-Addo defends borrowing from IMF, denies recklessness

    President Nana Akufo-Addo has defended his government’s decision to borrow from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) during his State of the Nation Address in Parliament. He stated that his government has not been reckless in borrowing, despite questions about the country’s debt situation and the misuse of COVID-19 funds.

    “Mr. Speaker, let me state emphatically that we have not been reckless in borrowing and in spending. Aside from the misuse of COVID-19 funds, we have only spent on urgent needs such as building roads, bridges, and schools,” Akufo-Addo explained.

    The government announced on July 1, 2022, that it was seeking a $3 billion bailout from the IMF, which was subsequently agreed upon in December 2022. The Ministry of Finance is currently in negotiations with the IMF, with hopes of securing the support by March.

    The President’s defense of the government’s borrowing intentions comes amid months of speculation and concerns about the country’s increasing debt.

  • SONA 2023: COVID-19 funds were not misused – Akufo-Addo

    SONA 2023: COVID-19 funds were not misused – Akufo-Addo

    Contrary of reports of misused funds, President Akufo-Addo has emphatically stated that the COVID-19 funds were not misused.

    President Akufo-Addo’s comment comes in reaction to the Auditor General’s report which pointed out a number of financial malfeasance in the disbursement of funds to combat the deadly virus.

    Fighting off claims during the 2023 State of the Nation’s address, the President maintained that “nothing dishonourable was done with the COVID-19 funds.”

    “It is important to show clearly that the COVID-19 funds were not misused. It is critical that we don’t lose the confidence in the people that the crisis that they were led to believe we were all in together was used for personal gain,” he said.

    In May last year, then Minority Leader, Haruna Iddrisu had accused the government of abusing the COVID-19 funds after the release of the Audito General’s report.

    He categorically stated that he was aware COVID-19 resources secured by government was misused nonetheless he called on the government to provide an update on what the funds were used for.

    Former President John Mahama also accused government of using COVID resources to win the 2020 polls.

    Subsequently, the Minority petitioned the Auditor-General to conduct an audit into the funds and what they were used for. The audit was eventually conducted.

    Speaking on the audit, the President indicated that the findings in the report is testament to his claim that the funds were not misused.

    “It was government that aked for the COVID-19 funds to be audited. And I can assure this house that nothing dishonorable was done with the COVID-19 funds. The responses from the Ministries for Health and Finance on January 23 and 25 2023, respectively have sufficiently laid to rest the findings from the Auditor-General’s reports and I believe any objective scrutiny of these statements of the said ministries will justify this conclusion,” he added.

    He further extended profound appreciation to all persons who contributed to the funds.

    “I was and I’m grateful that the people of Ghana Rose to the occasion and together we went through the crisis and came out well by defying the doomsday’s predictions about the unavailability if dead bodies on our streets. I’m grateful that we saw the wisdom in helping each other and I thank those who contributed their time and energy to the fight against the virus and those who contributed to the COVID-19 fund,” he added.

  • Acting is hustling; add a side gig – Pascaline Edwards

    Acting is hustling; add a side gig – Pascaline Edwards

    Veteran Ghanaian actress Pascaline Edwards has advised young people in the acting or movie industry to complement their acting with other side jobs.

    She said this warning that the acting business is a hand-to-mouth job and does not pay much.

    “If you have to sell groundnut and maize as your regular day job, do that and add the acting as your side hustle because it’s really a hand-to-mouth industry,” she said.

    She also asserted that anyone who claims to have made a fortune from acting in Ghana is not telling the truth.

    “Whoever in the industry says they’ve made a fortune from making movies is a liar,” she said.

    The award-winning movie star said this on Accra-based Onua FM’s programme Adwuma Adwuma.

    Now a fashion designer, Ms Edwards stressed that acting as a sole source of income, the brand endorsements and other deals aside, is inadequate in the acquisition of a house or to even start a business.

    She admitted that acting will give one a visibility and a celebrity status, however.

    “The movie industry propels you to a certain level. It gives you a brand. You may get brand ambassadorial deals and endorsement [deals] which can be lucrative but the income from the movies and set is inadequate,” she said.

    She decried the failure of production houses and filmmakers to pay talents their due and cited that the national broadcaster Ghana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC) owes her money.

    “GBC still owes me 5000 cedis [old currency], which is now about 50 pesewas in the new Ghana currency,” the actress with over three decade’s worth of experience indicated.

    Pascaline Edwards was recognised as Ghana’s Best Female Actress in 2002.

    She made a name on screen and on stage, often playing the role of a sassy diva.

  • Kuami Eugene recalls fighting a man over his woman in a club

    Kuami Eugene recalls fighting a man over his woman in a club

    Kuami Eugene has disclosed that he nearly got into a brawl in a club with a man who provocatively touched his ‘woman’ on the dancefloor.

    Recalling how far he has gone to defend a woman on ‘Stripped by Sika Osei’, the famous singer noted that an inappropriate touch from a man brought out the ‘Fadama’ boy in him resulting in a near fight.

    Back before Kuami Eugene became a household name, his manager, Richie Mensah went partying with him in a club, and in one of such occasions, he had to stand up for the woman he was with.

    Richie took me to the club, I hadn’t been to the club before. The first time I tasted alcohol was with Richie. He mixed it and said, try it, it will be nice. Now I go to the club by myself,” he laughed.

    Narrating the story, he said: “I had someone that I admired and we were in the club and someone (man) was dancing with her. It was calm, I mean it was a club so it was alright. Then it got to the level where I couldn’t help it. Now he wanted to touch her. The audacity. I was so charged like they put gas in me. I was like, boss, you shouldn’t touch her.

    “He got so far and the girl had to push him and it got heated. That was when I had the Fadama boy in me…I moved to him and we started, they had to walk me out. They spoke to me and advised me that I shouldn’t start the argument when I walk back into the club…I had to walk out because it was heated…I wasn’t this big, people will take out cameras to capture the scene. I wanted to hit back…that is how far I’ve gone for a woman.”

    Meanwhile, Kuami Eugene who claims to be single noted that he is attracted to smart and well-organized women.

  • Annie Idibia reveals how she solves her problems

    Annie Idibia reveals how she solves her problems

    Actress and entrepreneur, Annie Idibia, has shared how she deals with life’s problems.

    The mother-of-two and wife to popular legendary artiste, 2face stated that she laughs to solve her problems and to reduce her unhappiness.

    She shared this via her official Instagram platform.

    She wrote: “Problem e no dey finish!! A lil laugh will do no harm!!

    “It’s raining here in LAGOS City ATM – 11:38pm. Naija time!! I believe this is the universe pouring down Showers of blessings…to everyone single person here…To Heal Us to Heal our nation – NIGERIA”.

  • How some celebrities are reacting to military brutality at Ashaiman

    How some celebrities are reacting to military brutality at Ashaiman

    On the back of a swoop by some military men carried out at Ashaiman in Accra on Tuesday following the murder of a young military officer identified as Trooper Imoro Sherrif, many celebrities and the general public have taken to various social media platforms to express their disgust.

    Trooper Imoro Sherrif is reported to have been stabbed to death by some unidentified persons at Ashaiman, leading the military to storm the area to brutalise residents.

    GAF wishes to state categorically that the military operation, which was sanctioned by the Military High Command, was NOT to avenge the killing of the soldier but rather to fish out the perpetrators of the heinous crime,” the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) said in a statement while adding that they picked up about 184 suspects aged between 21 and 47 years old.

    These individuals, according to the statement, have since been handed over to the Military Police.

    The Deputy Minister for Defence, Kwaku Amankwa Manu has stated that the government will not offer any apology for the presence of armed military men in Ashaiman.

    According to him, while the government feels sorry for the alleged incidents of violence meted out to civilians during the operation, it is not in the books of the government to apologise for the operation which has been deemed by some critics as unlawful.

    “I think that it is only proper that we admit when there are excesses and in operations of this nature, you may get one or two people who may get carried away and so I mean if decent, innocent residents of Ashaiman were caught up in these operations, I, in my capacity as the deputy Defence Minister will want to apologise for that. That, of course, we will apologise, but my brother, we are not going to apologise for the operation,” he told Joynews in an interview.

    The development has triggered reactions from the general public with some condemning the act while others have mounted spirited defense for the military.

    Below are some reactions from some celebrities.

  • Akufo-Addo should announce duty reduction on spare parts in SONA – Dealers

    Akufo-Addo should announce duty reduction on spare parts in SONA – Dealers

    Some spare parts dealers in Abossey Okai are requesting that the government reduce the duty on spare parts.

    The traders complained to Rainbow Radio 87.5Fm’s Nhyiraba Kwabena Asirifi that the cost of duty has resulted in an increase in the price of spare parts.

    They want the president to address this in his state of the nation address, which he is scheduled to deliver on March 8, 2023.

    The dealers stated that it was their desire to sell their parts at a reasonable price.

    However, the cost of duty on spare parts importation is high.

    “We want him to announce a duty reduction on spare parts. Our pieces have been influenced by the cost of duty. We want him to take steps to reduce it would reflect in our prices. That is our challenge, according to a shop owner.

    “We want him to reduce the cost of duty,” said another. Because of the duty, spare parts are expensive. If the duty is reduced, we will be delighted. This would aid in lowering the cost of spare parts.”

    “If the cost of duty is reduced, our businesses will thrive. It would help lower prices and attract customers,” said another trader.

    President Akufo-Addo is scheduled to deliver the address on March 8, 2023.

    The President was supposed to deliver the message on February 28, 2023, but it was postponed.

    Alexander Afenyo-Markin, Deputy Majority Leader and MP for Effutu, said yesterday while presenting the Business Statement to the House that everything is now in place for the President to carry out his constitutional mandate.

