The Ghana Education Trust Fund (GETFund), has settled part of outstanding debts owed contractors to the tune of GH¢667,793,936.27 as of November 2022.
This was in fulfilment of a promise made by the Administrator of GETFund, Dr. Richard Ampofo Boadu, on Tuesday, November 8, 2022, at the Stakeholder Engagement Forum organised by the Fund, held at the Academy of Arts and Sciences, Accra.
Dr. Boadu had assured the gathering that processes had commenced to settle claims covering 867 certified Interim Payment Certificates (IPCs) on projects and supplies across the levels of education.GETFund contracts.
The Administrator had indicated how payments were going to be made via the mix of the funding sources; proceeds from Daakye Plc Bond Issuance and the government releases through the Controller and the Accountant General’s Department (CAGD) to the coffers of the Fund.
The highly patronised forum was graced by the Education Minister, Dr. Yaw Osei Adutwum, among other key stakeholders in the education sector.
The processes for the said payments that began mid-October 2022 with the signing of novation agreements with contractors covering 867 claims ended in November 2022 with the accounts of all contractors duly credited.GETFund contracts
Breakdown of Payments
The paid claims covered 271 for basic schools’ projects amounting to GH¢40,925,832.52.
The payments for second-cycle schools covered 351 certificates with a total sum of GH¢434,732,042.82.
A total of 242 tertiary institution claims were paid to the tune of GH¢188,845,374.61.
Other claims from the Ministry of Education paid, amounted to GH¢3,290,686.32.
It must be noted that the Daakye payments covered mainly emergency projects that were awarded between 2017 — 2022 and certificates were received and processed by 30 September 2022.
The tertiary claims covered about 92% of certificates on legacy projects inherited by the current administration, received and processed by 30 September 2022, by the Fund.
“GETFund would like to assure contractors that plans are in place to settle all outstanding certificates in an effort to complete stalled projects in our schools within the next three years”, a statement from the Fund mentioned.
Asante Kotoko will try to reclaim second place on the league table when they face Berekum Chelsea in Kumasi on Wednesday afternoon.
The Porcupine Warriors are currently fifth, and a win would propel them back to second, which fierce rivals Hearts of Oak currently hold after defeating Nsoatreman FC on Tuesday.
Kotoko went into the World Cup break without a win in two games, which cost them the top spot in the league. They’ve most likely used the four-week break to get back to their best and would be eager to show it against Berekum Chelsea in Kumasi.
Berekum Chelsea have been hot and cold this season, but they earned a great win before the break. They’ve had enough rest to be able to build on it.
They have the potential to cause problems for Kotoko in their pursuit of their first away win of the season.
The Blues won all three points in their last visit to Kumasi in May, thanks to a late goal by Kelvin Obeng. They haven’t won an away game since, so they’re hoping for a repeat performance.
Chelsea must be at their best, as Kotoko are unbeaten at home, and the Porcupine Warriors feel more at ease when they play in front of their fans.
Five persons, including a pregnant woman, have been remanded into Police custody by an AccraCircuit Court for their alleged involvement in the robbery of a Chinese national at Caprice in Accra on December 9, 2022.
They have been accused of robbing the Chinese woman of GH₵410,000, $8,000 and two iPhones.
The accused persons are; Prince Anthony Chiobi, Izichuku Igwenagu, Emmanuella Chinwetalu, the lady who is pregnant, Martin Ahamafula Onwukwa, and Godfred Chukuebuka, aka, Caleb.
A sixth accused person, Yaw John Darko Ikenna is said to be at large.
The five accused persons have been charged with conspiracy to commit robbery and robbery.
The court presided over by Mrs Susana Eduful did not take their pleas pending further investigations.
They are expected to reappear on December 28, 2022.
The prosecution, led by Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Seth Frimpong, opposed a bail appeal, saying if accused persons were granted bail, they would hamper investigations.
ASP Frimpong said the Police needed Emmanuella, the third accused person, married to Ikenna, currently at large, for more information.
He prayed the court to remand the accused persons for one week.
ASP Emmanuel Haligah, another prosecutor, told the court that the Police, at the peril of their lives managed to arrest the accused persons and that they had extended investigations into other places because some of the accused persons were said to belong to a group of robbers who allegedly travelled to Ghana to rob and leave the jurisdiction.
According to him, the Police had intelligence that Ikenna had sent money to Emmanuella to travel out of the country.
The defence counsel, Edward Nana Asare, prayed the court to grant the accused persons bail, especially Emmanuella who was heavily pregnant and needed special care.
“My Lady the Police are trying to use her as bait to get Ikenna.”
Nana Asare said there were no indications that any of the accused persons took part in the said robbery incident.
He drew the court’s attention to the Police’s assertion that some robbers had travelled to Ghana, engaged in robbery and left, suggesting his clients were not part of them.
The Court in its ruling declined bail.
It held that Emmanuella, who appeared to be pregnant, should be provided with basic needs while in custody.
The case of the prosecution was that on December 9, 2022, the Accra Regional Police Command had information that some armed men on motorbike had attacked, shot, and robbed a Chinese woman of some valuables at Caprice, a suburb of Accra.
It said the Regional Police on receipt of the information dispatched police personnel to the scene to ascertain the facts and investigate.
The prosecution said the victim informed the Police that the robbers took her GH₵370,000 which she had earlier cashed from the Standard Chartered Bank, West Hills Mall branch on the day of the incident.
According to the prosecution, the victim stated that she also had cash in the sum of GH₵40,000 and $8,000 as well as two iPhones (iPhone 11 and 8+), all stolen.
It said police intelligence revealed that the “suspects before this honourable court and others were involved in the crime and it emerged that they were at a hideout at Buduburam.”
The prosecution said when the Police got there the robbers engaged them in a shootout which resulted in the deaths of Nneji Harrison Ogbona and another.
“These suspects before the court were apprehended later while others escaped. During investigations, it emerged that the suspects met at Igwenagu’s drinking spot at Buduburam and planned the crime,” the prosecution told the court.
It said investigations revealed that Ikenna now at large, had agreed with Godfred Chukuebuka, aka, Caleb who had been convicted for 10 years by another Circuit Court for a similar offence.
The prosecution told the court that investigations also indicated that, “the suspects entered Ghana through unapproved routes with the intention to commit crime and go back”.
It said the police had received information that Ikenna was hiding in Nigeria, and that he had sent money – GH₵1,300 – as transportation for his wife (Emmanuella) to join him in Nigeria.
Dean for the University of Cape Coast Business School (UCCBS), Professor John Gatsi has said the announcement on the external debt payment for an International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan places the country in bad light for future loans.
Ghana has announced a suspension of all debt service payments under certain categories of external debt, pending an orderly restructuring of the affected obligations.
The suspension, according to a press statement by the Finance Ministry, will include the payments on Eurobonds; commercial term loans; and on most of the country’s bilateral debt.
Commenting on the announcement on Starr Today with Joshua Kodjo Mensah Monday, Mr. Gatsi indicated that the government’s difficult situation is self-inflicted.
He further added that the government’s predicaments on various debt restructuring were completely avoidable.
“We risk further downgrades but the question is a downgrade to where because we are already in junk status. If you are downgraded deeper it doesn’t mean much to you because you are not going to the debt market now. It is when you go later that you get the backlash as someone who does not keep a covenant. We may give you money but after some time you will come back and say you cannot pay.”
“So that is the risk awaiting us as we journey along even though I know that further downgrade does not mean much but it will catch up with us at a future date,” Mr. Gatsi explained.
He said the government had every opportunity to avoid the current situation it finds itself in but failed to recognize it.
“We had every opportunity to borrow according to the revenue size of the country. We had every opportunity to manage our debts well and we had every opportunity not to use COVID to overborrow. We had every opportunity not to use the COVID year to borrow excessively for elections. So we had every opportunity to manage our finances prudently but we chose not to do that and that is what has landed us in this situation.”
Parliament has approved GH¢114.78 million for the implementation of programmes and activities of the Ministry of Information and its agencies for the 2023 financial year.
For fiscal year 2022, the sum of GH¢151.89 million was appropriated by the House to the Ministry of Information and its agencies, which was later revised to GH¢ 143.30 million.
Out of the revised budget, the Ministry and its agencies expended a total of GHC90.38 million as of the end of November 2022.
The policy objectives in line with the Ministry’s National Medium-Term Development Plan (2022-2025) include deepening democratic governance, strengthening transparency and public accountability, and promoting the fight against corruption and economic crimes.
Vincent Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, the Minister of Information, who moved the motion for the approval of the Ministry’s budgetary allocation, said in his comment on GBC’s debt issues before the court that public resources could not be used to settle that and, therefore, the Corporation had to generate resources to settle that.
“…And, therefore, working with the Board and Management of GBC, we have been exploring ways by which an arrangement can be made to settle a part of the outstanding (debts), and then moving forward, there will be a new arrangement that will be in consonance with the law put in place,” he said.
“So, Mr. Speaker, we expect that between these two extremes, we would be able to bring an end to the annual debt issues of the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation.”
Mr. Sylvester Matthew Tetteh, the Vice Chairman of the Parliamentary Select Committee on Communication, and New Patriotic Party (NPP) Member of Parliament (MP) for Ngleshie-Amanfro, said the Committee noted the achievement of the Ministry of Information regarding the government flagship programmes (GOVCOM) being implemented by the Ministry.
He said the programmes being implemented comprised the Minister’s Press Briefing, Mass Media Campaigns, Reach on Social Media, Nation Building Updates, and Amplified.
He said it was, however, noted that out of the Ministry’s request of six million Ghana cedis submitted to the Ministry of Finance for the implementation of the GOVCOM activities in 2023, only a paltry sum of GH¢600,000.00 (representing 10 per cent) had been allocated; stating that the Committee considered these programmes very critical to consolidate the nation’s democracy and good governance and should be continued.
“In this regard, the Committee implores the Ministry of Finance to source additional funding to sustain the implementation of the programmes.”
He said the committee noted the precarious financial circumstances of the Ministry of Information and its agencies, especially the GBC, and accordingly, strongly requested the Ministry of Finance to arrange additional funding to support their operations in 2023.
Contributing to the debate on the Motion, Mr Alhassan Bashir Alhassan Fuseini, the Ranking Member of the Parliamentary Select Committee on Communication, and National Democratic Congress (NDC) MP for Sagnarigu, said the Information Ministry had the onerous responsibility of having to sensitise the people of the country about Government Policies and programmes, as well as serving as the feedback.
He said the government could have the best of intentions; however, it still had to get the mechanisms for conveying that information to the people.
He said many of the agencies under the Ministry were dealing with obsolete equipment and that there was a need for the government to do more to retool them.
Mr. Iddrisu Haruna, the Minority Leader in Parliament and NDC MP for Tamale South, noted in his contribution that the Minister of Information needed support in order to communicate the government and its policies well.
He said he was disappointed at what he was seeing in terms of budgetary allocation and budgetary resources for the Ministry of Information.
He called for the repositioning of the GBC, like the BBC and CNN, to make sure that the GBC itself functioned more effectively on a digital platform.
The minority leader said GBC was very capable of making it if given the needed support by the government.
The Qatar 2022 edition of football’s flagship tournament is the last to feature its current 32-team format, with 48 nations set to take part at the 2026 event.
Infantino has pushed for expansion since he replaced Blatter as the head of FIFA and has explored moving the World Cup to either a biennial or triennial cycle.
But his predecessor suggests he is not acting in the best interests of the sport.
“What is happening at the moment is an over-commercialisation of the game,” he told German newspaper Die Ziet. “[It is] trying to squeeze more and more out of the lemon.
“[Look at] the World Cup with 48 teams, or a Club World Cup that must be viewed as competition to the UEFA Champions League. FIFA is meddling in something that doesn’t really concern them.
“I have no relationship with Infantino. He behaved disrespectfully because he has refused any contact with me since his election. He only communicates with me through lawyers.”
Infantino revealed plans for a 32-team Club World Cup earlier this month, returning to a planned expansion originally waylaid by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The proposal is still subject to confederation approval, and is expected to generate pushback from several leading clubs, particularly in the wake of the failed European Super League breakaway.
