Author: Chris Kodo

  • WAEC calls for dialogue with GNACOPS over exam malpractice concerns

    The West African Examination Council (WAEC) is looking to engage the Ghana National Council for Private Schools [GNACOPS] over concerns about the examination body’s continued relevance.

    The Private Schools are pushing for the abolishment of the examination council, arguing that it has failed to contribute positively to educational development in the country.

    But the Head of Legal at WAEC, Rev. Victor Brew, told Citi News that engaging GNACOPS would be a progressive mood.

    “Mr. Gyetuah [the National Executive Director for GNACOPS] will help us when he submits inputs regarding how to better the assessment regime of this country.”

    “There are plans to engage Mr. Gyetuah’s outfit for us to discuss and find common ground regarding the way forward,” Rev. Brew said.

    GNACOPS has been critical of WAEC and called on the government to institute other examination bodies in a bid to break the monopoly of WAEC.

    The council believes such a move will aid in properly assessing candidates that sit for external examinations.

    This follows GNACOPS demand that WAEC must be scrapped because it has outlived its purpose.

    GNACOPS also feels the introduction of other examination bodies could help in resolving the issue of examination malpractice.

    Source: Citinewsroom .com

  • SMEs provide over 85% of manufacturing jobs – Dr John-Hawkins

    John-Hawkins Asiedu, the technical advisor to the minister of trade and industry, has stated that small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are responsible for a large number of manufacturing jobs in the nation.

    He claims that because it places a greater emphasis on exports, this sector also provides 70% of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    The Technical Advisor to the Minister of Trade and Industry said that this is why the government is looking forward to expanding the SME sector and connecting SMEs to the supply chains of large corporations while speaking at the West Africa Connect program in Accra on September 20, 2022.

    “Government is focused on SME capacity development in the area of profiling, match-making and linkage to the supply chain of large enterprises as many actors in the business space, we cannot overemphasize the importance of the SMEs sector in the economic development of Ghana and West Africa as a whole,” he said.

    “In Ghana, about 70% of all industrial establishment are micro-small and medium enterprises that provide over 85% of manufacturing jobs and 70% of gross domestic product. MSMEs contribute significantly to the overall export earnings from the non-traditional export sector and create jobs at relatively low capital,” he added.

    John-Hawkins Asiedu further said government is acquiring litigation-free lands for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs).

    This forms part of measures put in place by government to help grow the sector by introducing industrial parks development and special initiatives.

    It would also help these small and medium businesses upscale their production for exports.

    SMEs provide over 85% of manufacturing jobs – Dr John-Hawkins

  • Surprisingly, Aisha Huang has not been sacked or indicted with any Ghanaian officials – Ablakwa

    Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, the ranking member of the parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee, thinks it is absurd that Ghana’s security ministers are still in their positions following the recent Aisha Huang issue.

    The recent arrest of the galamsey (illegal mining) kingpin who was expelled from Ghana in 2018 was the subject of Mr. Ablakwa’s private investigations, which he detailed. He noted that the continued tenure of some government officials in office in spite of the evidence associated with the case suggests government complicity.

    “From our extensive work, there is still no credible evidence that Aisha Huang was deported to China as the President and his Senior Minister originally claimed. Based on what we now know, it is most inexplicable that many Ghanaian officials involved in this cruel and embarrassing conspiracy against our republic have not been fired and charged along with Aisha Huang in the current prosecution.

    “It remains a mockery of humongous proportions that all of Ghana’s security ministers are still keeping their jobs. When nobody in authority is punished for this international disgrace and for this grand scheme which has left our environment and water bodies destroyed, the only logical interpretation is that national leadership, right from the Presidency is complicit,” the MP said in a Facebook statement sighted by GhanaWeb.

    Aisha Huang was arrested in 2017 and charged with various offences, including illegal mining.

    However, the state filed to discontinue her trial and subsequently deported her from the country in 2018.

    The Senior Minister at the time, Nana Yaw Osafo Maafo, justified her deportation by saying it was rather in the country’s interest.

    However, President Akufo-Addo took a different position by describing her deportation as a “mistake.”

    But according to Mr Ablakwa, there is evidence to suggest that Aisha Huang was not deported in the first place as had earlier been indicated by government actors.

    He mentioned that Aisha Huang had actually been trekking between Ghana and Togo since 2019 and had actually been doing so using approved immigration routes with the aid of two different Chinese passports.

    “We can confirm that Aisha Huang has footprints of her physical presence in Ghana from as far back as February 27, 2019 — yes, more than 3 years ago, and much longer than originally portrayed.

    “We now know that Aisha Huang has been living in Ghana and Togo for more than 3 years before obtaining her Ghana Card on February 27, 2022,” he said.

    Aisha Huang, whose recent arrest is in connection with similar galamsey offences as her 2017 arrest, has been remanded into custody with various charges pressed against her in a magistrate and a high court.