    “Mr Speaker, the President of the Republic is scheduled to deliver a message on the state of the nation on Wednesday, March 8, 2023, in accordance with Arti­cle 67 of the 1992 Constitution.

    “Pursuant to the convention of this House, members are urged to be punctual and accordingly be seated in the Chamber latest by 9:15 a.m. as it may not be cour­teous for Members to enter or exit the House after the President has taken his seat in the Chamber to deliver his address. Indeed, that would amount to breach of protocol.

    “Mr Speaker, the Business Committee takes the opportunity to advise members not to enter the Chamber with their guests,” Mr Afenyo-Markin said.

    The Deputy Majority Leader stated that the debate on the President’s expected message would begin on Thursday, March 9, 2023, and would last six days, ending on Friday, March 17, 2023.

  • Akufo-Addo delivers State of the Nation’s address

    Akufo-Addo delivers State of the Nation’s address

    All is set for President Akufo-Addo to deliver the State of the Nation’s Address (SONA).

    Dignitaries and former heads of States including former President John Dramani Mahama, former President John Agyekum Kufuor, Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, etc. are all in attendance.

    Majority of the Members of Parliament from both sides (i.e the Majority and Minority side) are also in attendance.

    The address in accordance with Article 67 of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana. Among other things, the President is expected to address the House on the progress of development in all sectors of the economy.

    Additionally, he is expected to outline policies and strategies intended to liberate the country from the current economic crisis.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Giants hand Jones extension and franchise tag Barkley

    Giants hand Jones extension and franchise tag Barkley

    The New York Giants have committed to Daniel Jones as their future at quarterback, signing him to a $160million extension while franchise tagging running back Saquon Barkley.

    Negotiations between the Giants and Jones went right down to the wire as they looked to get a deal done before Tuesday’s franchise tag deadline.

    Jones and his representation had been said to be demanding as much as $45m a year following a 2022 season in which he helped the Giants reach the playoffs for the first time since the 2016 season.

    New York’s Wild Card round win over the Minnesota Vikings was the Giants’ first in the postseason since they defeated the New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLVI at the end of the 2011 campaign.

    Instead, Jones will receive an average of $40m over the course of a four-year deal, which contains $35m in incentives and will see him get $82m over the first two years.

    Jones, a previously maligned sixth overall pick in 2019, enjoyed the best season of his career in 2022 under first-year head coach Brian Daboll, completing 67.2 per cent of his passes for 3,205 yards, 15 touchdowns and just five interceptions. He added 708 yards and seven touchdowns as a runner.

    The Giants finished 9-7-1 in a turnaround few expected, but their decision to make Jones the seventh-highest-paid quarterback in the NFL by annual salary after one season of production that was still a long way from the league’s elite will raise eyebrows.

    Barkley will remain with the Giants at a much cheaper price, with the franchise tag set to pay him $10.1m for 2023.

    The second overall pick in 2018, Barkley had seen his career hindered by injuries in recent years but bounced back last season to rack up 1,312 rushing yards and 10 touchdowns.

    New York used the non-exclusive tag on Barkley, meaning teams can still negotiate with him.

    The Giants would have the chance to match any deal he may make with a rival team, who would have to give two first-round picks to New York if they chose not to match.

  • Embiid ‘the best player on the floor’ as 76ers keep rolling

    Embiid ‘the best player on the floor’ as 76ers keep rolling

    Joel Embiid was the dominant force in the Philadelphia 76ers’ 117-94 road win in Minnesota on Tuesday, declaring afterwards “I feel like I’m unguardable”.

    The seven-foot Cameroonian behemoth was at the peak of his powers against Rudy Gobert, racking up 39 points on 13-of-22 shooting in just 28 minutes. He also added 14 rebounds, four assists and four steals.

    Making the feat even more impressive was the fact that it came on the second night of a back-to-back, just 24 hours after piling 42 points (11-of-16 shooting) on defensive ace Myles Turner and the Indiana Pacers.

    Following consecutive seasons where he finished runner-up in MVP voting to Nikola Jokic, the 28-year-old has taken his game up another level this time around, sporting career-highs in points (33.2), field goal percentage (53.5) and steals (1.1).

    He trails only Luka Doncic (33.4 points per game) in the race for the scoring title, while also leading the league in made free throws per game (10.2).

    Speaking to ESPN immediately after improving the 76ers’ record to 43-22, Embiid said he feels it will be the same outcome no matter who is guarding him, even three-time Defensive Player of the Year Gobert.

    “I take pride every single time I step on the floor, no matter who’s guarding, I feel like I’m unguardable,” he said. “I want to show them that it’s not that easy to guard me.

    “[The Gobert matchup] doesn’t necessarily motivate me, but it’s the same thing with every big in the league, it doesn’t matter who I’m playing, it just feels like I’m going to do my thing regardless. I’m going to dominate. 

    “It’s no disrespect to any of them, but MVPs, Defensive Player of the Year, that doesn’t mean anything to me. I’m still going to be the best player on the floor.”

    While he said he has bigger things to worry about, Embiid admitted it would be special to receive what he feels is the pinnacle of individual awards when asked who he feels is the MVP favourite.

    “I don’t know, that’s not for me to answer,” he said. “I feel like, you know, obviously being in the running the last few years has been ‘whatever’, and this year I’ve taken a different approach.

    “I’m just trying to focus on the right things, win games, dominate – which I’ve been doing – and whatever happens, happens.

    “Obviously it would mean a lot to win one, that’s the best award anyone can get, but like I said I’m just focused on making sure I, first of all stay healthy, win games, and dominate.

    “But I’m excited about the playoffs, that’s where I feel like – I feel good. I feel good about myself and my team, so I just want to make sure that all of us get there healthy, and we do what we gotta do.”

    After putting together a 31-10 record since December 9, the 76ers are now just 1.5 games behind the Boston Celtics (45-21) in the race for the Eastern Conference’s two seed, with the Milwaukee Bucks (47-18) pulling away out in front.

  • 2 American survivors of deadly Mexico kidnapping hospitalized in US

    2 American survivors of deadly Mexico kidnapping hospitalized in US

    After an armed kidnapping left two of their friends dead and sparked a days-long hunt for the US visitors who had crossed the border for a medical treatment, officials say two Americans have returned to the US from Mexico and are being treated at a hospital.

    According to Tamaulipas Governor Américo Villarreal, the four Americans were discovered in a “wooden house” in or close to the Mexican border city of Matamoros, where they were abducted on Friday.

    He said that the group had been moved about during their disappearance “to cause confusion and thwart rescue efforts.”

    Victims Shaeed Woodard and Zindell Brown were found dead at the scene, a US official familiar with the ongoing investigation told CNN. Their remains are expected to be repatriated to the US after a Mexican medical examiner completes a forensic examination to determine their causes of death, the source added.

    The surviving travelers are Latavia Washington McGee, who had no injuries, and and Eric Williams, who was wounded, Villarreal said.

    Williams had been shot in the legs three times and was brought to a hospital in Texas to undergo surgery, his wife, Michele Williams, told CNN. Williams was emotional as he spoke to his wife on the phone, she said, explaining that he considered Woodard and Brown to be like his “brothers.” Their 11-year-old son was also happy to hear from his father, she said.

    The FBI confirmed Tuesday that Williams and Washington McGee had been transported to a hospital in the US.

    “I got my daughter and she’s alive,” Washington McGee’s mother, Barbara Burgess, told CNN. Washington McGee cried on the phone to her from the hospital, Burgess said. “She watched two of them die. They [died] in front of her.”

    The tight-knit group of friends had driven to Mexico from South Carolina so Washington McGee – a mother of six – could undergo a medical procedure in Matamoros, two family members told CNN.

    But the group never made it to the doctor’s office on Friday, the family members said. Their car was intercepted by unidentified gunmen who fired upon the Americans, loaded them into a vehicle and took them from the scene, according to the FBI. A Mexican bystander was also killed at the scene by a stray bullet, Villarreal said.

    Investigators believe the Americans were targeted by a Mexican cartel that likely mistook them for Haitian drug smugglers, a US official familiar with the investigation told CNN.

    One person has been detained in connection with the two deaths who was undertaking “surveillance functions of the victims,” Villarreal said, but officials would not confirm whether the person is related to a criminal organization.

    “Attacks on US citizens are unacceptable, no matter where or under what circumstances they occur,” National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications John Kirby said Tuesday. He said the US is working with the Mexican government “to ensure that justice is done in this case.”

    “Right now, our immediate concerns are the safe return of our citizens, the health and the well-being of those who survived this attack,” Kirby said.

    The four friends had booked a hotel in Brownsville, Texas, and were planning on driving across the border to Matamoros for Washington McGee to undergo a cosmetic surgery on Friday, Washington McGee’s close friend who did not want to be identified told CNN.

    This was not the first time Washington McGee had traveled to Mexico for a procedure, her mother said. A few years ago, Burgess said, her daughter had a surgery done in Mexico, which has become a top destination for potentially risky “medical tourism,” attracting Americans who may be seeking more affordable care or treatments that are unavailable in the US.

    The group crossed into Matamoros at about 9:18 a.m. Friday, Villarreal said.

    After becoming lost on their way to the clinic, the friends tried to reach the doctor’s office for directions but were having difficulty because of a poor phone signal, the close friend said.

    At some point as the friends were driving, unidentified gunmen fired upon their minivan and then loaded the Americans into their vehicle and took them away, according to the FBI. A Mexican official said Tuesday that the gunmen were driving a pickup truck.

    A video obtained by CNN that matches the incident shows a woman and other unidentified people being roughly loaded into a white pickup truck. The video shows the woman being pulled or pushed onto the bed of the truck by two unidentified people as a third visibly armed man watches before the men appear to drag at least two limp people onto the truck bed. CNN has not independently confirmed it is the four Americans shown in the video.