Hearts of Oak hero Kwadwo Obeng Jnr picked up the Man of the Match award as he scored the only goal of the match in their 1-0 win over Nsoatreman.
In his post-match interview, the striker said: “A lot has been said about Hearts of Oak on social media this week. I want to thank the fans for their support. I dedicate this award to all Hearts supporters.”
This comes in the wake of some unsavoury comments made by the club’s former captain, Fatawu Mohammed which has infuriated the Phobian fraternity.
Hearts have climbed to second place on the league standings- 3 points behind new leaders, Aduana Stars.
The Phobians will host Bechem United in their next league game on New Year’s Day.
Lionel Messi watched on as Emiliano Martinez held a doll with Kylian Mbappe’s face on it during Argentina’s World Cup victory homecoming parade.
Argentina goalkeeper, Martinez was pictured cradling the toy baby – complete with nappy, with Mbappe’s face stuck onto the head – on an open-top bus parade in Buenos Aires on Tuesday.
The goalkeeper had raised eyebrows when he performed a lewd gesture in the seconds after collecting the Golden Glove trophy at the World Cup final presentation on Sunday. He later claimed it was a response to French jeering.
His latest act is likely to increase tensions between Argentina and France and Messi’s presence, as a team-mate of Mbappe’s at Paris Saint-Germain, raises questions for when the pair return to club duty in the French capital next month.
Emiliano Martinez reignites Kylian Mbappe feud with baby doll taunt next to Lionel Messi – GETTY IMAGES
Mbappe, who scored a hat-trick in the final and yet still ended up losing, was the subject of another swipe from the Argentine players in the immediate aftermath of the final in Doha. They marked their win by holding a “moment’s silence” for the forward in the dressing room after the game.
Further celebrations saw a staff member dive head-first into a bin and Argentine players singing about “f—ing journalists” in the media area at the Lusail Stadium.
Martinez has become a focal point for some of the more questionable behaviour in the past 48 hours. He was hailed as a hero for his role in the shoot-out, which came after the game ended 3-3 in normal time.
The Aston Villa goalkeeper saved one penalty from Kingsley Coman and had an influential impact in a second being missed. He was pictured throwing the ball away when Aurelien Tchouameni had been expecting it to be returned to him. The France midfielder subsequently put his penalty wide.
Martinez then shocked millions of TV viewers when he held the goalkeeper trophy, a giant gold-plated hand, to his groin and waved it around on the podium. He later said he “did it because the French booed me. Pride doesn’t work with me.”
Argentina’s victory parade in their capital city would go on to be abandoned due to safety fears, with players being evacuated in helicopters.
Analysis: Messi and Mbappe may not be team-mates for much longer
By Jason Burt, Chief Football Correspondent
The futures of Messi and Mbappé are yet to be decided. Neither will go anywhere before the summer, but both have made it clear that they want to see how PSG’s latest attempt to win the Champions League plays out before deciding whether they will stay.
Pity Christophe Galtier, the PSG head coach who must now manage the reintegration of the two superstars – and their third, Neymar, whose World Cup ended in bitter disappointment in the quarter-final against Croatia – when the club’s next Ligue 1 fixture comes around on December 28, at home to Strasbourg.
Messi’s World Cup triumph will certainly hurt Mbappe, who is rightly regarded as the best player in the world at present and whose ambition burns brightly. But there has never previously been lasting animosity between the two players. They are not friends in the way that Mbappé is close to Achraf Hakimi, not least because there is a 12-year age gap, but there is respect and mutual admiration. Neymar, who is 30, is far closer to Messi than Mbappé is – as was evidenced in his exclusive interview with Telegraph Sport – and given their history at Barcelona that is no surprise.
Mbappé and Messi are not buddies, but neither is there any hostility. There is a far cooler relationship between Mbappé and Neymar, who were close, with the temperature having dropped further after Mbappé signed his new contract last May.
That caused consternation in Spain, where Real Madrid had convinced themselves he was joining them on a free transfer. PSG maintain they were always sure he would stay.
There have been outlandish claims of the level of control Mbappé now has at PSG, but it is fair to state that he is the most influential player at the club – just as he is with France. At the same time PSG are well aware that this, finally, might be his last season with them and having secured him on a new deal, up until 2025, they are prepared to sell if he wants to go and they receive an appropriate offer.
What would that be? One senior PSG source told Telegraph Sport: “If people realise how valuable Kylian is today then they will realise how important he is for the club.
“With Kylian it is huge. The value of Kylian? €300-350million. They [Madrid] offered more than us and he chose. That’s the biggest statement. He chose here and it was not about money.”
But it might be next year. PSG are relaxed about that, especially after the crisis in October when Mbappé made it clear he wanted to leave in the January window because, at that time, he felt his relationship with the club had broken down.
Sources close to Mbappé claimed promises made to him had not been kept, primarily the intention to sign a No 9 so that he would not have to play as a central striker, which became evident with his infamous “pivot gang” post on Instagram.
That led to tension with Neymar and sources claimed Mbappé regretted signing his new contract. It has calmed down since then, with PSG believing it was a cry for help.
Mbappe and Messi playing for PSG – FRANCK FIFE/GETTY
The situation with Messi is also clear for PSG. They, and sources close to the Argentine, emphatically reject reports that he will agree a deal to join Inter Miami at the end of this season.
When the claims were made last month PSG even double-checked with Messi’s camp and were assured that he was solely focused on the World Cup and that, as he had told them in talks before the tournament, he would be willing to stay another season in Paris if the conditions are right. There is already an option for him to do so.
It may also depend on how PSG fare in the Champions League, although Messi has told the club that he enjoys working under Galtier and they are reasonably confident he will remain. At the very least they are emphatic he has not decided his future.
Inter Miami, who are part-owned by David Beckham, have made no secret of wanting to sign Messi. Beckham also has close links with the Qataris, having played for PSG, and worked as an £150 million ambassador, controversially, during the World Cup. The Qataris would be surprised if a deal has been done behind their backs with Messi.
It further said that if the IMF board fails to meet the January 2023 expected date, the programme would be approved latest by March 2023.
A myjoyonline report indicates that Red Intelligence in its latest analysis on Ghana’s debt restructuring said the staff-level agreement is in good shape and the end of December target looks realistic.
It would be recalled that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday, December 13, 2022, announced that, it has reached a staff-level agreement with Ghana on economic policies and reforms to be supported by a new three-year arrangement under the Extended Credit Facility (ECF) of about US$3 billion.
According to the IMF, the authorities’ strong reform programme is aimed at restoring macroeconomic stability of Ghana’s economy.
An IMF team led by its Mission Chief for Ghana, Stéphane Roudet, said Ghanaian authorities have launched a comprehensive debt operation by way of restoring the country’s public debt sustainability.
Redd Intelligence, while touching on Ghana’s debt sustainability programme said it shows government is serious about achieving external debt restructuring in the first half of 2023.
On Monday, December 5, 2022, government rolled out a debt restructuring programme to restore its capacity to service its high-rising debt.
Under this programme, all domestic bondholders have been charged to exchange their instruments for new ones.
Existing domestic bonds as of December 1, 2022, will be exchanged for a set of four new bonds maturing in 2027, 2029, and 2037.
The annual coupons on all of these bonds will be set at 0% in 2023, 5% in 2024 and 10% from 2025 until maturity.
John Allotey, Chief Executive Officer of the Forestry Commission, who announced this said, “The Koforidua site has been identified and it has been fenced whilst we are waiting for approval from the Environmental Protection Agency.”
He added that “The Tamale site has been identified and the designs are being prepared and once they are ready, we will do the necessary consultations and start the practical work and the infrastructure.”
During the awards, 18 staff members of the Forestry Commission were given meritorious awards for their commitment and dedication to the organisation over the years, where they received citations, television sets, refrigerators, and unspecified amount of money.
The country already has two zoos located in Accra and Kumasi, and the Accra Zoo had recently undergone refurbishment while the Kumasi zoo is currently undergoing refurbishment.
Mr Allotey encouraged members of the public home and abroad to visit the zoos to achieve the intended purpose.
He touched on this year’s Green Ghana project and said 26.5 million seedlings were distributed, and three months after the exercise, staff of the Commission “At the district and regional levels have been able to confirm and verify that 24.5 million seedlings have been planted.”
He said “The Forest Services Division under the Plantation Development and Management Strategy was tasked to plant 25,000 hectares of plantation annually. Through the dedication of our staff, 18,887 hectares, representing 76 per cent, have been developed as of October, this year.”
He spoke about timber extraction and indicated “The total amount or volume of timber that has been extracted so far from the natural forest is 1.5 million cubic metres. This is made up of 1.3 million on reserve and 200,000 off reserve. As well, 142,000 cubic meters have been extracted from our plantation resources.”
Mr Allotey spoke about plans to strengthen reporting on the Commission’s activities from the regional levels, saying the Commission planned to have at least one public relations officer per region.
“To be able to report on activities that are happening in the various regions. We realised most of the activities happening in the regions are not reported on time and we will designate staff as public relations personnel and will be trained to be able to report on activities in the regions.”
Mr Benito Owusu Bio, a Deputy Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, expressed need for efforts to ensure that trees planted under the Green Ghana project grew well.
“As we approach the dry season, we need to put in extra efforts to fight wildfires from destroying the trees, especially in the fragile savannah ecological area.”
Professor Seidu Al-hassan, Vice-Chancellor of the University for Development Studies (UDS) whose speech was read on his behalf, expressed need for more collaboration between government and other stakeholders to guarantee success of the Green Ghana project.
He said the UDS had facilitated the planting of 3,547 seedlings as part of the Green Ghana project, announcing that the UDS would soon launch its West Africa Centre for Shea Innovation Research to help promote sustainable innovations in the shea sector through evidence-based research and policy advocacy to improve the livelihoods of the people.
Ya-Na Abukari (II), Overlord of Dagbon, whose speech was read on his behalf, pledged to support the Forestry Commission to ensure that trees planted were nurtured to maturity.
Government spending and arrears clearance in the first nine months of 2022 was broadly within target.
According to the Bank of Ghana, some key expenditure lines, however, recorded overruns.
Total expenditures and arrears clearance, for the first nine months of 2022, summed mainly up to ¢99.570 billion (16.8% of Gross Domestic Product), below the target of ¢102.566 billion (17.3% of GDP).
This outturn represented year-on-year growth of 30.1%. The outturn was also 97.1% of the target.
Of the expenditures, Compensation of Employees (including wages and salaries, pensions & gratuities, and other wage related expenditure) was ¢27.14 billion, lower than the target of ¢27.94 billion.
This outturn represented 97.1% of the target.
In terms of fiscal flexibility, compensation of employees constituted 42.0% of domestic revenue mobilized, better than the 50.4% recorded in the corresponding period of 2021.
Use of Goods and Services totalled ¢4.233 billion, lower than the expected target of ¢5.117 billion. The outturn was 17.3% below the target, but recorded a year-on-year growth of 25.9 percent.
Total interest payments of ¢32.10 billion was higher than the projected target of ¢30.890 billion by 3.9%, and accounted for 32.2% of total expenditure.
It also constituted 49.7% of domestic revenue, compared with 54.7% recorded in the corresponding period of 2021. Domestic interest payments accounted for 78.0% of the total interest payments during the period under review.
Grants to other government units consisting of National Health Fund, Education Trust Fund (GET Fund), Road Fund, Energy Fund, District Assemblies Common Fund (DACF), Retention of IGFs, transfer to GNPC and other earmarked funds all summed up to ¢17.562 billion, above the envisioned target of ¢16.820 billion by 4.4%.
It also recorded a year-on-year growth of 57.7%.
Other expenditures made up of ESLA Transfers, Covid-19 related expenditures, and other critical spending, for the first nine months of 2022 was ¢7.093 billion.
ESLA transfers of ¢3.816 billion was above the projected target of ¢3.319 billion by 15.0%.
Little Ride, is the latest to join ride hailing services in the country.