    When Mexican authorities arrived on the scene, they noticed the Americans’ van had North Carolina license plates and reached out to US officials, who were able to run the plates, according to Tamaulipas Attorney General Irving Barrios Mojica.

    Investigators began processing vehicles, obtaining ballistics and fingerprint data, taking biological samples for genetic profiles and gathering surveillance camera footage, Mexican officials said.

    Police were able to identify the gunmen’s truck, Barrios Mojica said. Officials then initiated “several searches” with different agencies, he said.

    The Americans were finally found at a house outside Matamoros on Tuesday Morning, the attorney general said. At the scene, two of the friends were dead – identified by a source as Woodard and Brown – while Washington McGee and Williams were still alive.

    Though US law enforcement were not involved in the search on the ground, federal and local agencies in Mexico were cooperating in the effort and a joint task force was created to communicate with US officials, Barrios Mojica said.

    In the state of Tamaulipas, where Matamoros is located, the US State Department has issued a “Do Not Travel” advisory for US citizens, citing organized crime activity and kidnapping. It is among more than twodozen other states under some level of the State Department’s travel advisory, all of which cite crime as a reason for precautions.

    Ongoing violence and organized crime activity has plagued some Mexican cities as part of the country’s long-running drug war.

    Several family members and friends have described to CNN the panic and worry that began to set in as more time passed and their calls and texts to the group went unanswered.

    People had “been calling all of their phones and it’s just going to voicemail,” said Washington McGee’s friend who did not want to be named. “I called her mom, too, and she told me she hasn’t been able to contact them either. That’s when I knew something was wrong.”

    The friend said she reached out to the doctor’s office in Mexico on Saturday after hearing that the clinic had contacted Washington McGee’s cousin to say she never made it to her appointment.

    “When I reached out to the doctor’s office they told me that Latavia had reached out to them to ask them for directions because she was lost,” the friend said.

    By Sunday, Washington McGee’s family became so concerned that they began searching online for any news related to the group’s travel destination, her aunt Mary McFadden told CNN.

    They came across a video that McFadden described as showing the kidnapping, and recognized her clothing, she said. “We recognized her and her blonde hair.”

    “She is a mother and we need her to come back here for her kids,” she said Monday before Washington McGee had been found. She added that Washington McGee’s children range in age from 6 to 18 years old.

    Another friend who said she had traveled to Texas with the group called police in Brownsville on Saturday to report that she hadn’t heard from the group since they left to drive to Matamoros the previous morning, according to a police report.

    Brownsville Police checked a local jail to ensure no one in the party had been taken into custody, but no other action was taken, the report says.

  • Smith in the dark on Ahmedabad surface

    Smith in the dark on Ahmedabad surface

    Australia’s stand-in captain Steve Smith remains in the dark over which pitch will be used in Ahmedabad in the Fourth Test against India starting on Thursday.

    Ahmedabad’s massive Narendra Modi Stadium will host the finale of the Border Gavaskar Trophy, but two pitches were being prepared and under covers when Smith and the Australian team trained at the venue on Tuesday.

    Smith conceded he left the venue less than 48 hours out from the first ball of the Test uncertain which pitch they would be playing on, having been given no clarity by the curator.

    “The short answer is no,” Smith replied when asked he knew which pitch was going to be used in the fourth Test. “There’s two prepared.”

    Smith added that situation, given the short turnaround prior to the game, was something he had never encountered before in his career.

    “[There] might have been a couple of [pitches] prepared maybe a bit longer out than two days but I can’t remember two days,” he said.

    It is the latest in a series full of controversies surrounding pitches used, with all three Tests completed within three days so far. The series is on track to finish with the fewest balls bowled in a four-match series in Test history.

    India coach Rahul Dravid had more clarity on which pitch was going to be used, although he said both being under covers was unusual.

    “I don’t know why two strips are covered,” Dravid said. “I never asked him why he covered the other one. But I don’t know what that was. We’re playing on this one, I have no idea about the other one.”

    Australia can secure a series draw with victory in Ahmedabad after an impressive nine-wicket win in Indore in the third Test.

    The tourists have come in for constant criticism after falling 2-0 down in the series, with Smith responding that some of that had been “mind-boggling” particularly around their bowling selections.

    Australia have deployed three spinners in their past two Tests in the series where fast bowlers have played a minor role and been far less fruitful. The five leading wicket-takers in the series are all spinners, with 78 of the 93 wickets taken by bowlers coming via spin.

    “It’s been weird with a bit of the commentary back home, people talking about us playing three quicks and one spinner,” Smith said.

    “It’s kind of mind-boggling to me when we look at these surfaces and we see what we’ve had, 11 innings in six days or something like that, and spinners have taken the bulk of the wickets and you see how difficult it is to play the spin.

    “It’s kind of odd to hear that kind of commentary, but we’ve had faith in what we’re trying to do and it’s good that we are able to show that we can play with three spinners and win. We weren’t too far away in Delhi either, outside of that hour of madness.

    “Nice to know our plans and everything we are trying to do can work.”

  • Hamilton wants Mercedes engineers to ‘own up’ ahead of Saudi Arabian GP

    Hamilton wants Mercedes engineers to ‘own up’ ahead of Saudi Arabian GP

    Lewis Hamilton urged Mercedes engineers to “own up” for their performance issues after a slow start to the season.

    The seven-time world champion finished fifth in the opening race of the 2023 Formula One season in Bahrain, behind both Red Bull cars, Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso and Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz.

    Any hope that Mercedes would be able to compete at the front of the grid following a woeful campaign in 2022 is already on the back burner, with the zero-pods concept continuing to attract criticism.

    Team principal Toto Wolff admitted on Sunday that “radical” changes are needed, a view that Hamilton clearly shares.

    Major improvements for the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix later this month are unlikely, but Hamilton is keen for the engineers to own up to their errors.

    “Last year, I told them the issues that are with the car,” he told the BBC’s Chequered Flag podcast.

    We need to take our chances – Howe disappointed at another Newcastle blank

    “Like, I’ve driven so many cars in my life, so I know what a car needs, I know what a car doesn’t need.

    “And I think it’s really about accountability, it’s about owning up and saying ‘yeah, you know what, we didn’t listen to you, it’s not where it needs to be and we’ve got to work’.

    “We’ve got to look into the balance through the corners, look at all the weak points and just huddle up as a team, that’s what we do.

    “We’re still multi World Champions you know, it’s just they haven’t got it right this time, they didn’t get it right last year, but that doesn’t mean we can’t get it right moving forwards.”

  • Two Americans taken hostage in Mexico discovered dead

    Two Americans taken hostage in Mexico discovered dead

    As reported by US and Mexican officials, two of the four Americans who were abducted by armed gunmen in the border city of Matamoros, Mexico, on Friday were discovered dead, and two more were discovered alive on Tuesday.

    According to a US official familiar with the current inquiry, Shaeed Woodard and Zindell Brown were discovered dead.
    Before being passed over to the American government, their remains would first be investigated by Mexican authorities, the official said.

    Latavia Washington McGee, a mother of six, and Eric Williams survived the ordeal, according to the official. They were taken to a Texas hospital for treatment and observation. A Mexican government official said Washington McGee was found uninjured. Williams was shot twice in one leg and once in the other, his wife, Michele Williams, told CNN Tuesday.

    One person has been detained in connection to the incident, Tamaulipas Governor Américo Villarreal said, but officials would not confirm whether the person is related to a criminal organization.

    The victims were found in a “wooden house” in Matamoros and had been transferred to various places over the days “in order to create confusion and avoid rescue efforts,” Villarreal said.

    Follow live updates

    The discovery of the Americans’ whereabouts comes days after the four were abducted at gunpoint in Matamoros in what is believed to be a case of mistaken identity.

    The tight-knit group of friends traveled from South Carolina to Mexico so Washington McGee could undergo a medical procedure across the border Friday, but they never made it to the appointment, two family members told CNN.

    The group crossed into Matamoros in the state of Tamaulipas, at about 9:18 a.m. Friday, Villareal said, but they got lost while trying to locate the medical clinic, according to Washington McGee’s close friend, who did not want to be identified. They reached out to the doctor’s office for directions on Friday but were struggling to communicate with the office because they had a poor cellphone signal.

    After crossing the border, they were fired upon by unidentified gunmen, “placed in a vehicle and taken from the scene by armed men,” according to the FBI.

    Investigators believe the Americans were targeted by a Mexican cartel that likely mistook them for Haitian drug smugglers, the US official said. The US citizens have no concerning criminal history that has been identified by investigators, the official said.

    An innocent Mexican bystander was also killed in the encounter, US Ambassador to Mexico Ken Salazar said. The woman was hit by a stray bullet almost a block and a half from where the Americans were taken, Tamaulipas Gov. Américo Villarreal said on Tuesday.

    Their abduction highlights the ongoing violence that has plagued some Mexican cities during the long-running Mexican drug war as well as the growing business of “medical tourism.”

    Matamoros has a population of more than 500,000 people and is located just across the Rio Grande from Brownsville, Texas. The US State Department has issued a “Level 4: Do Not Travel” advisory for US citizens thinking of going to Tamaulipas, citing crime and kidnapping.

    Federal and local Mexican authorities were participating in the effort to locate the Americans and had set up a joint task force to communicate with US officials, Tamaulipas Attorney General Irving Barrios Mojica said.

    US law enforcement was not involved on the ground in Mexico in the search for the missing Americans, Villarreal said at a news conference Tuesday.

    Mexican officials displayed a timeline of the search, including photos of the cars believed to be used by the kidnappers, before they were found Tuesday morning. Mexico Secretary of Security Rosa Icela Rodríguez said that authorities in Mexico have been in constant communication with the US ambassador and other US officials since Sunday.

    State Department spokesperson Ned Price thanked Mexican partners for facilitating the recovery of the Americans.

    “Ultimately, we want to see accountability for the violence that has been inflicted on these Americans that tragically led to the death of two of them,” he said.

    He also did not rule out designating drug cartels as terrorist organizations – something that some Republican lawmakers have called for – but said “we are always going to look at every tool that is by law or any other authority available to us to attempt to work with our Mexican partners to crack down on what is the threat to Mexicans and to Americans alike.”

    This trip was the second time Washington McGee, a mother of six children,had gone to Mexico for a medical procedure, her mother, Barbara Burgess, said.

    She traveled to the country for surgery about two to three years ago, Burgess said. But this time, Burgess was informed by the FBI on Sunday that her daughter had been kidnapped and was in danger.

    Receipts found in the group’s vehicle indicated the Americans were in Mexico for medical procedures, a US official with knowledge of the investigation told CNN.

    Washington McGee’s close friend told CNN the trip was for a cosmetic surgery. The group booked a hotel in Brownsville and planned to drive into Matamoros for the surgery, according to the friend.

    A day after the kidnapping, the friend became concerned and reached out to the doctor’s office for more information.

    “When I reached out to the doctor’s office they told me that Latavia had reached out to them to ask them for directions because she was lost,” the friend said. “They sent me a screenshot of the messages and they said they sent her the address and asked her if she was using a GPS.”

    The disappearance of the four was reported to Brownsville police on Saturday, according to a police report. Cheryl Orange called police from a Motel 6 in Brownsville Saturday to report that the group had not been heard from since driving toward Matamoros in a rented minivan on Friday morning.

    Orange, who told police she had stayed behind in the US because she did not have an ID with her, said the four had not been answering their cell phones.

    The report states that Brownsville Police checked a local jail to make sure that no one in the party had been taken into custody, but no other action was taken.

    The group of missing Americans grew up together in South Carolina and were bonded “like glue,” Brown’s sister Zalandria Brown told CNN. She added that she and her brother are also close.

    “Zindell is like my shadow, he’s like my son, he’s like my hip bone. We’re just tight like that,” she said.

    Mexico has become a particularly popular destination for “medical tourism,” attracting travelers who may be seeking cheaper alternatives or medical treatments that are unapproved or unavailable in the US. But the CDC warns the growing trend can carry dangerous risks depending on the destination and facility, including infection and possible post-procedure complications.

    Matamoros, however, is “not considered a primary medical travel destination,” said Josef Woodman, the company’s founder, “largely because there are no internationally accredited medical centers/speciality clinics there, or in the immediate region.”

    Washington McGee’s aunt, Mary McFadden, told CNN that when the family hadn’t heard from the group of friends by Sunday, they began searching online for any news related to their travel destination. Then, the family saw a video McFadden described as showing her niece being kidnapped.

    “We recognized her and her blonde hair,” McFadden said. She said she also recognized her niece’s clothing from a live video Washington McGee had posted to Facebook earlier Friday.

    “She is a mother and we need her to come back here for her kids,” she said, adding that Washington McGee’s children range in age from 6 to 18 years old.

    A video obtained by CNN shows a woman and other unidentified people being roughly loaded into a white pickup truck. CNN has confirmed the video matches the incident but has not independently confirmed it is the four Americans shown in the video.

    The video shared widely was filmed around 11:45 a.m., Villarreal said.

    The video shows the woman being pulled or pushed onto the bed of the truck by two unidentified people as a third visibly armed man watches. The three men then appear to drag at least two limp people onto the truck bed, the video shows.

    Additionally, photos obtained by CNN appear to show fragments of the scene where the situation occurred, including the car believed to have been driven by the Americans crashed with another vehicle before they were taken at gunpoint from the scene.

    The US citizens were driving a white minivan with North Carolina plates, according to the FBI in San Antonio.

    The FBI would not confirm the authenticity of the photos, but CNN has geolocated the images and confirmed their authenticity with a US official with knowledge of the investigation.

    The photos also show a woman looking at and then sitting next to three people lying on the ground outside a white minivan. All the doors of the van are open. It is unclear whether the four people in the photos are the US citizens.

    The woman then appears to have been loaded onto the bed of a white pickup truck, beside which several people can be seen lying on the street, the photos show.

    One photo shows that an ambulance arrived, but it’s unclear if medical attention was being provided.

  • Potter beams as Cucurella makes his Marc on night to remember

    Potter beams as Cucurella makes his Marc on night to remember

    Graham Potter praised Marc Cucurella after the decision to restore him to Chelsea’s defence was vindicated by a brilliant individual display against Borussia Dortmund. 

    The Blues reversed a 1-0 deficit from the first leg in Germany to seal a stunning Champions League fightback and hand Potter his finest night as manager at Stamford Bridge. 

    Cucurella had been left out of the manager’s last three matchday squads but was brought in to start in a back three with Thiago Silva injured and Benoit Badiashile not part of the Champions League squad.  

    Goals either side of half-time from Raheem Sterling and a retaken penalty from Kai Havertz won it for the Blues, after they had bombarded the Bundesliga’s second-place side during a first half in which they dominated and could have been out of sight. 

    It was a performance that finally demonstrated the potential in the team following owner Todd Boehly’s whirlwind January transfer spend, with Joao Felix imperious in driving down the left side of Chelsea’s attack and British-record signing Enzo Fernandez in near-total control in midfield.

    But it was Cucurella, whose inclusion after a difficult personal spell Potter admitted had been a risk, who rose best to the occasion with an energetic, focused display of high pressing. 

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    Reflecting on Cucurella’s Player of the Match performance, the Chelsea boss said: “I’m delighted for Marc. When you’re having a bad time like we’ve had, you accept the criticism and Marc has dealt with it well. 

    “We’ve tried to shield him a little bit and at the same time pick the moment [to bring him back]. 

    Marc Cucurella was rewarded with the Player of the Match award last night
    Marc Cucurella was rewarded with the Player of the Match award last night

    “With Benoit not available, I thought he gave us some left-footed balance in the back three. Thankfully he delivered a top performance.”

    Chelsea peppered Dortmund’s goal in the first period with Felix and Havertz both going close, the latter striking the post with a wicked drive late in the half. 

    Sterling’s goal in the 43rd minute repaid the raucous support lent by the crowd at Stamford Bridge before Havertz’s twice-taken penalty completed the turnaround, hitting the post first time but taking his second chance after Dortmund’s players encroached. 

    It brought much-needed breathing room for Potter, particularly following on from the unconvincing 1-0 victory against Leeds on Saturday that ended the team’s six-match winless run. 

    This time, the performance matched the magnitude of the result. 

    Potter added: “It was an important game, it was a special atmosphere. 

    “It was a passionate evening. Stamford Bridge was rocking, I thought it would be. Our performance helped that. 

    “We pressed high, we tried to win some tackles. We tried to attack them and play some decent stuff against a top team. 

    “It’s not just this evening. We’ve had a tough period. We had to respond against Leeds. 

    “We played a good game against Dortmund away and we lost. In the moment that we’re in, no one wants to hear that we played well, had some chances and should have scored. 

    “We had a poor first half against Southampton and it could have spiralled into an unpleasant situation. Everybody had to stick together and suffer together and find a way through.”

    Dortmund boss Edin Terzic felt the penalty awarded by VAR for a handball against Marius Wolf was the call that ultimately turned the direction of the tie against his side. 

    He said: “If a decision takes five or six minutes to make you know it’s not been an easy call. 

    “I’m the manager, I’m responsible for performances. But not for the performance of the referee. 

    “In both legs it was very tight games. Inches decide whether you’re going to go to the next round. 

    “We’ve been unlucky in moments but this is part of the game. We knew we’d have to show two top performances. 

    “Both teams deserved to go through but Chelsea scored twice, we didn’t, so we can’t complain about being out.”

  • Rahm ‘thankful’ for LIV Golf forcing PGA Tour to reflect and adapt

    Rahm ‘thankful’ for LIV Golf forcing PGA Tour to reflect and adapt

    Jon Rahm is a fan of the PGA Tour’s recent changes to their schedule and prize money, and gave credit to LIV Golf during Tuesday’s pre-tournament press conference at The Players Championship.

    Rahm, who had won five of his previous nine events before last week’s disappointment at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, has been the undisputed hottest player in golf this season.

    With that form has come the title of world number one, as well as a nice boost to his bank account, having already won two of the four new ‘elevated’ events to take place so far on the PGA Tour calendar this year. He collected $2.7million for taking out the Sentry Tournament of Champions, and another $3.6m with his title at The Genesis Invitational.

    The prize purses in those events have almost doubled since their designation as elevated events, designed to attract the tour’s top players to the flagship tournaments – with 44 of the world’s top 50 teeing it up at Bay Hill last week.

    When asked what he thinks was the driving force behind the PGA Tour’s recent innovations – including the announced no-cut events to debut next season – Rahm said it was obvious.

    “Oh, it’s LIV Golf,” he said. “I mean, without a doubt. Without LIV Golf, this wouldn’t have happened.

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    “So to an extent, like I’ve said before, we should be thankful this threat has made the PGA Tour want to change things. 

    “I think I said it last week, as well. I wish it didn’t come to the PGA Tour being, you know, under fire from somebody else to make those changes and make things better for the players, but I guess it is what we needed. 

    “So, yeah, it is because of LIV Golf, otherwise we wouldn’t have seen any of this.”

    While Rahm is thankful for the competition and the effects they have had, and has no hard feelings towards those who chose to jump ship, he reiterated that the PGA Tour is clearly the home of the most exciting and competitive golf.

    “If you’re not happy with the product, [LIV Golf signees] are free to do as they choose,” he said. “I still think that the PGA Tour is the best platform for professional golfers. 

    “Obviously they’re very different products and they differ in a lot of things, but it’s not the same. Like I’ve said before, I’m not one to tell people what to do with their life and with their career. 