This service has a competitive advantage over other ride hailing services as it has unique features such as delivery services, quality cars and provides the option of preferred drivers where customers are allowed to request the services of a specific driver.
It is a dedicated transport management portal for companies and Ghanaian users which has a lot of unique features.
Little Ride provides maximum security to customers as it encompasses an SOS button that customers can use to notify authorities in times of danger in the course of their movement.
Speaking at the launch, Kamal Budhabhatti said the company is interested in the safety of customers and that informed their decision to improve on the quality of cars and drivers.
“We are more reliable both in terms of services and quality. The quality of cars and drivers is much more superior and we are corporate focused and several other options such as reduction in cost,” he said.
The Director of Little Ghana, Paul Jacquaye, added that the launch of the app will help to reduce the unemployment rate in the country by providing more youths in Ghana with jobs.
“Little will bring in more jobs for Ghanaians and also raise the standard for Ghanaians in the current market. We’ll ensure that the ride hailing beomes a very effective tool for mobility”, he said.
Little app was first launched in Kenya. It also provides female drivers with the opportunity to register and work as drivers using the app.
Some others sold petrol at GHC 6.99 per litre and diesel at GHC 7.05 per litre.
The price increased to GHC 7.42 and GHC 7.99 in February.
During the first pricing window of February, there was a 9.6% increase in brent and gasoline prices, moving the price of petrol and diesel to GHC 7.42 pesewas. This was the first time fuel prices had crossed the GHC 7 mark.
The increase was an upward adjustment of 0.52 pesewas from the January price.
Experts stated that this was a result of rising crude oil prices on the international market. At the time, the price of crude oil was $93.39.
Fuel prices cross GH¢8 mark in March
On March 1, 2022, diesel and petrol were selling at GHC 8.29 pesewas.
Industry players attributed the upsurge in the prices of petroleum products to the sharp increase in brent crude, gasoline, and gasoil on the international market and the free fall of the cedi.
Oil prices jumped on Thursday, February 24, with brent rising above $100 a barrel for the first time since 2014, after Russia attacked Ukraine, exacerbating concerns about disruptions to global energy supply.
Meanwhile, by the close of March, fuel prices were projected to hit GH¢9 per litre.
The increase was attributed to the depreciation of the cedi and the increase in the price of crude oil on the international market.
As the pressures were weighing on citizens, the government announced a reduction of 15 pesewas to begin in April.
Speaking at a press briefing in Accra on March 24, 2022, the finance minister said, “To mitigate the rising price of petroleum products at the pumps for the next three months, the government has decided to reduce margins in petroleum price build-up by a total of 15 pesewas per litre with effect from 1st of April,” he said.
“BOST margin reduced by 2 pesewas per litre, unified petroleum pricing fund margin reduced by 9 pesewas per litre, fuel marking margin reduced by 1 pesewa per litre, primary distribution margin reduced by 3 pesewas per litre. These are expected to reduce the price of petrol by 1.6 percent and diesel by 1.4 percent. We anticipate the measures taken to stabilize the currency will help further stabilise the prices at the pumps,” Ken Ofori-Atta added.
However, in May, fuel prices took an upward turn as LPG experienced a slight reduction.
It was projected that petrol may sell for GHC9.538 per liter, about a 0.4% increase, while diesel will go for GHC10.829 per liter, a 3% increase.
Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) was projected to be sold at about GHC10.093 per kilogramme, an indication of a reduction of about 21 pesewas (2%).
In June, the Chamber of Petroleum Consumers-Ghana (COPEC) projected that “Petrol will go up to almost GH¢11 for this window, while LPG will decline by as much as 17 pesewas or some 1.61 percent for the first window.”
But OMCs started selling a litre of diesel for GHC12.40 and petrol for GHC10.10 per litre on June 6, 2022.
Chief Executive of the Chamber of Petroleum Consumers, Duncan Amoah, noted that petroleum products may see a reduction in the second pricing of July.
They noted that both petrol and diesel will witness some decline, with diesel expected to go down by more than 11% and petrol by 4%, while LPG will fall by almost 10% per kilogramme.
In August, petrol was selling at GHC10.95 whereas diesel was selling at GHC13.26 among the leading oil marketing companies.
By the end of August, a liter of petrol was selling at a little over GH¢11 and GH¢13.70 for diesel at various fuel pumps.
By September 1, 2022, fuel prices at local pumps had shot up by about 5.4 percent with petrol and diesel trading at an average of GHC 11.55 and GHC 14.50, respectively.
In October, Petrol was projected to sell at GHC12.63 per litre and GHC15.46 for diesel.
In November, fuel prices saw an unprecedented increase, coupled with increasing transport fares.
Petrol was selling at GHC16.82 and diesel at GHC20.50.
Meanwhile, from the beginning of December, fuel prices have begun dropping due to the appreciation of the cedi and the reduction in global oil prices.
Donnell Russell, a former manager of R. Kelly, has been sentenced to one year in prison for calling in a shooter threat at the premiere of the disgraced R&B singer’s Lifetime documentary Surviving R. Kelly.
CBS New reports Russell will serve the sentence concurrently with another 20-month term he received for making threats to one of Kelly’s victims. Russell will also pay a $10,000 fine.
While receiving his sentence in a Manhattan court room on Monday, Russell told a federal judge he “made bad judgments” while serving as Kelly’s manager. “I’m not a horrible person,” he said.
Russell’s latest sentencing stems from an active-shooter threat that took place four years ago. Lifetime had been set to premiere Surviving R. Kelly on Dec. 4, 2018, at New York City’s NeueHouse Madison Square. The screening was called off just several minutes into the documentary, after Russell called the theater from a Chicago landline and told a NeueHouse employee that he “was going to shoot up the place.”
According to prosecutors this “terrifying interstate threat to sabotage the event” came after Russell posed as a lawyer and sent a cease-and-desist letter to Lifetime, while also calling the New York police and fire departments in the lead-up to the premiere of Surviving R. Kelly.
“We all evacuated in sheer pandemonium. It was total chaos in that theater,” a witness said. “The victims were screaming, crying, not knowing which way to go.”
Russell, 47, is scheduled to turn himself in early next year, and will serve both sentences simultaneously.
Kelly is currently serving a 30-year prison sentence on charges of racketeering and sex trafficking.
Ghana’s Sports Minister Mustapha Ussif has revealed that his outfit spent $5, 071, 840.36 out of the $8,166,200.00 budgeted for the 2022 World Cup.
The Member of Parliament for Yagaba-Kubori in his address to Parliament on Wednesday, revealed how much was spent at the tournament by the Black Stars.
Ghana exited the group stage after losing two games against Portugal and Uruguay.
“Mr Speaker, you may recall that prior to Ghana’s participation in the World Cup in Qatar, I informed the House that our estimated budget for the group stage of the World Cup was $8,166,200.00″, Mustapha Ussif said on the floor of Parliament.
He explained that, the expenditure “covered appearance fees, per diems, flight arrangements, medicals, equipment, logistics and hospitality.
“Out of this estimated budget, our total expenditure for our group stage participation amounted to $5, 071, 840.36. This expenditure covered appearance fees, per diems, flight arrangements, medicals, equipment, logistics and hospitality.
“Mr Speaker, the reason for the surplus of over $3m Dollars, after our exit at the group stage, is as a result of the Ministry’s prudent management of resources, as well as the Ministry’s decision to negotiate a qualification bonus to the next round, instead of paying winning bonus per match.
“What this means is that, inspite of the Black Stars defeating South Korea 3:2 in our second group match, we did not pay winning bonuses for that win. However, we would have paid qualification bonus to the team had they been able to progress from the group to the next stage of the World Cup, regardless of the results of our group matches.
Mr. Speaker, this measure we have adopted is aimed at motivating the team to go all out and progress from one stage of competitions to the other, and also ensure prudent management of resources.
“Eventhough we would have been very happy for the Black Stars to progress for us to pay the qualification bonus, this measure has also saved the nation some money, which will go back to our continuous sports development”, he added.
Pep Guardiola considers arguments in favor of Pele or Diego Maradona to be “sentimental,” and believes that Lionel Messi is without a doubt the greatest player to ever play the game.
Even though Messi has long been regarded as one of the greatest players ever, some people still ranked him and Cristiano Ronaldo behind Pele and Maradona while neither had yet won the World Cup.
That changed on Sunday, when Messi led Argentina to glory at Qatar 2022, matching Maradona’s achievement from 1986.
However, in the eyes of Manchester City manager Guardiola, who coached Messi at Barcelona, there was never any doubt.
“Everyone has their opinion, but nobody can doubt he’s there with the greatest of all time,” Guardiola said. “For me, I’ve said many times: he’s the best.
“It’s difficult to understand how a player can complete what he’s done in the past 50 or 70 years.
“The people who saw Pele or [Alfredo] Di Stefano or Maradona, the people can say ‘my favourite’, but these opinions are sentimental.
“On the other side, if he wouldn’t have won the World Cup, the opinion about what he has done for the whole of football and my opinion of how he is as a player wouldn’t change absolutely anything.
“But it’s normal that it depends if you win [how] you are evaluated. Of course, for him, it’s the final cherries on his incredible career.”
Messi was joined in the Argentina side by City striker Julian Alvarez and Nicolas Otamendi, who spent five years at the Etihad Stadium between 2015 and 2020.
“We are incredibly happy for him [Alvarez] – congratulations,” Guardiola added. “For him, for Nico Otamendi, personally for Messi, for Argentina the country, for a well-deserved champion.
“For Julian, he is with us, and we are delighted. He played a lot, and his contribution was amazing to the team for the way we played. We have a world champion in our team.”
Guardiola confirmed Alvarez would now enjoy “a break”, but City’s other World Cup stars have started to return ahead of Thursday’s EFL Cup fourth-round tie against holders Liverpool.
“The players that were at the World Cup are in a better condition than the players who were here, that’s for sure,” Guardiola explained.
“Sergio [Gomez], Erling [Haaland], Riyad [Mahrez], Cole [Palmer]… the rhythm they miss a little bit compared, for example, to Manu Akanji and Rodri and Aymeric [Laporte] and Nathan [Ake].
“They came back and we saw them so good, perfectly. That’s normal. They compete, they train every day, while we had holidays.”
Photos of the marriage ceremony between the National Communications Officer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Sammy Gyamfi, and his bride, Irene Amankwaa Karikari, have popped up on social media.
The now-revealed fiancée of Sammy Gyamfi is also believed to be a staunch member of the NDC.
The private event, being held at Chain Homes in Tse Ado, is attended by former president John Dramani Mahama, the new National Chairman of the NDC, Asiedu Nketiah, as well as his predecessor, Samuel Ofosu-Ampofo.
According to mynewsgh.com, the marriage, which was scheduled earlier in late November 2022, was postponed until after the NDC’s National Delegates Congress, where the groom was seeking re-election as National Communications Officer.
Sammy Gyamfi later went unopposed after his opponent was disqualified, going on to win.
Sammy Gyamfi also has a son who celebrated his 10th birthday recently.
See the first photos as acquired by GhanaWeb below:
Ahead of the 2020 elections, National Communications Officer for the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Sammy Gyamfi, vowed to marry should his party, led by former President John Dramani Mahama, win the elections.
Mr Gyamfi who was optimistic that his party would win the polls, said he would climax the election victory with his wedding ceremony.
However, to his utmost disappointment, the NDC lost the elections to the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP), thus, he was unable to fulfill his promise.
Two years on, photos and videos of a private wedding ceremony of Mr Gyamfi have popped up on social media.
According to reports, this happened on Wednesday, December 21, 2022.
The occasion was graced by high ranking members of the party, including the former President John Dramani Mahama, National Chairman, Johnson Asiedu Nketia, outgoing Chairman, Samuel Ofosu-Ampofo, etc.
See the first photos as acquired by GhanaWeb below:
Liverpool are ready for a “new start” ahead of their return to action in the Carabao Cup against Manchester City, assistant manager Pep Lijnders has said.
Jurgen Klopp’s side endured a poor showing in the early months of the season, heading into the World Cup break sixth in the Premier League standings – seven points behind fourth place and 15 adrift of leaders Arsenal.