    “I do think the changes that are happening are very positive – very, very positive. It’s only going to make it so, you know, the better players in the world play together more often, which at the end of the day is what the fans want to see.”

    His comments were similar to those from Rory McIlroy earlier this week, saying LIV Golf’s presence forced the PGA Tour to reassess their “antiquated” format.

    “I’m not going to sit here and lie; I think the emergence of LIV or the emergence of a competitor to the PGA Tour has benefitted everyone that plays elite professional golf,” he said.

    “When you’ve been the biggest golf league in the biggest market in the world for the last 60 years, there’s not a lot of incentive to innovate.

    “This has caused a ton of innovation at the PGA Tour, and what was quite, I would say, an antiquated system is being revamped to try to mirror where we’re at in the world in the 21st century with the media landscape.”

  • Protests break out as Georgian parliament passes a draft foreign agents bill

    Protests break out as Georgian parliament passes a draft foreign agents bill

    As a contentious draft bill requiring some organizations receiving foreign funds to register as “foreign agents” passed first reading in Georgia’s parliament on Tuesday, protests broke out in Tbilisi.
    Rights organizations have condemned the measure for restricting the nation’s fundamental liberties.

    The website of the legislature streamed the court session live.

    13 votes against, 76 in favor.
    In the first reading, the law was approved, according to Speaker of the Parliament Shalva Papuashvili.

    The plan must pass several readings in parliament to become law, but so far looks to have overwhelming support among Georgian politicians despite opposition domestically and overseas.

    Thousands of protesters could be seen outside the parliament building on Tuesday night, holding not just the Georgian flag but also European Union flags.

    Some threw stones and petrol bombs, as security forces responded with tear gas and water cannon. Video posted on social media also showed protesters storming a barricade at the entrance to the parliament building and tearing it down.

    There are fears the law could impede the country’s hopes of closer ties with the European Union.

    The President of Georgia, Salome Zourabichvili, threw her support behind protestors, in a video message posted on Facebook, saying “the path of European integration must be protected. Those who support this law today, all those who voted for this law today are violating the Constitution. All of them are alienating us from Europe,” she said.

    She said she would repeal the law if it crossed her desk. However, the ruling Dream Party has the parliamentary majority to overcome a presidential veto, according to Human Rights Watch.

    “I said on day one that I would veto this law, and I will do that,” Zourabichvili said in the video.

    Georgia’s Interior Ministry has asked protesters to disperse, warning that “legal measures” would be taken to restore calm.

    “The protest action near the parliament building on Rustaveli Avenue in Tbilisi has become violent. The protesters tried to block one of the entrances to the parliament, and there are facts of violence against the employees of the ministry,” read an Interior Ministry statement.

    Protesters’ chants, with insults aimed at both Georgian politicians and Russian President Vladimir Putin, underline fears that the bill follows the model of a controversial law in neighboring Russia that has already imposed draconian restrictions and requirements on organizations and individuals with foreign ties.

    President Zourabichvili called it “an unnecessary law that did not come out of nowhere, but was dictated by Moscow,” telling protesters that she was “standing next to you because you are the very people who represent free Georgia today. The Georgia which sees its future in Europe and will not let anyone take this future away from it.”

    The Georgian bill has been widely criticized as posing a potential chilling effect for Georgian civil society, and particularly NGOs and news organizations with links to Europe.

    Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have said that the bill would impede rights to freedom of expression and association in the country with onerous financial reporting requirements.

    “The ‘foreign agent’ bills seek to marginalize and discredit independent, foreign-funded groups and media that serve the wider public interest in Georgia,” said Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

    An EU statement Tuesday warned that the law would be “incompatible with EU values and standards” and could have “serious repercussions on our relations.”

    In February, US State Department spokesperson Ned Price also said that “anyone voting for this draft legislation” could also imperil Georgia’s relationship with Europe and the West.

    The former Soviet republic has played a balancing act between its citizens’ pro-European sentiment and its regional positioning next to Russia. Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said in 2011 that had Russia not invaded Georgia in 2008, NATO would have expanded into Georgia.

    The invasion only lasted a couple days, but it appeared to have the same pretext Russian President Vladimir Putin used to invade Ukraine in 2014 and last year, writes think tank European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR).

    “In the last few years, and especially over the past 18 months, Georgia’s ruling coalition has made a series of moves that seem designed to distance the country from the West and shift it gradually into Russia’s sphere of influence,” ECFR writes in a report where it attributes much of the drift to the ruling Georgian Dream party.

  • Bellingham keen to avoid fine despite ‘joke’ refereeing

    Bellingham keen to avoid fine despite ‘joke’ refereeing

    Jude Bellingham labelled the refereeing in Borussia Dortmund’s Champions League defeat at Chelsea a “joke”, though he warned he would not talk himself into another fine.

    Dortmund took a 1-0 lead to Stamford Bridge for the second leg on Tuesday after Karim Adeyemi’s goal at Signal Iduna Park gave them the advantage in the round of 16 tie.

    But Raheem Sterling equalised on aggregate in the 43rd minute, before Marius Wolf was adjudged to have handled Ben Chilwell’s cross in the Dortmund box from close range shortly after the break.

    Kai Havertz hit the post with his initial penalty, but a retake was ordered after a Dortmund player allegedly encroached, with Havertz making no mistake with the second spot-kick by sending Alexander Meyer the wrong way as Chelsea held on to dump Dortmund out.

    Bellingham, who was fined €40,000 (£35,665) by the German Football Association (DFB) in 2021 for criticising referee Felix Zwayer, was unhappy with both the decision to award a penalty and the ruling of a retake, blaming Havertz’s run-up for his team-mates edging into the area.

    “From where I was it looked like he was pretty close and I’m not sure what more he can do with his hands,” Bellingham told BT Sport. “It’s a yard or two away.

    Man Utd clash will be full of emotions, form means nothing – Klopp

    “I don’t want to get in trouble, I’ve paid enough to them lot.

    “That in itself was disappointing, and then the fact they’ve had a retake I think is a joke. For every penalty, especially when you have such a slow run-up, there’s going to be people encroaching into the box by a yard or so.

    “But that’s the game I suppose, he’s made a decision and we have to live with it.”

    Dortmund head coach Edin Terzic was keen to focus on his team’s shortcomings rather than blame the referee, though he also felt it was a tight call that went against his side.

    “I’m responsible for the performance of our team and my performance,” Terzic said. “I don’t want to talk about the referee.

    “It’s now the third time your [media] colleagues are asking me the question. I think it was a tight call and a harsh decision but that’s how it goes.”

    Despite the defeat, Terzic was proud of his players and pointed to Chelsea’s huge spending in the transfer market as evidence of his team competing at the top level.

    “Fair play to Chelsea and congratulations,” Terzic added. “It was two very tight games and in the end, inches decide whether you go to the next round or not.

    “We have enough quality in the team and that’s the good thing. These two games, this is what we want. We don’t want to compete with Chelsea in the transfer market, we want to compete with Chelsea on the matchday and I think we did it twice.”

  • China expands its diplomatic efforts and dramatically increases its budget

    China expands its diplomatic efforts and dramatically increases its budget

    China is attempting to step up its diplomatic offensive and regain lost ground after three years of mainly self-imposed isolation on the international stage, all the while hardening its public stance against its superpower competitor, the United States.

    Beijing’s new foreign minister, Qin Gang, claimed on Tuesday that “China’s diplomacy has hit the ‘accelerator button’” in reference to the nation’s recovery from the pandemic and the restart of international relations.

    Such outreach will be strengthened by a 12.2% rise in the Chinese government‘s budget for diplomatic expenses this year.
    It is a significant change from the zero-Covid era, when China’s borders were largely closed: in 2020, China cut its diplomacy expenditure by 11.8%, followed by a modest 2.4% increase in 2022.

    This year’s budget, pegged at 54.84 billion yuan (about $8 billion), remains below the pre-pandemic peak, but experts say it marks a significant increase for China to resume and expand its diplomatic engagement with the world. In comparison, in the US, the requested 2023 budget for “international affairs” listed on the State Department’s website was $67 billion.

    And the money will be used not only to fund diplomatic trips. According to China’s Ministry of Finance, the umbrella term “diplomatic expenditure” covers a wide range of areas, from budgets for the Foreign Ministry, Chinese embassies and consulates, to China’s participation in international organizations, foreign aid and external propaganda.

    Alfred Wu, an associate professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore, noted that China is likely to increase its spending on propaganda efforts targeting foreign audiences to service Beijing’s diplomatic interests – including through Chinese social media apps.

    “For example, they try to extend influence in different countries, such as Singapore and Malaysia, through WeChat, targeting those who speak the Chinese language,” Wu said.

    Experts also question whether some of the increase is due to the debt stress and repayment problems faced by countries under Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s signature overseas development initiative, known as the Belt and Road.

    “Even if the interest and principal repayment is suspended, it still creates a large hole,” said Yun Sun, director of the China Program at the Washington-based Stimson Center think tank.

    This year marks the 10th anniversary of the Belt and Road, and Chinese leaders will likely travel the world to talk up its successes, Sun said. “That usually means more diplomatic expenditures such as aid and gift packages,” she said.

    China is set to host the third Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation this year, after a long delay due to the pandemic. It will also host the first in-person summit between Xi and leaders from five Central Asian countries.

    “China wishes to catch up and do more to make up for the lost time and opportunities,” Sun said.

    And China has a lot of catching up to do, at least in terms of stabilizing relations with developed countries.

    Global surveys by the Pew Research Center have shown that public opinion toward China in advanced economies has turned “precipitously more negative” since 2017, due to concerns about Beijing’s human rights record and military buildup in the South China Sea, with the most dramatic declines between 2019 and 2020.

    Since the pandemic, opinions have only deteriorated further, partly due to perceptions that China had mishandled the initial Covid outbreak in Wuhan, according to a Pew survey published last year.