That left Liverpool among those needing a significant improvement heading into the remainder of the season, though Lijnders believes positive signs were shown ahead of the tournament in Qatar, with results including back-to-back wins against Tottenham and Southampton.
“We see it as a new start. The boys are hungry, they are passionate, they want to show this on the pitch,” Lijnders said.
“We know we have to be committed. Against City there will be moments where it will not be easy, but all our boys have this experience. It will be a top show for sure.
“I think we were on our way back, to be honest, I felt that we got momentum, and then it was the World Cup. You have to take life as it is, a lot of things you cannot change, you have to make the best out of it.
“That’s what we always tried to do, we used this time to not only train the lungs, the legs, the heart, but to train the eyes and the mind with video meetings.
“We know we can be successful, there are many things left to play for.”
Liverpool and other sides competing in Europe have previously shuffled their deck for Carabao Cup encounters, using them as an opportunity to hand experience to younger players within the squad, and Lijnders says the World Cup showed why rotation is key.
“If there’s one thing this World Cup proves, it is that you need your whole squad. The teams that became successful needed their whole squad,” he said.
“When we play League Cup it’s always in a busy schedule, and we know we have to be top to win these games. We cannot rest players. The boys have to be on top in games, and it’s a perfect time to use the squad.
“Age is just a number, we still believe we need to give our talents chances, not just younger players against lower-league oppositions but against Premier League sides too.
“We want them to have challenges and make them struggle because that’s how they improve. It’s my job and Klopp’s job to improve our players and to improve the team, and that’s what we try to do.”
Ghanaian actor popularly known as Akrobetohas graced our screens for the past 3 decades and counting with his impeccable acting skills, grace and charisma.
Although most people have seen Akrobeto in over 100 movies but not much is known about his private life because he’s one humble celebrity who likes to keep his profile from the public domain.
Akrobeto started his enviable acting career chalked with many successes by first joining the Kristo Asafo Band owned by Apostle Kwadwo Safo Snr in the late 80s.
He later got an invite to join the once-famous Keysoap concert party in the late 90s and early 2000s.
Now, let’s dive deep into Akrobeto’s laudable biography
Early Life And Career
Akwasi Boadi professionally known as Akrobeto was born on 18th November 1962. His deceased parents were small-scale cocoa farmers who tried their possible best to give him the perfect life until their demise.
The famous comedian began his elementary education at Akyem Ayerebi L/A primary and middle school and graduated in 1979
He grew up along with his 10 other siblings but sadly, they are all dead at the moment making him a lone survivor.
After years of acting with the Kristo Asafo Band since age 18, Akrobeto’s breakthrough came in 2016 after he was cast as the lead actor in a popular Kumawood movie titled video Na me nnim.
Ever since then, he has been featured in over 200 local movies and short comedy series including – Asantewaa (2019) as Agyekum (Akwasi Boato Akrobeto) and The Return of Jamal (2022) as Akrobeto.
Aside from acting, Akrobet also serves as the host of UTV’s Real News segment which has gained him global recognition.
He has also served as a brand ambassador for many corporate bodies both locally and internationally.
Awards
With a career spanning over 3 decades, Akrobeto aka “Who nose tomorrow” has won over 20 awards as part of his contribution to the local movie industry.
Just in 2021, he was awarded as the overall Entertainment Personality of the Year at the Entertainment Achievement Awards.
Wife And Kids
Akrobeto is married to Mrs Georgina Johnson. They share three kids together as a couple.
Akrobeto’s net worth is estimated to be around $200,000. He made this huge fortune from acting, ambassadorial deals and hosting shows, events and TV programs.
Cars and Houses
Akrobeto has over three houses but their exact locations are not known. He owns a 2022 Toyota Venza, a Mercedes C-class and one other saloon car.
Citing the Council on Foreign Relations, an American think-tank specialising in U.S. foreign policy and international relations, she argued in a keynote address at the ‘Seats for Ladies in STEM’ initiative (S4LIS) launch that increasing women’s participation in STEM careers has the power to close the gender pay gap and boost women’s cumulative earnings by US$299billion over the next ten years, expediting global economic development in the process.
A brainchild of the Ghana Chamber of Telecommunications, S4LIS aims to close the yawning gender gap within the Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) ecosystem of Ghana.
In view of the above, she said any development agenda to be championed by government will not gloss over the need to implement interventions which address the inequality in education and specific job environments.
The ministry, she said, “Has been supporting this agenda with its Girls-in-ICT Initiative, whereby girls are encouraged to pursue careers in the evolving and lucrative ICT industry and in recognition of the many more girls in deprived communities who need exposure to the programme.
“It is therefore gratifying to note that the Chamber is focusing on a more concerted effort aimed at ensuring that, in the next 5 years, we achieve near-parity when it comes to gender distribution in the field of STEM in Ghana. This for me is important, because it has implications for our national development,” U Owusu-Ekuful stated.
Commitment, collaboration critical for S4LIS success
She said: “The ministry puts much priority on digital skills as one critical pillar for the draft Digital Economy Policy, which is currently receiving inputs from stakeholders. I would encourage the drafting team to align S4LIS as one of the initiatives to be pursued in the strategies for the policy’s implementation.
Fast-tracking sustainable development
On her part, Chairperson of the Ghana Chamber of Telecommunications and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Vodafone Ghana, Patricia Obo-Nai, called for deliberate policies and strategies to have a lot more women actively participating in the STEM ecosystem; and said scientific work and technological innovations are “missing the invaluable perspectives and contributions of our women.
“So, as part of creating these concrete and practical measures to effectively bridge this gender gap in Ghana, the Ghana Chamber of Telecommunications with support from the Ministry of communications is today launching an industry sustainability initiative termed ‘Seats for Ladies in STEM’.”
She said the Seats for Ladies in STEM Initiative’s objective is to fast-tract Ghana’s sustainable development through STEM, by increasing the percentage of women taking up STEM-related jobs from 30 percent in 2021 to 40 percent by 2031 through a number of initiatives.
“Together, we can create a more diverse digital workforce and promote growth and innovation across our country, thus developing more holistic solutions which benefit all in society – directly impacting the lives of many young ladies and creating futures for their offspring as well,” said Mrs. Obo-Nai.
Adrien Rabiot may not have left Qatar with the World Cup trophy — but his displays for France could well bolster his hopes of sealing a January move.
The Juventus ace, 27, was a key man for Les Blues, featuring in all but one game in the heart of midfield as they went within inches of defending their status as world champions.
Manchester United were keen on Rabiot last summer and his exploits for his country could well tempt Erik ten Hag to make a fresh attempt to land his signature.
With his contract in Turin expiring at the end of the season, we turn the spotlight on what is next for the midfielder.
An impressive turnaround
When United’s interest was first reported last summer, Rabiot had been something of a polarising figure since joining Juve in 2019.
Managing just six goals across his three seasons in Turin, many questioned whether he was capable of reinvigorating what was, at the time, a struggling midfield.
But fast forward four months and things look a lot different with Rabiot enjoying a superb season in Italy’s top flight.
The midfielder has started all 11 of Juve’s Serie A games so far, while rediscovering his threat in front of goal with five strikes and two assists to his name already in all competitions.
Fantastic for France
Adrien Rabiot has made himself an important player for club and country this season
Rabiot arrived in Doha in a confident mood and with injuries to key men N’Golo Kante and Paul Pogba, knew he would have a pivotal role to play for Didier Deschamps’ men.
And he continued to make an impact where it mattered for his country, providing a goal and an assist in a 4-1 opening-game win over Australia.
The playmaker remained a sure pick in the France XI from that point, with his all-action displays proving the perfect combination alongside the defensive-minded Aurelien Tchouameni and creator-in-chief Antoine Griezmann.
Illness prevented the 35-cap international from featuring in the semi-final against Morocco but he was immediately installed straight back into the XI after recovering in time for the showpiece versus Argentina.
Striker Olivier Giroud said of his team-mate: “We like him [Rabiot] a lot. He’s being himself, all smiles. He’s important on the pitch. I see he feels accomplished.
“For us, it’s great to have him available and in form, especially considering the absences we have in midfield.”
Manchester United moving in
United are said to still be keen on bringing Rabiot to Old Trafford, but his exploits for club and country mean they are now unlikely to be alone in their pursuit.
Barcelona and Atletico Madrid are two other reported suitors to emerge since World Cup’s conclusion, with the star’s availability on a free next summer making him an attractive option.
But it appears United will hold the advantage in the race for his signature, with Rabiot admitting he is keen on a move to the Premier League.
Of course, he knows the area well, having spent a brief time with Manchester City’s academy before going on to make his name at Paris Saint-Germain.
Speaking about his time in England, Rabiot said: “It was [a] very good experience. I didn’t do a whole season, though. Everything went well while I was there.
“I really liked the atmosphere. It’s really something that is only in England. It’s different from France and Italy.
“I have always said that I’d like to play in England in my career. I still have that desire. I’d like to evolve in the Premier League.”
Adrien Rabiot likes to operate in multiple areas of midfield
Turin trouble
While Rabiot was lighting up Qatar, current club Juventus have been enduring a crisis back home.
Last month, the entirety of their board of directors — including president Andrea Agnelli and vice president Pavel Nedved — resigned amid allegations of false accounting.
It has led to the futures of many of their players being plunged into doubt, with Rabiot among those names as his contract edges closer to expiry.
While a summer exit looked likely, the troubles in Turin could well see Rabiot jump ship quicker than expected and force a January move.
The latest reports indicate Juve are eager to stop that from happening, though they could be powerless should United opt to make their move.
For all their improvements under Ten Hag this term, a deeper midfield partner to feature alongside Casemiro still looks to be an area in need of improvement.
Having showcased his capabilities to do just that in Qatar, the French star could be the perfect addition as the Dutch boss looks to seal the Red Devils’ return to the top four.
Ghana’s past performance in the last African Cup Of Nations (AFCON) left a little more to be desired. Many fans had incredibly high hopes for Ghana, but as you may already know, the semi-finals was the farthest this notorious team managed to get.
The huge upset that Ghana left us with the last AFCON has made fans everywhere wonder whether or not they are going to come back stronger than ever for the next competition. This is a good query, and it is one that we are going to be talking about in this article. Let’s jump right into it and take a look at whether or not Ghana is looking strong heading into the next AFCON.
The Team Is The Strongest It Has Been In a While
One of the key reasons for Ghana’s strength is the depth and quality of their squad. They have a number of experienced players who have been at the top level for many years, such as Asamoah Gyan, Andre Ayew and Kwadwo Asamoah. These players provide a strong backbone for the team, and their experience will be crucial in the high-pressure environment of the tournament.
In addition to these experienced players, Ghana also has a number of exciting young talents coming through the ranks. Players such as Thomas Partey and Christian Atsu have been impressing at their clubs, and they will be looking to make a big impact at the tournament.
Another factor in Ghana’s favour is their strong recent form. They have won their last four matches, including impressive victories over South Africa and Ethiopia. This will give them confidence heading into the tournament, and they will be determined to carry this momentum into their first game.
Of course, this doesn’t mean that anything is guaranteed. AFCON is incredibly tough, with some people even going as far as to say that it is tougher than the World Cup. Ghana undoubtedly has the capabilities to be one of the top competitors in the next AFCON if they put in the effort to improve, and it will not be long until we find out if all of the changes they have made will be effective.
The Betting Odds Of Ghana Winning Are Better Than Most
When it comes to the predictions and theories based on data that we have access to now, things are looking pretty promising for Ghana. Just go ahead and choose your favourite sports betting casino and take a look at the odds for Ghana to win the next AFCON – they are going to be pretty high.
Both avid fans as well as expert analysis worldwide predict that Ghana is going to be a solid contender in the next AFCON, with them having a better chance than most of winning the whole competition.
Saying this, Ghana’s odds are still pretty low in the grand scheme of things. When you factor in the number of incredible teams and nations that participate in AFCON, having overwhelmingly positive odds is just not possible.
Nevertheless; Ghana is without a doubt looking stronger going into the next African Cup Of Nations, and it would not be a surprise to see them place incredibly well.