    A notable shift in China’s diplomatic endeavors is a more forceful approach in publicly pushing back against the US – from the very top of the Chinese leadership.

    In unusually direct remarks Monday, Xi accused the US of leading a campaign to suppress China and causing its serious domestic woes.

    “Western countries led by the United States have contained and suppressed us in an all-round way, which has brought unprecedented severe challenges to our development,” Xi told a group of government advisers representing private businesses on the sidelines of an annual legislative meeting in Beijing.

    China’s top leader usually avoids directly attacking the US in public even as bilateral relations have deteriorated sharply. He generally refers only to “Western countries” or “some developed nations” when making critical comments about Washington.

    Xi’s blunt rebuke of US policy was echoed Tuesday by Qin, the foreign minister, who said US competition with China is in fact all about “containment and suppression” and “a zero-sum game of life and death.”

    “If the United States does not hit the brakes, but continues to speed down the wrong path, no amount of guardrails can prevent derailing, and there will surely be conflict and confrontation,” Qin warned.

    To longtime observers of Chinese politics, the sharpened rhetoric rings alarm bells for already tense US-China relations, with no off-ramp in sight for deescalation.

    “It sure feels like the (Chinese) side has decided to level up in responding much more forcefully to what it sees as unfair US accusations and actions,” wrote Bill Bishop, author of the Sinocism newsletter.

    Now that Xi – the most powerful Chinese leader in decades – has lashed out at the US directly, China’s entire officialdom and propaganda machine are expected to take note and rigorously follow.

    Temperatures are not likely to cool in Washington, either, given the consensus across the aisle to be tough on China and hardening American public perceptions. According to a Gallup poll released Tuesday, a record-low 15% of Americans view China favorably in 2023, a 5% fall from last year and a 38% decrease since 2018. More than eight in 10 US adults now hold a negative opinion of China, the poll said.

    “Expect US-China to get worse faster,” Bishop wrote. “I fear we are entering into a much more dangerous period in US-China relations.”

    Since late last year, some observers have noted Beijing’s softening tone on foreign affairs as it upped its diplomacy with Western governments, following Xi’s flurry of meetings with Western leaders at the G20 summit in Indonesia.

    The demotion of combative foreign ministry spokesperson Zhao Lijian and the promotion of Qin – a measured former ambassador to the US – to foreign minister had been seen by some as a signal China was moving away from “wolf warrior” diplomacy, the aggressive style adopted by Beijing’s envoys in recent years.

    When asked about that perceived shift Tuesday, Qin criticized “wolf warrior” diplomacy as a “narrative trap.”

    “Those who coined the term and set the trap either know little about China and its diplomacy, or have a hidden agenda in disregard of facts,” Qin said. “In China’s diplomacy, there is no shortage of goodwill and kindness. But if faced with jackals or wolves, Chinese diplomats would have no choice but to confront them head-on and protect our motherland.”

    To Sun, the expert at Stimson Center, the tone of Qin’s remarks did not come as a surprise – it simply aligns with China’s established lines on foreign policy, she said. “I think it is assertive and spiky, but not as aggressive as wolf warrior diplomacy was.”

    Wu, the expert in Singapore, meanwhile, said he hadn’t observed much of a mellowing in Beijing’s diplomatic outreach. “Qin Gang may be a bit softer than Wang Yi,” he said, referring to Qin’s predecessor who was recently promoted as Xi’s top foreign policy adviser.

    “But Wang is the No.1 official in diplomacy. They are still following Xi’s instruction to show their ‘fighting spirits’ – to go out proactively to fight hostile forces against China.”

  • Arsenal star Lia’s heartfelt letter to herself to mark International Women’s Day

    Arsenal star Lia’s heartfelt letter to herself to mark International Women’s Day

    Lia Walti has won the Women’s Super League with Arsenal and is captain of Switzerland, having collected almost 100 senior international caps.

    The midfielder, 29, was named in the PFA Team of the Year in 2018-19 after joining the Gunners from Turbine Potsdam just a year earlier and helped them to Continental Cup success against Chelsea last Sunday. 

    To mark International Women’s Day, she sat down to write a letter to her childhood self about how the world has changed for females. 

    A message from Lia… to Lia

    Dear younger self

    Generation after generation, women were not allowed to do sports. They were ridiculed, humiliated and not accepted as athletes. 

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    When you were little, at football tournaments, your team always had a one-goal lead before even starting a game — because they had you as a girl in the team. 

    At some tournaments, your goals counted double — because you were a girl. 

    Lia Walti is a regular fixture in the Arsenal team
    Lia Walti is a regular fixture in the Arsenal team

    The only way for you to improve your skills was to play in boys’ teams – because for girls, there were close to no opportunities. 

    It was only in 1970 when women were first allowed to play football in Switzerland. Hence, you wouldn’t probably believe me if I’d told you how my life looked like today — over 50 years later. 

    Today, my team and I have played in front of a 50,000 crowd in a Women’s Super League game. Today, we travel through Europe for Champions League games. 

    Today, our friends and family can watch our games on TV. Today, more people in Germany have watched the Women’s Euros final than the men’s World Cup final. 

    Today, I am able to earn a living from my passion. Today, I don’t have to spend my savings to live in a life of football. 

    Today, there are female idols. Today, playing football is a career for women as well as for men. 

    Lia Walti and her Arsenal team-mates lifted the Continental Cup last Sunday
    Lia Walti and her Arsenal team-mates lifted the Continental Cup last Sunday

    Today, playing for big clubs is no longer a utopia — it has become reality. Today, I live the dream that you haven’t even dared to dream. 

    Today, I dare to dream because dreams like that can come true. Today, we stand on the shoulders of those women who have dared to dream a long time ago. 

    It still isn’t perfect, there is more we need, new dreams we have. 

    I dream about a world where everyone can do the sport that they like. A world where sports provide places of connection rather than exclusion and discrimination. 

    A world where everyone has idols and feels represented. A world where our gender does not prevent anyone from doing what they like. 

    Therefore, we must dare to keep on dreaming because we are not there, yet. 

    Love, Lia.

  • Lioness Kelly hopes success and celebration inspire next generation

    Lioness Kelly hopes success and celebration inspire next generation

    Chloe Kelly wants women and girls to feel they are able to “just be themselves” — something the England star did when she celebrated her Euro 2022 winner in memorable style.

    After poking home the extra-time finish that secured a historic 2-1 win over Germany at Wembley last July, sub Kelly took off her shirt and whirled it around her head as she wheeled away in her sports bra. 

    While it has been seen as an image of female empowerment, Kelly says it was a spontaneous reaction, celebrating the same as she would as a child — the way she felt in general on the field that day. 

    The Ealing-born Manchester City winger, 25, said: “I think it was just off the cuff and just showed my emotion in that moment. 

    “All I thought was, ‘We’ve done it’. It was nothing more than that. In that moment I just celebrated and went absolutely crazy! 

    “It’s something I love talking about because it brings back so many great memories. I think it’s one that will stick with me forever and one I will definitely be telling grandchildren and things like that. It’s memories you dream of when you’re a young girl. 

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    “For me growing up just round the corner from Wembley, you dream of those moments, to play there. 

    I was playing ‘Wembley doubles’ as a kid, where you score and go through to the next round, and that is just like playing at Wembley. 

    England star Chloe Kelly wants women and girls to express themselves freely
    England star Chloe Kelly wants women and girls to express themselves freely

    “I felt like a young kid on the pitch there and I just celebrated the goal like I would celebrating in cage football.”

    Comparisons were drawn with the famous celebration of former United States international Brandi Chastain after she scored the winning penalty in the 1999 World Cup final. 

    Kelly, who received a message on Twitter from the “inspirational” Chastain on the day and has kept in touch with her, said: “Just to see how many women were so touched by that and how powerful it was — I probably didn’t realise in that moment just how powerful that celebration was.

    “I think it’s brilliant and I think as women we are so powerful. So let’s be ourselves. 

    “Not just me in that celebration, I think the whole tournament really empowered women in this country. And for sport in England I think that’s massive, so long may that continue. We have to keep our foot on the gas now. 

    “Those that came before us paved the way for us to be in this moment now. I think we have to create a legacy now going forward and an environment where the younger generations are able to just be themselves. 

    “Be comfortable in an environment where you can be yourself — and I think that’s what we’re setting out to do with the PE lessons in schools and having football accessible to females. I think that’s massive.” 

    Coinciding with International Women’s Day, it has been announced that UK government is to make it clear to schools that they are expected to deliver a minimum of two hours of PE per week and ensure girls have equal access to all school sport, including football. 

    The Lionesses changed football in England by winning Euro 2022
    The Lionesses changed football in England by winning Euro 2022

    That comes after the Lionesses called for change in an open letter published just after their Euros success, the first major tournament triumph in the team’s history.

    Towards the end of last year, the FA published a number of positive statistics regarding the growth of the women’s game, which included the number of registered female players rising by 12.5 per cent from September to December. 

    The 2022-23 Women’s Super League season has also seen attendance records broken, as was the case at the Euros. 

    Kelly, who is hoping to achieve more success with England at this summer’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand, is “very proud” of the role she has had in the transformation that has taken place so far. 

    She added: “I think as people and players we can carry that on. I feel sometimes having difficult conversations is very important.

    “I think what we did in the summer was amazing but there’s still so far to go with women in sport — not just football, in sport as a whole — and I think it’s very important we do keep our foot on the gas. 

    “I’m very proud to be part of a team that did change mindsets and it is so much better now — I think we can make it even better for the generations that come after us.”

  • Five talking points from Chelsea 2-0 Borussia Dortmund

    Five talking points from Chelsea 2-0 Borussia Dortmund

    Graham Potter’s Chelsea reign was handed a welcome shot in the arm as the Blues overturned a first-leg deficit against Borussia Dortmund to reach the Champions League quarter-final.