Ghana Does Have a Good Track Record
It is difficult to accurately assess whether or not Ghana is looking stronger heading into the next African Cup of Nations than they did in the past. Without access to current information and statistics, it is impossible to determine the team’s current strengths and weaknesses.
However, it is worth noting that Ghana’s national team has a history of strong performances in the African Cup of Nations. The team has won the tournament four times, and has made it to the quarter-finals or beyond in each of the last five tournaments. This track record suggests that Ghana is a formidable team and should not be underestimated.
Sure, past performance should not be taken as a reliable indicator of future performance – but it can give us some evidence to suggest that Ghana has a pretty good chance of placing well.
In conclusion, Ghana has made a plethora of changes since the last AFCON, and all indications point towards them performing much better at the next African Cup of Nations. Ghana has always been one of the top contenders at AFCON – one relatively poor year does very little to tarnish their reputation.
Only time will tell whether or not Ghana has what it takes to succeed in the next AFCON. Either way; it’s going to be a spectacle to watch. We will see you then.
Multiple award-winning artist Kofi Kinaata says that one doesn’t have to understand the lyrics of music before one can enjoy it.
According to the Fante songwriter and artist, the sweet melodies and the rhythms of songs makes people enjoy songs.
Speaking in an interview with Doreen Avio on Hitz FM, Kofi Kinaatasaid if the lyrics of the songs are hard to understand due to the language barriers the melodies of the song help one to enjoy the music.
“I’m speaking Fante and even you sometimes you don’t get what I’m saying, what is a poem when you don’t understand the poem,” he said as Amansan Krakye.
He disclosed “I’m telling you a poem in let’s say Spanish, how will you appreciate that poem but if the poem contains some melodies that even if you don’t understand the language or lyrics you will enjoy the melodies and rhythms?
“I’m giving you Fante poem, instead of that let me do it through singing and infuse some melodies, harmonies, tunes that even if you can’t sing the song or understand what I’m saying you will still feel it,” he narrated.
Health Sector Workers in the country have announced a roadmap for the industrial strike action by Organised Labour in protest against the government’s intended Debt Exchange Programme.
The health sector workers, made up of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), the Ghana Registered Nurses and Midwives Association (GRNMA), the Health Sector Workers’ Union (HSWU) of TUC Ghana, and the Government and Hospital Pharmacists Association (GHOSPA), all constituent members of Organised Labour, reiterated that following a meeting held by Organised Labour on Monday, December 19, 2022, it was agreed that an industrial strike will be embarked on.
It stressed that the “action has become necessary to press home our demand for the exemption of pension funds from the domestic debt exchange programme as announced by the Finance Minister.”
It, therefore, entreated all health sector workers “to follow the outlined road map to ensure a smooth implementation of the strike.”
According to the health sector workers, the industrial strike will take place as follows: “27 December 2022, withdrawal of all outpatient services; 2 January 2023, withdrawal of emergency services; 9 January 2023, withdrawal of all services.”
Organised Labour has served notice of a nationwide strike beginning next week over the government’s failure to exempt pension funds from the debt exchange programme that has been extended to next year.
The stipulated date for the strike is Tuesday, December 27, 2022.
The Secretary-General of Organised Labour, Dr. Anthony Yaw Baah, made this known at a press briefing today, Monday, December 19, 2022.
He said the strike has been occasioned by the government’s decision to introduce a debt exchange programme.
According to him, the strike will be in force until the government exempts pension funds from the planned debt exchange programme.
“We are asking the government to exempt us from the debt exchange programme.
“We have already told the world that if the government doesn’t do that, we will advise ourselves.
“Today, we are here to announce the advice. The advice is very simple.
“We have all agreed that because the government has refused to grant our request, we have decided firmly that all workers of Ghana are going to strike on December 27, 2022, and we will be on strike until our demands are met,” Dr Yaw Baah vehemently noted.
It was Senegal’s year in the African football arena as they finally conquered the Africa Cup of Nations, but their achievements overshadowed by Morocco’s barnstorming run to the World Cup semifinal.
What many predicted might be another horror year for the African game, turned into anything but at the World Cup in Qatar as Morocco became the first African country to reach the last four.
Senegal also went through to the second round as Africa made up for the disappointment of not getting a single team past the first round in Russia in 2018.
Although Cameroon, Ghana and Tunisia did not advance they were all close with Ghana losing a decisive game to Uruguay while the Indomitable Lions left the tournament despite upsetting Brazil and Tunisia handing defending champions France a 1-0 defeat in the group phase.
Morocco had been the most convincing of the teams to come through the qualifiers, which were concluded in March when the 10 group winners from 2021 were paired into five playoff ties.
There were upset defeats for Algeria, who conceded a last gasp goal at home to Cameroon to miss out on Qatar, and Nigeria, edged by Ghana on the away goals rule after a goalkeeping howler.
Senegal narrowly edged Egypt on post-match penalties to book their place at a second successive World Cup tournament after a two-legged stalemate, which came only six weeks after edging the Egyptians on penalties as well to win the Cup of Nations.
Senegal lived up to their pre-event billing as favourites although it was by no means a convincing triumph for the continent’s top ranked team.
But their success will forever have the stain of the deadly stadium stampede that overshadowed the troubled tournament and condemned Cameroon to one of the worst continental championships in decades.
The deaths of eight people, with a further seven seriously injured, came as a result of poor organisation, lax security controls and general dereliction of duty.
This was an event that came close to being cancelled less than a month before kickoff because of concerns over Cameroon’s hosting ability, which were then realised in horrific tragedy.
Yaounde’s newly-built Olembe Stadium, where police stood idly by while a surge of spectators attempted entry into the ground causing a crush, was still being hastily completed days before the kick off of the tournament, itself twice delayed by Cameroon’s failure to be ready and then the Covid pandemic.
A barely playable pitch saw the other showpiece new stadium in Douala prematurely shut in another embarrassing setback and there were a litany of tales about poor training facilities, inadequate accommodation and severe food poisoning that hit two sides staying at the same hotel.
The folly of Zambian referee Janny Sikazwe twice blowing short a key early match between Mali and Tunisia also rained down ridicule and there were some overzealous red cards and VAR referrals.
But it would be disingenuous to write off Cameroon 2021 as a disaster. The first week of football produced a bizarre sequence of 1-1 scorelines but then came intriguing twists and turns, highlighted by some fairytale shocks that brought the competition to life and will have put to bed the argument that a 24-team tournament means too many mediocre matches.
At club level, Wydad Casablanca won a third African Champions League as they ended a record-breaking bid by Egypt’s Al Ahly in the final and at the end of another tournament mangled by administrative machinations.
The choice of Casablanca to host the one-off final was clouded in Machiavellian deceit and prove another example of the Confederation of African Football shooting itself in the foot without provocation.
This was the third Champions League final to be decided at a neutral venue after CAF changed from the tried and tested format of a two home-and-away legs in a bid to replicate the success of their Uefa equivalent.
But the contrast with Europe in terms of fan travel and resources are stark and bidding by African cities to host the final has not proven plentiful, in contrast the wide array of options European football’s controlling body have annually.
While Uefa decide on the venues of its European club competition finals well in advance, CAF left the decision until the Champions League was already at the semifinal stage – just three weeks before the final when it was already clear that Al Ahly and Wydad would contest the final.
CAF claimed Morocco were the only football association to bid for the match after Senegal withdrew but the truth is Casablanca and Dakar were both on the table and a vote of the CAF executive committee gave it to Morocco despite the fact there were two Casablanca teams in the Champions League while none from Senegal, making Dakar the perfect neutral venue.
Predictably the Egyptians were up in arms about having to play the final in Wydad’s back yard and took the matter to the Swiss-based Court of Arbitration for Sport but had their appeal dismissed.
“I suppose the powerful got what they wanted in the end,” said a bitter and sarcastic Ahly coach Pitso Mosimane after his side lost 2-0 in the final and in a reference to Morocco’s considerable sway on the African game. Casablanca’s Mohamed V did deliver an extraordinary one-sided atmosphere with the 12th man factor proving considerable as Wydad won, thereby denying Ahly the distinction of becoming the first club to take the Champions League three years in a row.
Stonebwoyclaimed in a recent interview that he is the only artist who sold the afro-dancehall genre to the world.
Not giving regard to other dance hall musicians from Africa, Stonebwoy said he singlehandedly made the Afro-dancehall genre appealing to the global market.
“I have performed with Bounty Killer, Richard Stevens, Alpha Blondy, etc., on the same stage as Shaggy. I put a lot of effort into promoting afro-dancehall. In all actuality, it was me who sold afro-dancehall to the world. “Oh, I am the one,” he said.
Afro-Dancehall has become one of the musical genre that has truly brought the attention of the world to the African continent.
Musicians like Buffalo Souljah from Zimbabwe, Orezi from Nigeria, Samini, Stonebwoy, Shatta Wale, and Mzvee from Ghana are a few of the acts that have contributed significantly to the globalization of afro-dancehall music but Stonebwoy is claiming sole glory.
When asked if he had plans of organizing a concert in Jamaica, the BET award-winner answered saying;
” God willing!…that would be amazing..It takes an arm and a leg to stage such a concert there, but everything is possible. Actually, I am performing in Jamaica next month so gradually I will get there”.
According to the writs issued, the Plaintiff, a limited liability firm involved in the supply of collateral management, product control, and management services, is attempting to recover more than USS514,054.68.
The plaintiff is also asking for general damages for contract breach, cost reimbursement in full, interest on the amount at the current commercial bank rate from October 2021 until the date of the final payment, and any other judgment or relief the court may find appropriate.
The second Defendant, the plaintiff stated, is a limited liability company operating in the petroleum sector trading and supplying crude oil and other refined products to various oil marketing companies and other bulk users in Ghana.
Plaintiff states that “on or about July 2019, Plaintiff, the Defendants and Tema Oil Refinery executed an Agreement described as a TriPartite Stock Control and Management Agreement for the monitoring of crude delivery through a refining process and subsequent sale to bulk distribution companies as well as exports.
Plaintiff says it was appointed per the TriPartite Stick Control and Management Agreement by the 1st Defendant to provide the service in respect of crude oil to be delivered from time to time, and other refined products by the first Defendant to the second Defendant.
Plaintiff contends that its appointment was required to enable the 1st Defendant to properly monitor the supply of crude oil, its refining into various energy products yields and sale to the 2nd Defendant and over which the 1st Defendant had a lien.
Mandate per contract
Plaintiff also says the services included inspecting adjoining facilities to detect any challenges during discharge as well as ascertaining the quantities of crude oil discharged upon arrival of vessels and reconciling same with quantities on discharge documents issued at the port of discharge.
“The Agreement also imposed post-discharge roles on the Plaintiff which included, among others, identification of nominated tanks for refined products, taking daily measurements of stored products, verification of daily quantities of crude processed and product yields, releasing product yields to off-takers per release instructions of the 2-Defendant as well as issuing required daily and progress reports to the respective parties,” the plaintiff stated in its Statement of Claims.
The plaintiff states that per the express terms of the Tripartite Agreement the fees payable for the services based on the total outcome of the crude oil and refined products, “an outstanding balance of Five Hundred and Fourteen Thousand, Fifty-four United States Dollars and Sixty-eight Cents (US514,054.68),” the Statement of claims noted.
Termination of agreement
It is the case of Plaintiff that “the Defendants have evinced a clear intention not to pay the outstanding amount and proceeded to instruct Plaintiff to cease providing the services and hand the same over to them, which Plaintiff has dutifully done.
“Plaintiff also says that the Defendants have ignored demand notices served on them for the payment of the outstanding amount and have not dignified the same with the courtesy of a response.”
“Plaintiff further says that the termination of the Agreement by the Defendants was contrary to the express terms and in breach of the prior notice period condition for termination spelt out in the Tripartite Agreement.
“Plaintiff finally says it has suffered hardship due to the unjustifiable and unlawful refusal of the Defendants to pay the outstanding amount and they will persist in their refusal to pay unless compelled by this honourable Court,” the Plaintiff averred.
The defendants have since entered appearance in the matter before the Commercial Division of the Accra High Court.
Former Kenya captain Dennis Oliech is confident an African nation will win the FIFA World Cup if they stop their players from playing for European countries.
Morocco made a huge impression at the 2022 global showpiece after becoming the first African team to reach the semi-finals of the competition, however they lost France who were represented by several African players.
According to Oliech, Africa must use resources available to keep their players in bid to win the World Cup.
“Just like our brother Divork Origi plays for Belgium, but comes home to Kisumu and swims in Lake Victoria, speaks sheng, and uses, matatus, these are Africans who are identified in their villages. But in Europe they are working…,” Oliech wrote on his Facebook.
“It shows one thing… Just like in athletics, and basketball, where black players rule… A well-resourced team of blacks is unbeatable.”
“Truth be told, England is also following France in this trend… And sooner than later, one team from Africa will have enough resources to maintain their players and stop them from going to Europe… That team will win the World Cup…”
The Marketing Queen is a unique pageant competition that has created a prestigious platform for ladies to exhibit their entrepreneurial marketing skills and business ideas for job creation.
Developed by PGW-GH, a leading marketing partner of Longrich International, a consumer product manufacturing conglomerate, the pageant has the objective of helping young female graduates use their beauty to develop business ideas for job creation.
More than 200 ladies are expected to benefit from the objective of the pageant which requires the contestants to exhibit their intelligence in various fields.
Apart from the benefit to the contestants, the pageant aims to create public awareness on network marketing opportunities which the youth can explore for wealth creation.
Kennedy Amoako, Chief Executive Officer of PGW-Ghana, speaking at the grand launch, said, “we believe that a project such as an entrepreneurship pageantry will seek not only to resource and empower the pageants but also provide a platform to educate the general public to understand and embrace the opportunities that network marketing businesses provide towards the growth of the economy.”
He explained that contestants would be funded to create personal business and community projects in addition to receiving business coaching.
The contestants will be given network marketing-related challenges weekly to perform, and the winners will be rewarded weekly, with the top 10 finalists going into the grand finale TV reality show. The ultimate winner takes home a Honda saloon car, while the other finalists get various business start-up packages.
Popular Ghanaian internet sensation Moesha Boduong has been spotted giving a lap dance at the car park of a club and this has caused a massive stir online.
Dressed in flower print pair of black trousers and a crop top, she was captured giving spicey dance moves, while spectators took out their phones to record her.
She started dancing and whining her waist on the chair, whipped her hair in the air back and forth. She then went on her knees and went on to entertain the crowd.
The video has gotten many people talking as many wondered what could have triggered her sensual actions in a public space.
National Communications Officer for the NDC, Sammy Gyamfi, is finally off the market.
MyNewsGh.com reports indicate that the National Communications Officer of Ghana’s largest opposition party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), will “say I do” to his fiancée in a private ceremony in Accra later today.
Samuel Gyamfi, popularly known as Sammy Gyamfi, will marry his longtime girlfriend at a private event at Chain Homes in TseAdo with only a few invited guests.
The marriage, which was scheduled earlier in late November, was postponed until after the NDC’s National Delegates Congress, where the groom was seeking re-election as National Communications Officer. Sammy Gyamfi later went unopposed after his opponent was disqualified, and he went on to win.
The Chain Homes Private marriage is expected to be attended by former president and 2020 flagbearer of the NDC, John Mahama, who will be the new couple’s special guest, as well as newly elected NDC Chairman Johnson Asiedu Nketiah.
Although Sammy Gyamfi has a son who celebrated his 10th birthday this year, Sammy Gyamfi has married the little boy’s mother since his birth in 2012.
The strictly-by-invitation event will see a pastor bless the couple in a simple ceremony.
MyNewsGh.com will publish full details of the bride for our readers soon.
It will be recalled in 2020; Sammy Gyamfi promised to marry in 2021 to celebrate John Mahama’s victory in the election. This did not happen.
Later today, Sammy Gyamfi will finally tie the knot and be off the market.
Lawyer Sammy Gyamfi is a former student of St. James Seminary Secondary School. Sammy Gyamfi continued at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in the Ashanti Region, where he pursued his first degree.
Sammy Gyamfi obtained an LLB at the same Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology. He continued to the Ghana Law School where he took his professional law course to become a lawyer.
He has served as a spokesperson for Exton Cubic and the Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly.
Veteran rapper Reggie Rockstonehas called on the thousands of followers of Bongo Ideas to unfollow him.
The social media troll has gained notoriety for unnecessarily criticising celebrities for social media clout.
Bongo usually plies his trade on Twitter where he commands a following of a little over 50,000. He also cross-posts his despicable comments on Facebook and Instagram with a collective following of 20,000.
Why is Reggie Rockstone embarking on this campaign? Bongo revealed this morning that Davido sent him a text on Instagram concerning a comment he made when his only son drowned and died in October this year.
The notorious troll blamed Davido for failing at his father duties leading to the death of his son.
Davido allegedly texted Bongo and prayed that what happened to him never happens to happens to his (Bongo) child.
This action from Bongo was the last straw that broke the camel’s back for Reggie Rockstone.
He charged at the social media commentator calling him demonic for mocking a man who lost his son.
Nsoatreman FC deputy coach Boniface Ayipah has expressed his displeasure about his sides defeat to Hearts of Oak in matchday 9 of the Ghana Premier League on Tuesday.
The Nsoatre-based club suffered their first home defeat when Hearts of Oak inflicted a 1-0 win over the Ghana Premier League debutants.
Kojo Obeng Jnr’s goal in the 54th minute settled the encounter on Tuesday afternoon as the Phobians climb to the second position.
Speaking after the game, Boniface Ayipah said he is unhappy about his sides defeat to the Phobians.
“Seriously we are not really happy that we’ve been defeated. We came up with a strategy because we knew it was Hearts of Oak we are playing, we knew their style of play so have to map up a strategy to be able to hold them and to take them on”
“In the first half we got glaring chances but we failed to bury the chances. It was unfortunate we couldn’t bury those chances and I think their coach too realize we are playing three back so he was pushing more men upfront and with that we had to talk to our midfielder to keep put but I think they didn’t get what exactly we were doing so they were able to get that chance”
Mohammed Gago’s side in their first home defeat of the season lost 1-0 to Hearts of Oak, and are currently placed 7th on the league standings.
They are away to King Faisal for their next league game on January 1, 2023.
Majority Leader, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, has called for the establishment of a committee of parliament that would probe the impact of loan agreements by government.
The lawmaker, in his submission, explained that the functions of the Finance Committee of Parliament are limited and cannot assess the economic impact of loans on the country.
He said, “There should be a committee on the economy that will determine for Parliament, the impact of any loan that the nation will be taking. The Finance Committee has some functions like that, but they don’t make any referral of the impact of loans on the economy. They only talk about the terms and conditions. 10 or 15 years from now, we will wake up to the reality”.
He also proposed to the House that chairpersons from the opposing party in the House be allowed to chair core committees.
He argued that doing so would ensure proper checks and balances.
“Parliament is as strong as its committees make it. The structure of our committee’s system is not helping us to grow our parliament. When we have a system where all committees are headed by the members from the ruling party, certainly you will have this dividend, you will really lower the standards of parliament”.
At the floor of Parliament, the Member of Parliament for Yagaba-Kubori indicated the expenses covered the team’s appearance fee, per diem, flight arrangement and others.
The Black Stars were eliminated after the first round of the tournament following a 2-0 defeat to Uruguay.
After defeating South Korea in their second group game, the Black Stars needed a draw or win against Uruguay to advance to the last 16 stage.
But the team failed to negotiate for points against their ‘enemies’ Uruguay to progress.
Addressing parliament on the expenditure at the tournament, he said, “Prior to Ghana’s participation at this World Cup I informed this house that our estimated budget was $8,166,200.” Out of this estimated budget, Mr. Speaker, our total expenditure for the group stage participation amounted to $5,171,840. This expense covered the appearance fee, per diem, flight arrangements, medical expenses, equipment, logistics, and hospitality.
Mustapha Ussif added that due to strict measures, the country was able to save $3 million after Ghana’s exit from the group stage “Mr Speaker, the reason for the surplus of three million dollars after our exit from the group stages is as a result of the ministry’s prudent management of resources as well as the ministry’s position to negotiate on qualification bonus for the next round instead of paying winning bonuses per match.
“What means is that despite the Black Stars winning against South Korea we did not pay any winning bonus because we had negotiated for a qualification bonus.”
He thanked Ghanaians for coming together to support the Black Stars during the tournament.
Kids who school at the Great Minds International School had a great time during this year’s Speech and Prize Giving day held on Tuesday, December 20, 2022.
At the speech and prize-giving day ceremony which took place at the school owned by the actor, Kwadwo Nkansah aka Lilwin, was on a money-blowing spree, blowing money on the
The ceremony which was full of fun was attended by some popular figures in Ghana’s entertainment sector.
Rapper, Strongman performed at this ceremony.
During his performance, Lilwin splashed cash on him.
The popular actor seemingly enjoyed Strongman’s performance.
In a video available to Zionfelix.net, the rapper was captured singing his ‘Mokobe’ song which featured Wendy Shay.
Lilwin displayed funny dance moves after splashing the cash on Strongman.
With an 11:10 majority vote, the committee’s minority side rejected the budget.
At a press conference on Tuesday, December 20, 2022, committee member Mr. Yussif Sulemana stated: “I can tell you on authority that at the end of the day, we had to vote and after the vote, the minority carried the day.
We have voted against it and have stated that now is not the appropriate moment to spend so much money on constructing a cathedral.
Again, he noted, “we were told that they have moved the cathedral from wherever it was to the ministry of tourism. And the question I put to them was that that organisation that is handling this cathedral, the secretariat, is it under the ministry of tourism?”
“If it’s not under the ministry of tourism, then it means that you want o use the ministry as a conduit to send the money wherever you want to send it and we, the minority, will not accept it”.
A few days ago, President Nana Akufo-Addo said upon completion, the National Cathedral will serve not only as the country’s collective thanksgiving “to the Almighty for the blessings He has bestowed on our nation, sparing us the ravages of civil war that have bedevilled the histories of virtually all our neighbours, and the outbreak of deadly mass epidemics but also as a rallying point for the entire Christian community of Ghana, which represents seventy-plus per cent of the population.”
The president made this known on Sunday, December 18, 2022, when he delivered an address at the centenary celebration of the Ga Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana, held at the Black Star Square, Accra.
Addressing the congregation, which included the Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana, Rev. Prof. Joseph Obiri Yeboah Mante, they asked the Ga Presbytery, and, indeed, all Christians, to continue to pray for Ghana’s peace and unity, so the nation can move forward in unity.
“I need the support of every Ghanaian, together with the prayers of the church, to help me and my government carry out our mandate successfully. Pray for me so that Almighty God will continue to give me wisdom, strength, courage and compassion to enable me to execute my duties as a good leader. With Him, all things are possible, as the battle is the Lord’s. For this, too, shall pass”, President Akufo-Addo said.
Meanwhile, the Executive Director of the Ghana Center for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana), Professor H. Kwasi Prempeh, recently said the National Cathedral is not a sensible project to undertake in the midst of an economic crisis.
In his view, the government could use the site for the project, for a more sensible venture.
Speaking at a roundtable organised by the Citizen’s Coalition in Accra on Thursday, 15 December 2022, Professor Prempeh said making allocations for the cathedral in the 2023 budget beats his imagination.
“When you are in a crisis, you can do exceptional things, I don’t see anything in the budget to suggest that this is a crisis and that this is being done as an emergency measure,” Professor Prempeh said.
“This is not the time for vanity projects but we have preserved a vanity project in the form of the cathedral. I was expecting that this being a crisis period, we will reflect on that decision and say: ‘even if this is sensible to do at all’ – and I do not think so – that it will not be the appropriate period or we will change the idea to something else”.
“There is a lot that we can still do with that site which can make sense”.