    Goals from Raheem Sterling and Kai Havertz were enough to secure a convincing 2-1 aggregate win in the last 16 clash and ease the pressure on the under-fire Blues boss.

    Here are five talking points from the action at Stamford Bridge.

    Another step

    Potter described the performance in the first leg as a “step forward” despite losing and having overturned the tie with a convincing home victory, he will see this as an even bigger one.

    Though the chances were at times hard to come by, Sterling’s opener just before the break was no less than the Blues deserved. 

    Real Madrid dominated and made us struggle in possession – Xavi

    Havertz’s early second-half penalty ensured a narrow aggregate win and after seeing his side score more than once in a game for the first time in 2023, the 47-year-old will hope it is a sign of more to come.

    Raheem’s relief

    Raheem Sterling found the net at the second attempt in the first half
    Raheem Sterling found the net at the second attempt in the first half

    Sterling has endured a frustrating start to his Chelsea career, with the ex-Manchester City player one of several Blues forwards misfiring this term.

    Without a goal since New Year’s Day, the England man was finally on the scoresheet once again after powering the opener into the back of the net just before half-time.

    Having initially miskicked his first effort, the 28-year-old was the most relieved man in the stadium when he finally turned it home — with Potter perhaps a close second.

    Silverware still on

    Even during supposedly difficult periods of the past, Chelsea have had a knack of still ending the season with a trophy, lifting silverware in six of the previous eight campaigns.

    Following victory, the Blues live to fight another day in Europe’s elite competition with faint hopes of extending that record in 2022-23.

    Though it would be a surprise to see them go all the way as they did under Thomas Tuchel, a deep run in the competition could buy Potter some crucial time to convince critics he is the man to deliver more triumphs for the Stamford Bridge club.

    Quiet Jude

    Jude Bellingham endured a frustrating evening
    Jude Bellingham endured a frustrating evening

    All eyes were on Jude Bellingham as he prepared to face one of several potential summer suitors but it was a quiet night for the highly coveted teenager.

    Dortmund’s No22 was the driving force behind BVB’s efforts to get themselves back in the game but he struggled to dictate midfield in his usual fashion against Mateo Kovacic and Enzo Fernandez in the engine room.

    Things got worse for the Three Lions starlet in the second half as he somehow poked wide from close range and spurned a gilt-edged chance to bring his side level. 

    Blossoming defence

    Injuries and new signings have seen Chelsea regularly chop and change their defence and stalwart Thiago Silva’s absence has presented Potter with yet another challenge to handle.

    That is why the Solihull-born tactician will have been delighted to see his team secure a second successive clean sheet in the Brazilian’s absence.

    Kalidou Koulibaly and Wesley Fofana remained in the back three, with Marc Cucurella joining them as they shut out any hopes of a Dortmund resurgence late on.

  • Black Sherif’s Highlife music could revive the genre internationally – Akwaboah

    Black Sherif’s Highlife music could revive the genre internationally – Akwaboah

    Akwaboah has argued that Black Sherif’s music is ignorantly called Hiphop or Afrobeats by the music industry.

    “I will describe most of the songs Black Sherif does as Highlife,” Akwaboah told the host of Accra-based Joy FM’s morning show, Kojo Yankson.

    The ‘Obiaa’ hitmaker explained by adding that: “When you listen to the way he [Black Sherif] sings and everything,” it is evident he is a Highlife artiste, “but he has been pushed to Hiphop.”

    Akwaboah opined that should Black Sherif be tagged a Highlife artiste, he could carry the iconic Ghanaian genre on his ascendency.

    “So going global, imagine calling what he is doing Highlife, that would have been Highlife on the map,” he projected. “But in a way it appears we are pushing him into hip hop or Afrobeats.”

    “So now what is happening is, he is out there but they are calling it Hiphop or Afrobeats,” the award-winning Highlife vocalist and record producer bemoaned.

    Black Sherif has categorically stated in interviews that he creates his music from a Highlife perspective. He is also heavily influenced by Reggae. These influences come from music he experienced thanks to his parents when he was a boy.

    Meanwhile, Akwaboah’s latest offering is titled ‘Darling’ featuring Kwabena Kwabena who has lately expressed sentiments similar to his on Sherif.

  • Afrobeats: Nigeria is reaping where it hasn’t sown – Okraku Mantey

    Afrobeats: Nigeria is reaping where it hasn’t sown – Okraku Mantey

    Deputy Minister of Tourism, Arts and Culture Mark Okraku-Mantey has said Nigeria is reaping from the hardwork of Ghana and other African nations because of the ‘Afrobeats’ name given to all music coming out of Sub-Saharan Africa.

    The famed music executive and politician said this on Accra-based Joy FM morning show, Tuesday, March 7, 2023.

    Mr Okraku-Mantey cited an instance in Dubai where a shop attendant mistook Ghanaian Highlife star Bisa Kdei for a Nigerian.

    “The man was Moroccan and he thought the music was [from] Nigeria,” he said.

    “And I have experienced a lot of these things where Ghanaian hard work is going to Nigeria,” he added, explaining that it is the case: “Because [Nigeria] make so much noise such that there is a perception [that] every music you hear from Africa is from Nigeria.”

    Mr Okraku-Mantey opined that Ghana made “a mistake… accepting that we are also performing under [the] Afrobeats [genre].”

    Furthermore, he asserted that the very name, Afrobeats, in plural form, readily reminds the world of Nigerian Fela Kuti’s Afrobeat legacy.

    “The word Afrobeat itself was coined by Fela Kuti years ago, without an “s”. So the moment you hear Afrobeat, the owner of that word is Fela. Then overtime, the West said Africa has too many rhythms so why don’t you call all of them African rhythms?” he stated.

    In Mr Okraku-Mantey’s opinion, Nigerians were quick to adopt the Afrobeats name for their music to cunningly distinguish their music from Ghana’s and position themselves competitively.

    “Because we [Ghanaians] were known for Highlife and we were bullying them [Nigerians] with our Highlife, quickly they opted for the Afrobeats,” he said.

    “Unfortunately, my [Ghanaian] brothers and sisters went to join them,” he stressed. “They don’t know that all their hard work is actually going to Nigeria because [of] the perception about Afrobeats [and] Nigeria.”

    He buttressed his point with another anecdote.

    “I heard Camidoh’s song in Tanzania, Arusha, and people around thought it was from Nigeria,” he narrated. “And that is why Nigeria is getting the buzz they are getting. Everybody is thinking that almost at the music you hear from Africa now are from Nigeria.”

  • Cojo Rae apt to top VGMA Unsung with jamming street anthem, ‘Jah Guide’

    Cojo Rae apt to top VGMA Unsung with jamming street anthem, ‘Jah Guide’

    Signed to Wayne Chavis Records, budding singer Cojo Rae has been tipped to be nominated and possibly win the upcoming VGMA 23 Unsung category.

    His song, Jah Guide has been trending for the past weeks on various streaming channels especially in Kumasi due to his educational background.

    Born as Agyapong Raymond, the talented singer completed Opokuware Senior High School in 2022 with his song blazing in every corner.

    ‘Jah Guide’, the banger, is a creative blend of drill music, lovers’ rock reggae, and it’s captivating in every sense of the word. However, Jah Guide was produced by Tubhani Musik, the producer known to be churning out dope records for many A-list acts in the country like Strongman.

    Meanwhile, Cojo Rae is set to take over the airwaves with his anchored foundation cemented by Black Sherif’s former manager, Shadrach Agyei Owusu, popularly known as Snap Wayne Chavis.

    After the scuffle with his former artiste that almost got him exiting the music business, Snap Wayne Chavis aka Snap C has still kept his desires burning against all odds.

    Becoming a relentless investor, the building contractor and pharmacist who along the line became a music fanatic says he’s always been keen to keep supporting pure talent.’

    With Cojo Rae, climbing up the ladder his umbrella, some artistes who have benefited from the benevolence of Wayne Chavis Records include Awal, Lousika, Amerado and Black Sherif among other ace musicians – he has been the silent investor of many artistes and songs alike in Ghana and beyond.

    Interestingly, he became a centre of attraction when he parted ways with his then sensational artiste Black Sherif, who has now become a household name in Ghana, due to a “breach of contract” reason.

    Nonetheless, his latest signee Cojo Rae right after high school in 2022 slammed out with, ‘Don’t Need Your Love’ and Jah guide which quickly accumulate over 1.7 million streams on just Boomplay.

    With over 11,000 followers on Instagram and 135,000 followers on TikTok, Cojo Rae is projected to be part of the VGMA Unsung Category by many industry players since his music career took off in style.

  • 11 things Kiki Gyan said in his BBC interview before he died

    11 things Kiki Gyan said in his BBC interview before he died

    Kiki Gyan was one of Ghana’s most prominent musicians, known for his exceptional keyboard skills and innovative fusion of highlife, funk, and disco. He was born to parents who both played the keyboard.

    As a member of the popular Afro-rock band Osibisa, he toured the world and gained international acclaim.

    However, Gyan’s life was also marked by personal struggles including drug addiction, and health complications, which ultimately led to his untimely death at the age of 47.

    In this article, GhanaWeb delves into the life and legacy of Kiki Gyan, exploring his musical career, his battles with addiction, and the impact he had on Ghanaian and African music.

    These were disclosed by the musician in an interview with the BBC in 2001.

    1. A highly talented musician and member of Osibisa at age 14

    Kiki was a highly talented musician who began his career as a member of Osibisa at the age of 14 in the 1970s. Osibisa was a unique fusion of African rhythms, rock, and funk that captured the imagination of fans all over the world.

    When the previous keyboard player left the group, Kiki became their keyboard player, despite some members of the group complaining that he was too young. Kiki’s exceptional talent and dedication to music eventually won over the other members of the group, and he became an integral part of Osibisa’s success.