“So, generally it is a missed opportunity in terms of seeing this as a crisis moment and seeing it as a moment to reset the button”, Prof Prempeh noted.
“I think we have not quite done that”, he stressed.
“It looks to me that it is purely an emergency thing targeted at the IMF to approve a loan, as opposed to something that is going deep into the structure and our governance,” Professor H. Kwasi Prempeh admonished in his assessment.
Prof Prempeh is in good company with pressure group OccupyGhana, which recently recommended that the government suspend all public expenditure on the National Cathedral considering that the country is going through an economic crisis.
“Whatever arguments there might have been to support spending now-non-existent money on the proposed National Cathedral, have been eroded by the dire straits that the nation faces”, the group said in a statement.
“Our current situation makes the continued commitment in the budget to spend GH¢80 million on the cathedral, look like a vanity project”, it noted.
OG said: “We lose nothing by suspending expenditure on that project until the economy recovers”.
The National Cathedral was a personal promise made to God by then-presidential candidate Nana Akufo-Addo if he won the 2016 election.
The 25-year-old put up an inspired performance to help his side secure a vital win at the Petro Sport Stadium on Tuesday.
Ismaily SC took the lead in the 16th minute of the game through Annor. The visitors doubled their advantage in the the 90th minute courtesy of El Mohamadi’s strike from the penalty spot.
However, Ali Fawzi halved the deficit for the home side also from the spot-kick eight minutes later.
Ismaily SC held on to seal a 2-1 win and move out of the relegation zone as they currently lie 14th on the league table with just six points after eight matches played so far.
Ismaily SC will host Al Masry on Sunday, December 25, in their next league game.
Annor has made five league appearances and scored two goals for Ismaily SC this season.
Watch Yaw Annor’s strike for Ismaily SC against ENPPI in Egyptian Premier League below:
إشادة كبيرة بغزل المحلة ومتصدر ترتيب الهدافين بالدوري المصري أحمد الشيخ في حصاد بلس 🗣️ pic.twitter.com/DCLLww3q4I
In comparison to the US dollar and the euro, the Ghanaian cedi keeps strengthening.
As of Monday, December 19, 2022, the cedi is trading for GHC8 to the dollar, according to checks at several forex bureaus.
The increase of currency flows from remittances and the mining industry, as well as the staff level agreement with the IMF for a US$3 billion package, are what the president of Ghana, Akufo-Addo, has credited to “the strengthening of the cedi.”
Spokesperson to Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, Dr. Gideon Boako speaking to this, hinted that the dollar will drop further if government is able to go through with its gold-for-oil policy and complete the board approval of the IMF loan.
“I can confidently say that once government has reached the staff level agreement, the next thing is the board approval; once the board approval comes, the news and the impact of that will affect the currency and so there’s a likelihood that the dollar will drop further . . . there’s a huge expectation that between now and January to March, the dollar will fall again so if you’re a smart trader, you wouldn’t want to keep dollars for anything . . . ” he stated on Peace FM’s morning show ‘Kokrokoo’.
Mohammed Kudus impressed L’Équipe at the just-ended World Cup. The Ajax player who represented Ghana in the 2022 World Cup in Qatar is praised for his adaptability by the French daily, which is well-known for its critical evaluations.
Mohammed Kudus was a sensation for Ghana in each position he filled: right winger against Korea, playmaker against Portugal, and striker against Uruguay.
With his pace and skill, the former FC Nordjaelland player made a significant impact. He scored twice for Ghana in the second game and was named man of the match by FIFA.
The tournament in Qatar ended after only three games for Kudus and Ghana. Ghana was placed in Group H, which included matches against Portugal, South Korea, and Uruguay.
Ghana lost against both the former and later countries, but Kudus and his teammates defeated South Korea 3-2. The talented midfielder took control that day, scoring two goals in the World Cup’s only victory. Ghana eventually finished fourth and last in the group.
Mohammed Kudus has been linked to clubs linked Everton, Borussia Dortmund, Manchester United and Barcelona after his outstanding performance at the Mundial.
The cedi is no more the worst-performing currency but among the top-performing currencies in Africa, according to reports.
The Ghana cedi continues to gain strength against the US dollar and the euro.
Checks at some forex bureaus indicate that the cedi is going for ghc8 to the dollar as of Monday, 19th December 2022
President Akufo-Addo has attributed “the strengthening of the cedi” to “cedi liquidity tightening measures, resulting in the offloading of forex, as a store of value, by speculators; the improvement of forex flows from remittances and the mining sector; and the reaching of a staff level agreement with the IMF for a US$3 billion package.”
However, Asani Tanoh has doubts.
Contributing to a panel discussion on Neat FM’s ‘Me Man Nti’ programme, he said “this is not real”.
“This is just surprising . . . looking at the last two months, from October, the rate at which the cedi depreciated not just on daily basis but hours more or less; if you are looking for a typical economic voodooism this is one form of it. We all want the cedi to appreciate but any Economist who will tell you this is real just hoot at him. The reality is there’s something fundamentally wrong somewhere . . . you will see the reality after Christmas . . . ”
“We are still doing the old things we have been doing so ask yourself, what have we exported or generated that is making the cedi gain that strength?” he quizzed.
People see me on Strictly with the most beautiful and glamorous dresses, fake tan, the best hair and make up and think what’s she got to complain about?
But I deal with the impact of having Crohn’s disease and have days when I go into hospital when I’m the furthest from the Amy you see on the telly.
I have experienced body shaming. I take steroids and it makes me put on weight.
I’m taking eight steroids a day to keep me out of hospital. When people online say “she has thunder thighs”, it hurts.
I’ve been dancing since I was eight years old and dance is part of who I am – but so too is Crohn’s, which I’ve had since I was 11.
Although the condition isn’t visible from the outside, some of the symptoms and medication can have an effect on the way I look – it’s something I’ve been body shamed about and that hurts.
Crohn’s is a lifelong invisible condition where parts of your digestive system become inflamed and I’ll get really swollen eyes, terrible mouth ulcers, spots across my body and my skin.
My Crohn’s flare-ups are frustrating and annoying without everybody else bringing it to your attention – and it’s even worse when it’s comments from people you don’t know. It really sticks with me.
I can remember doing a dance competition when I was about 19 or 20, I’d been on a really high dose of steroids and it bloated me a lot – and my face changed, I called it the guinea pig face. My costume was really tight. It took me a lot to get on the dancefloor.
I remember walking onto the floor and this professional dancer shouted out “she’s got a fat bottom” and a “thick middle” – well, that’s the polite way of saying it. That comment has stayed with me for the rest of my life and when I go on steroids, it’s the first thing I hear.
She didn’t know what I’d been through and instead of dancing I just wanted to run off and cry. I got through the dance but that lady doesn’t realise that line she said, I’m still talking about it now more than 10 years later.
Sometimes they can be ignorant or sceptical but when you get someone criticising the way you look because of your illness, it’s even more hurtful.
One in five people in the UK have a disability – and the vast majority of those are said to be invisible.
Body shaming is awful whether your illness is visible or invisible. Anyone with an invisible illness will be used to getting comments.
Amy Dowden finished second in the 2019 edition of Strictly with TV presenter and actor Karim Zeroual
When you have an invisible illness, we have to battle through so much on a day to day basis so we don’t need any extra on top.
Imagine you had a piece of wood and you’ve put nails in it. Even if you took the nails out, there’s still a dent left in that piece of wood. Every time you say a nasty comment to somebody, you’re leaving a dent inside of them.
For my new BBC Sounds podcast, I wanted to speak with others with invisible illnesses and who have been body shamed to ask what impact it has had on them – and what’s the best way to deal with it.
Body positivity campaigner Harnaam Kaur told Amy “people are so fixated on walking towards what is fake, anything that’s real is seen as brave”
Someone that knows this too well is Harnaam Kaur, who has polycystic ovary syndrome – one of the symptoms can be high levels of male hormones which can lead to excess body or facial hair.
“I was ostracised, discriminated against and I was bullied even more horrendously,” Harnaam told me. “I do get a lot of death threats, I get a lot of people being very horrid.
“I grew out my facial hair at 16 and it wasn’t one of those things where I got up and I was like ‘right, I’m going to face the world now’. No, it took real strength, real courage.
“I call myself brave and I see that within me but sometimes that can be really patronising ‘Oh, you’re so brave, you have a beard, you look different’. Well why wouldn’t I just embrace my beard? Why is it brave?
“This world is hard and tough, people are horrible, people can be rude and cruel but when there is injustice, there will always be people like me to stand up and fight for what’s right.
“With children, there’s a lot of innocence. When it comes to adults, there’s no excuse – it’s more ignorance.
“It’s affected my career as people will judge you on face value. So where interviews would have lasted an hour. An hour and a half only lasted five minutes.
“This world will try and push you down and break you because they think that those that look different have low self esteem or no confidence. Well, you’ve messed with the wrong person if you’re going to step to me like that.”
But not all body shaming comes from online trolls and it can be far more subtle.
I spoke to Mared Parry, who had to deal with scoliosis while growing up and faced a lot of teasing.
Mared Parry told Amy she gets body shaming comments “every time I meet someone new and every time I’m on a night out”
“I was relentlessly bullied, she told me. “Kids will hop onto anything to rip at you. I got called every name under the sun. But I’m grateful for all the bullies in a weird way as it made me want to push and work even harder.
“I always get shouted at in the street by men ‘someone has lost her balance in her heels tonight’ or if I’m on a night out a bouncer might say ‘you’re drunk and can’t walk properly in those heels’.
“I’m like ‘actually babe I’m disabled and they usually shut up pretty quickly. But that’s what I deal with all the time. People aren’t mean on purpose, because I have an invisible disability, people don’t know I have it.”
Mared makes an interesting point as sometimes people aren’t deliberately trying to offend or bully. People don’t think before they speak. They make throwaway remarks, but they can be far from throwaway for those on the receiving end.
They can chip away at your self worth. Especially when you can be really low when you’re in pain, that affects your emotions and how tired you are and the slightest comment then can tip you over the edge – and stress, for me, is the worst thing for my condition.
What I have found refreshing about everyone I’ve spoken to is how open they are about their conditions and how they are trying to turn negative experiences into positive ones.
They have accepted their conditions, they haven’t tried to change for the public and I think that’s so important to anybody with a disability who just wants to be themselves.
A Plus claims that the plan, which was mostly developed by Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, is “great” and deserving of praise.
Let’s have a conversation about: A Plus posted on Facebook:
Ghana has been the world’s top gold producer for more than a century, but we are constantly in desperate need of paper money (the dollar) to import petroleum products.
The oil for gold program, in my opinion, is a great idea. All the natural resources the west requires are found in Africa. As to why we trade
Kwame A Plus put the question up for discussion and whilst many followers agreed with his prognosis, others also called for Ghana to start refining its own crude by reestablishing the Tema Oil Refinery (TOR).
Dr Bawumia said: “The demand for foreign exchange by oil importers in the face of dwindling foreign exchange reserves results in the depreciation of the cedi and increases in the cost of living with higher prices for fuel, transportation, utilities, etc. To address this challenge, Government is negotiating a new policy regime where our gold (rather than our US dollar reserves) will be used to buy oil products. The barter of sustainably mined gold for oil is one of the most important economic policy changes in Ghana since independence,”
The Vice President continued: “If we implement it as envisioned, it will fundamentally change our balance of payments and significantly reduce the persistent depreciation of our currency with its associated increases in fuel, electricity, water, transport, and food prices. This is because the exchange rate (spot or forward) will no longer directly enter the formula for the determination of fuel or utility prices since all the domestic sellers of fuel will no longer need foreign exchange to import oil products.
“The barter of gold for oil represents a major structural change. My thanks to the Ministers for Lands and Natural Resources, Energy, and Finance, Precious Minerals Marketing Company, and the Governor of the Bank of Ghana for their supportive work on this new policy.
“We expect this new framework to be fully operational by the end of the first quarter of 2023. God bless our homeland Ghana.”
The suspect, Isaac Osei, was arrested at a checkpoint on Tuesday while on his way to Winneba when he was spotted in a black Police uniform.
Osei, who according to Police sources, was driving a vehicle with registration number GE 3012 -12, was signalled to stop but failed over claims he was an officer.
He, however, succumbed to pressure and upon interrogation, maintained he was a policeman.
The suspect, who identified himself as Isaac Osei, wore a uniform with the name tag ‘Laryea’.
When asked of his service number he could not give it and later confessed he was not an officer but it was his friend’s uniform.
Further information gathered by Adom News indicates that the suspect without hesitation removed sim cards from his phone and chewed it in front of the police to avoid tracking his activities.
It is not easy to find a relationship where you are happy 100% of the time, if that even exists.
Relationships come with their share of compromises, negotiations, arguments, and frustrations. However, when the sense of comfort and ease is stronger than the other emotions, you know that you have finally found the relationship you deserve.
Here are the life moments that prove that you’re finally in a relationship you deserve.
1. Things that matter to you will matter to them
You don’t have to have the same hobbies and interests, but when you are in a relationship you deserve, things that matter to you will matter to your partner. If it is important to you to get away occasionally and they are a homebody, they will make it happen.
2. You feel heard
It doesn’t have to be a huge life event, but if you have a good memory associated with food or a place, they will listen and remember the details of little essential things in your life. They remember things that are crucial, happy, or stressful in your life.
3. You can openly talk about issues
All relationships have challenges and fights, but it is essential to talk about things that bother you or make you uncomfortable. You aren’t afraid of talking about them out of fear that you will upset your partner.
4. You don’t need plans to have fun
There are many dates and trips when you first start dating, but once you are more comfortable in a relationship, they are part of your life, but you are satisfied just hanging out at home doing nothing. You can hang out with each other while you are doing your own thing. You enjoy just hanging out in each other’s company.
5. They keep their word
It can be an invitation or a promise to fix something, but they keep their word. The promise of a life together with security is amazing, but someone who keeps their word on what they say they will do will add up in the long run.
6. You are mindful of each other’s boundaries
It is essential to know, acknowledge, and respect each other’s boundaries from the beginning. You should be able to say no without feeling guilty and make an effort to get out of your comfort zone instead of being stubborn. Respecting each other’s boundaries is one of the best ways to tell if they are a keeper.
7. Your priorities are important to both of you
It is not important to have the same interests and hobbies, but if one of you loves video games, you must be okay with that, and if you have spiritual beliefs, they don’t have to agree, but they cannot disregard its importance in your life. If you can understand and accept each other, you know you are in a relationship you deserve.
8. They do not make fun of you in public
It is natural to have some inside jokes, but some jokes do not need to be shared with others in public, even if it is done lightly. Mainly when you express your vulnerability and weaknesses to your partner, the relationship you deserve will never use them against you for a good laugh.
9. They don’t make excuses or blame you
When you are close to someone, it is easy to take your frustrations out on them. If you are in a relationship you deserve, they stop making lame excuses and do not blame you for things not going well in their life.
10. They make you a priority
It takes time and practice to make someone an equal and important part of your life. When you are in a relationship you deserve, you become each other’s priorities. When someone is essential in your life, you must know they are your priority by your actions and not just words.
Sammy went to the Ghana Law school where he was very as the SRC president. He was called to the bar on 5th October 2018.Sammy Gyamfi contested for the National Democratic Congress (NDC) position of National Communication Officer in November 2018 where he won massively beating his contender Fred Agbenyo.
The ancient city of Great Zimbabwe was an engineering wonder. But archaeologists credited it to Phoenicians, Babylonians, Arabians – anyone but the Africans who actually built it.
Walking up to the towering walls of Great Zimbabwe was a humbling experience. The closer I got, the more they dwarfed me – and yet, there was something inviting about the archaeological site.
It didn’t feel like an abandoned fortress or castle that one might see in Europe: Great Zimbabwe was a place where people lived and worked, a place where they came to worship – and still do. It felt alive.
Great Zimbabwe is the name of the extensive stone remains of an ancient city built between 1100 and 1450 CE near modern-day Masvingo, Zimbabwe. Believed to be the work of the Shona (who today make up the majority of Zimbabwe’s population) and possibly other societies that were migrating back and forth across the area, the city was large and powerful, housing a population comparable to London at that time – somewhere around 20,000 people during its peak.
Great Zimbabwe was part of a sophisticated trade network (Arab, Indian and Chinese trade goods were all found at the site), and its architectural design was astounding: made of enormous, mortarless stone walls and towers, most of which are still standing.
However, for close to a century, European colonisers of the late-19th and early-20th Centuries attributed the construction to outsiders and explorers, rather than to the Africans themselves.
Indeed, the author of the first written European record of Great Zimbabwe seemed to be staggered by the very idea that it could have been built at all. Portuguese explorer Joao de Barros wrote in 1552 that, “There is masonry within and without, built of stones of a marvellous size, and there appears to be no mortar joining them.”
Visitors who come to Great Zimbabwe today can still explore three sections: the Hill Ruins (the oldest, with an acropolis believed to be a royal city); the Great Enclosure (surrounded by a large, high wall and containing an 11m conical tower); and the Valley Ruins (a collection of mud-brick houses where the majority of the ancient population lived).
Cynthia Marangwanda, a writer, poet and heritage specialist who writes about Zimbabwean national identity, explained that “some people want to call it ‘the Great Zimbabwe ruins’, but I disagree with that: considering the kind of European meddling it has endured, it has stood up very well.”
Built between 1100 and 1450 CE, Great Zimbabwe was large and powerful (Credit: evenfh/Getty Images)
In the Shona language, zimbabwe translates approximately to “stone house”, and because of the site’s size and scope, it became known as Great Zimbabwe.
Moreover, it was not the only such “Zimbabwe”: there are remains of approximately 200 smaller settlements or trading posts spread across the region, from the Kalahari Desert in Namibia to Mozambique.
According to Munyaradzi Manyanga, a professor of archaeology and cultural heritage at Great Zimbabwe University, the position of Great Zimbabwe among these settlements has been widely debated. Some people have speculated that it was a capital city of a very large state, but to Manyanga, that seems unlikely. “Such a state would have been too large.
One wouldn’t have been able to manage that kind of extent and size. So most of the interpretations talk of these as having been influenced by Great Zimbabwe.” He added that the Kingdom of Zimbabwe is considered to be made up of Great Zimbabwe and the smaller settlements located closer to it.
One of the most remarkable features of the site is its walls. As Manyanga explained, “The style and scale of dry-stone walling that constitute Great Zimbabwe is unparalleled elsewhere in Africa and beyond.”
The walls of the Great Enclosure are 6m wide and 11m tall, and they run about 250m, making the enclosure the largest single structure in sub-Saharan Africa and the second largest on the continent by total area: only the pyramids in Egypt exceed them in size according to Manyanga.
The walls, which are made of granite, are stacked precisely and do not use any mortar to hold them in place (Credit: 2630ben/Getty Images)
The walls, which are made of granite, are stacked precisely and do not use any mortar to hold them in place. “The quarrying of the granite, taking advantage of natural processes of weathering and the shaping of it into regular blocks was a major engineering undertaking by these pre-colonial communities,” Manyganga said.
Iron metallurgy was needed to make the tools required to cut the blocks; it was also needed to make trade goods subsequently found at the site. All of this points to a highly organised and technologically advanced society.
The population of Great Zimbabwe began to decline in the mid-15th Century as the Kingdom of Zimbabwe weakened (possible theories for the decline include a drop in mining output, overgrazing by cattle, and depleted resources), but the site itself was not abandoned.
Manyganga explained that it was regularly visited by different Shona groups for spiritual reasons right up until colonisation by the British in the late 19th Century.
“The racial prejudices of the time could not imagine that the grandeur of Great Zimbabwe could be associated with African populations, who at that time were living very rural lifestyles in small huts on hills,” said Manyanga.
Initial explorers assumed that it had to be a long-lost European civilisation or the site of something mentioned in the Bible. For example, in 1871 gold-seeker Karl Mauch believed he’d found King Solomon’s Temple (raising hopes that his gold mines must be nearby) or the palace of the Queen of Sheba.
British archaeologist James Theodore Bent, after leading a dig in 1891, wrote a book declaring that Africans were not capable of building what he’d found. Bent even threw away artefacts that would have proven that the site did not date back to Biblical times.
Europeans of the late-19th and early-20th Centuries attributed the construction to outsiders and explorers, rather than to the Africans (Credit: Agostini/Getty Images)
A decade later, in a speech to the Royal Geographic Society, British journalist Richard N Hall supported Bent’s perspective after visiting the site himself.
He talked about the artistic value of soapstone carvings that had been unearthed and the “marvellous cleverness” of a gold-mining operation that spanned hundreds of mines, before concluding that “it is quite a moral certainty that even the cruder methods of [these sciences’] application were imported from the Near East, and did not originate in South-East Africa.” Instead, he and his colleagues held that Phoenicians, Arabians or Babylonians created the city.
According to Manyanga, “They wanted to use [this explanation] as a moral justification for colonising Zimbabwe. If there was this long-lost civilisation in this part of the world, there was nothing wrong with colonialism because they were resuscitating this old kingdom.”
However, a few archaeologists of the time countered that the site was not nearly old enough to be from Biblical times. “The then-colonial government suppressed these views, and the official narrative in public media and museums was that Great Zimbabwe was of foreign origins,” said Manyanga. This version of history was upheld through the 1960s and 1970s by the white-minority government of the colony.
Only in 1980, when Zimbabwe achieved independence, could the new leaders finally affirm that the site was built by their own ancestors. During the 1960s, black nationalists had even settled on Zimbabwe as the name for the country they hoped to lead to freedom, harkening back to Great Zimbabwe.
“It was Africans who created this, and over a millennium later it’s still standing. It’s a testament to who we are.”
Since 1980, local archaeological research has been slow to resume and has dealt largely with maintenance and repair. Research has instead focused on the satellite sites, in part because they were less disturbed by early excavations. Manyanga emphasised that scholarly understanding of Great Zimbabwe has shifted.
“Eurocentric models interpreted the site as though you were looking at a castle in Europe. What has come to light from recent work is that Great Zimbabwe was built over a long period of time; it was not built once and then occupied, but grew over time. Even the walling came at a later stage because earlier on there were farming communities at Great Zimbabwe.”
Today, the great ancient city remains just as important for Zimbabweans. Shona villages are located nearby, and many residents work to maintain the site. A religious centre is close by too, and the site still attracts worshippers who practice traditional Shona faiths.
“It was Africans who created this,” said writer Marangwanda. “And over a millennium later it’s still standing. It’s a testament to who we are.”
BBC Travel’s Lost Civilisations delves into little-known facts about past worlds, dispelling any false myths and narratives that have previously surrounded them.
Ghanaian rapper, Jason Gaisie, popularly known as Pappy Kojo, has declared himself the best Amapianoartiste in the world.
Amapiano is a fusion of deep house, jazz and lounge music characterized by synths and wide percussive basslines. The South African-originated genre of music has emerged as every artiste’s favorite and is topping the charts of listener choice on music streaming platforms all across the globe.
In 2012, the genre was changed to Amapiano by “Mfr souls”, a South African Amapiano music duo that made it a hit.
“It does not matter where it is from, it’s very simple; I am the best Amapiano artiste in the world,” Pappy Kojo said.
The Fante rapper made this bold claim in an interview on a 24-hour digital channel segment, Culture Daily, as he promoted his newly released EP, “Nothing Matters.”
Pappy Kojo described his new EP as his second project and third EP within the year. The third piece on his four-song-listed EP, titled “Wee Don’t Stop” is an Amapiano song that gave the premise for his intriguing proclamation.
He mentioned that his constant release of EPs this year is a result of how quickly EPs are made and uploaded. “Albums take a lot of time and a lot of work, but for EPs, they are quick; they just go.”
The “Nothing Matters” EP has two features from Ghanaian pacemakers in the Ghanaian music industry. The EP comes with the first being Introduction, which is followed by Frass featuring Larruso, “Wee Don’t Stop” and “At The Back” Featuring Kwaw Kese as Track three and Track four respectively.