    2. Kiki detailed reasons for leaving Osibisa, said he was short-changed

    While playing with Osibisa from 1972 to 1979, Kiki Gyan said he left the band due to his sense of being short-changed in the payment for his contributions to their records. He said despite writing many of the group’s hits, his name was often not on the record, leading to frustration and ultimately causing him to leave the band. This experience shows how the lack of recognition for his work impacted his feelings of self-worth and influenced his decision to move on.

    3. Kiki’s Solo Success with “24 Hours in a Disco”

    After leaving Osibisa in 1979, Kiki decided to pursue a solo career. His single “24 Hours in a Disco” was a tremendous success and made the charts in both the UK and America. Producers were impressed with Kiki’s talent and told him that he had the potential to become the next Boney M.

    4. Kiki Gyan reveals how his addiction began after he left Osibisa

    Kiki said that after he left the band, he started playing with musicians who were into drugs. These musicians introduced him to drugs, and although he initially tried to resist, he eventually succumbed to the temptation.

    This marked the beginning of his addiction, which lasted for more than two decades and had a devastating impact on his life.

    5. Kiki spent $5,000 a day on drugs

    Despite her early success, Kiki’s career was derailed by drug addiction. He struggled with a cocaine habit that became so severe that he had a $ 5,000 a day habit at one point. Kiki battled addiction for the rest of his life and went in and out of rehabilitation programs.

    6. He was worth 2 million pounds

    Kiki revealed that working with some of the biggest names in music made him rich. According to Kiki, he has seen it all and had all the fun, but how fast he made money is how fast it left him.

    According to him, he was worth two two million pounds but spent his money on parties, drugs, and being generous to others, which eventually led to him losing all his wealth

    Kiki Gyan was known for his love of parties and spending time with wealthy friends, like Elton John and other big names who lived on large properties with horses and other luxury items.

    7. Hugh Masekela’s role in Kiki’s recovery

    Fortunately, Kiki had some supportive friends, including the South African trumpeter Hugh Masekela. In 2003, Masekela flew Kiki out to a drug rehab center in South Africa to help him overcome his addiction. Although Kiki was unable to maintain his sobriety after returning to Ghana, Masekela’s intervention was a powerful example of the compassion and support that Kiki received from those who cared about him.

    8. Kiki Gyan’s mother had a physical reaction to seeing him, which prevented him from seeing her:

    In the interview, Kiki Gyan revealed that his mother had a physical reaction to seeing him, which prevented him from seeing her. His mother would fall ill every time she saw him, and as a result, his sister would not allow him to see her.

    Kiki’s father and mother were both alive at the time of his death, which was a tragic loss for the family and the music industry. His death was a reminder of the devastating impact that addiction can have on a person’s life and the importance of seeking help to overcome it.

    9. Kiki Gyan slept with many women but is shocked he had only one child

    Kiki Gyan revealed during the interview that he had spent time with a lot of women, but because of his promiscuous lifestyle, he only had one child, whom he named Vanessa, whom he didn’t see often but hoped to reunite with one day.

    According to him, she was born during a time when America had the first black Miss America, and her name reflected this momentous occasion.

    He also added that, despite his struggles with addiction and financial ruin, he remained hopeful that he would reconnect with his daughter someday, demonstrating his love for her and his belief that family bonds are important.

    10. Kiki revealed what he would have done right if given a second chance

    Kiki Gyan expressed regret over his past actions, particularly his addiction to drugs, which he believed contributed significantly to his downfall. He wished to use his experience to spread awareness about the dangers of drug use and advocate for others to say no to drugs.

    11. How much he made in three days working with big names like Elton John, Steve Woods among others

    Kiki Gyan made a lot of money as a musician outside of Osibisa, playing as a session musician for famous artists like Phil Collins, Elton John, Steve Wood, and Micki Jagger, among others.

    According to Kiki, he made a lot of money as a session musician for various famous artists, earning up to 8,000 pounds for three days in the studio. He was considered the best-harmonized organ player in London, and his talents were highly sought after by many artists in the music industry.

  • David Dontoh’s performance in Snowfall’s ‘Door of No Return’ has got the reaction of netizens

    David Dontoh’s performance in Snowfall’s ‘Door of No Return’ has got the reaction of netizens

    David Dontoh, the veteran Ghanaian actor, is currently trending on Twitter due to his exceptional performance in the latest episode of the crime drama series, Snowfall.

    The third episode of the sixth season, titled “Door of No Return,” is dedicated to slavery in Africa, particularly in Ghana.

    David Dontoh plays the role of Likem, a tour guide who takes the characters Leon and Wanda around Cape Coast Castle and educates them on the history of slavery in Africa under colonial rule.

    Many viewers of the show have taken to Twitter to praise David Dontoh’s acting and the way he delivered his lines.

    They have commended his performance for being both captivating and informative, and for bringing attention to the important issue of slavery in Africa.

    The episode has also received high praise, with many viewers commending the show for shedding light on the brutal history of the African slave trade.

    The use of the Cape Coast Castle, a major hub on the Atlantic slave trade’s route, as a setting for the episode has also been lauded for its historical accuracy and importance.

    Overall, David Dontoh’s trending status on Twitter is a testament to the impact of his performance in the latest episode of Snowfall and the significance of the show’s portrayal of the African slave trade.

    It highlights the power of television in bringing attention to important issues and sparking discussions on social media.

  • ‘Let’s work to avert violent extremism

    ‘Let’s work to avert violent extremism

    The Principal Analyst for the National Counter Terrorism and Fusion Centre of the Ministry of National Security, Dr Baba Sayuti, has cautioned that the threat of eminent terrorist attack on the country calls for an all-inclusive approach by all state actors to combat the threat.

    “Ghana, in recent times, faces looming threat from violent extremists following increased activities of terrorist groups in the Sahel and the West Africa sub region, especially its neighbour­ing countries of Burkina Faso and Mali but Burkina Faso, for instance, is said to have accounted for 58 per cent of all terrorist attacks recorded in the Sahel Region in 2021,” he said.

    Dr Sayuti explained that threats of terrorist attack on the country had reached an alarming level, but the lack of collaboration among state agencies and institu­tions especially security agencies over the years had allowed terror­ist groups to exploit such gaps to carry out their operations.

    Speaking at a National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) dialogue on ‘Violent Ex­tremism, Prevention and Contain­ment in Accra, he observed that after 9/11, the world realised that there was a gap between state agen­cies in the area of collaboration but despite the might and resources of the US they were attacked and attributed that to institutions not working together.

    The objective of the nation­al dialogue was to engage all key stakeholders to build strong coalition to prevent spillover of violent extremism, terrorism into the country, provide an experience sharing platform to build synergies, share best practices and reduce duplication of activities.

    It forms part of a series of activities the Commission has undertaken in its implementation of the Preventing and Containing Violent Extremism (PCVE) proj­ect, funded by the European Union Rapid Response team.

    Afua Lamptey, Deputy Pro­gramme Head, Conflict Man­agement Programme, Faculty of Economic Affairs, Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Centre, stated that arms proliferation in the sub region and Ghana in particular remained a major setback to the fight against violent extremism and was estimated that one billion firearms were in circulation.

    Kathleen Addy, Chairperson of NCCE, recommended adoption of multidimensional approach to reduce the threat since the threat the nation faced could not be addressed in isolation as it formed part of bigger global network of dangerous non-state actors determined to destabilise vulnera­ble States, seize control of natural resources as well as territories.

    Colonel Kelvin Merdiemah, Director, National Centre for Coordination and Early Warning Mechanism, stressed the need for timely dissemination of early warning alerts to inform the citi­zenry on measures to take.

  • Adopt right measure to resolve labour disputes – CJ

    Adopt right measure to resolve labour disputes – CJ

    Adopting the right procedures in labour issues will help reduce work load of the judiciary, the Chief Justice, Justice Kwasi Anin Yeboah, has said.

    He said the courts could only be invited to enforce the law on any labour matter when the Na­tional Labour Commission (NLC) plays it part by ensuring the laid down procedures were employed during adjudication of labour disputes.

    • Justice Kwasi Anin Yeboah (middle) with executives of the commission Photo: Seth Osabukle
    • Justice Kwasi Anin Yeboah (middle) with executives of the commission Photo: Seth Osabukle

    The Chief Justice said these on Thursday when the NLC paid a courtesy call on him in his office in Accra.

    Justice Yeboah noted that there would not be the need for the high court to reopen a case if the right procedures were taken by the NLC.

    But in the event the high court reopens a case after the right pro­cedures were adopted, the Chief Justice said the NLC could appeal the decision of the high court at the Supreme Court.

    The Chief Justice said that the decision of the Supreme Court which was the highest court of the land, then became binding on the high court.

    Justice Yeboah said that cen­tralisation of institutions and the failure to use administrative tribu­nals in resolving labour disputes remained a challenge.

    The Chief Justice advised the NLC to engage good lawyers who were capable of pursuing cases from the high court to the Supreme Court.

    For his part, Justice Kwabena Asuman-Adu, the chairman of the NLC, described the judiciary as an important stakeholder in labour matters.

    He stressed the need to en­gage the judiciary as they were the first point of call whenever there was a labour dispute.

    Justice Asuman-Adu, who is a retired high court judge told the Ghanaian Times in an interview that the NLC considers training recorders- those who record proceedings during adjudication and transcribe the recordings as a priority.

    Touching on centralisation,  Justice Asuman-Adu said the NLC had committees who sit in only three out of the 16 regions.

    The NLC Chairman men­tioned Takoradi, Kumasi, and Tema as the regions where NLC committees sit and added that the NLC was in the process of setting another committee in Sunyani, and would set more in all the regions if it got the neces­sary financial support.