    But according to Mr Ablakwa, there is an obvious intent by the government to ensure that the Chinese national walks free from crimes as a measure to protect her accomplices.

    “It is also clear to us from concrete facts we have discovered that Aisha Huang’s charges are deliberately scanty, narrow and superficial with the obvious intention of protecting guilty accomplices in high places,” he said.

    He has thus reaffirmed his call for a bipartisan parliamentary probe into the Aisha Huang case.

    “We are stronger in our conviction that this astonishing Aisha Huang scandal requires a full independent Article 278 Commission of Enquiry which must be broadcast live to all Ghanaians,” the Member of Parliament for North Tongu declared.

    Read below full details of Mr Ablakwa’s statement on Aisha Huang:

    Diligent, assiduous and industrious parliamentary oversight on the Aisha Huang scandal has produced more bombshell findings:

    1. We can confirm that Aisha Huang has footprints of her physical presence in Ghana from as far back as February 27, 2019 — yes, more than 3 years ago, and much longer than originally portrayed;

    2. We now know that Aisha Huang has been living in Ghana and Togo more than 3 years before obtaining her Ghana Card on February 27, 2022;

    3. Our unimpeachable investigations reveal that even before Senior Minister Yaw Osafo Maafo justified Aisha Huang’s doubtful deportation in April 2019 and long before President Akufo-Addo’s statement on the dubious deportation in September 2019, Aisha Huang was in Ghana traveling on multiple occasions between Ghana and Togo;

    4. We can state authoritatively that Aisha Huang uses at least 2 Chinese Passports for her travels (see evidence attached);

    5. One passport bears the name Huang En with passport number: G39575625. It was issued on January 14, 2010.

    6. Her other passport has the name Huang Ruixia. It’s number is: EE9994609. This particular Chinese passport was issued on January 14, 2019;

    7. Strangely, both passports have different dates of birth. In her En Huang passport (G39575625) she claims to have been born July 7, 1986 while in the Ruixia Huang passport (EE9994609) she claims to be much older having been born on November 7, 1975.

    8. We have also secured her China Identity Card which indicates she was born on November 7, 1975;

    9. Her Ghana Non-Citizen Identity Card has different information from her China Identity Card – she clearly told NIA officials she was born on July 7, 1986;

    10. Curiously, her En Huang passport had not expired on its scheduled expiry date of January 13, 2020 when she secured her Ruixia Huang passport on January 14, 2019.

    11. It’s quite striking how she makes sure her Chinese passports are always issued on a January 14;

    12. Even though Aisha Huang deliberately damaged the electronic component of her Ruixia Huang passport before her latest arrest (see evidence attached), the Chinese government owes Ghana some urgent clarifications on the genuineness of both passports, and if they are genuine why Aisha Huang was issued a second passport when her earlier passport hadn’t expired;

    13. We now have it on authority that her multiple trips to Togo and back to Ghana since February 2019 were not on the blind side of Ghanaian authorities. In other words, she didn’t sneak in and out through unapproved routes as the Ghanaian government’s jumbled narrative suggests;

    14. We come to the firm conclusion that the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government ought to have known about her multiple travels between Ghana and Togo at a time we were told she had been deported to China because expert forensic analysis we have conducted on Ghana Immigration Embarkation and Disembarkation Stamps in her Chinese passport using the latest version of the globally acclaimed Video Spectral Comparator (VSC 8000/HS) confirms that all the Ghana Immigration Embarkation/Disembarkation Stamps in her passport are genuine;

    15. Our irrefutable investigations reveal that Aisha Huang physically presented herself to Ghana Immigration officials at the Aflao border on February 27, 2019 and on April 28, 2019;

    16. Despite her changing names and different dates of birth, it is most bizarre that Aisha Huang’s biometrics didn’t raise alarm at the Aflao border immigration post considering that her biometrics had previously been captured at numerous locations including at the Kotoka International Airport and the NIA;

    17. Her well-stored details as contained in Ghana’s PISCES (Personal Identification Secured Certified Evaluation System) should equally have raised alarm if she didn’t have top collaborators within our security institutions;

    18. It is also intriguing that the Ghanaian government didn’t appear to share intelligence on the notorious Aisha Huang with governments of neighboring countries as is standard practice, and which could have limited Aisha’s sinister movements in the sub-region;

    19. From our extensive work, there is still no credible evidence that Aisha Huang was deported to China as the President and his Senior Minister originally claimed;

    20. Based on what we now know, it is most inexplicable that many Ghanaian officials involved in this cruel and embarrassing conspiracy against our republic have not been fired and charged along with Aisha Huang in the current prosecution;

    21. It remains a mockery of humongous proportions that all of Ghana’s security ministers are still keeping their jobs;

    22. When nobody in authority is punished for this international disgrace and for this grand scheme which has left our environment and water bodies destroyed, the only logical interpretation is that national leadership, right from the Presidency is complicit;

    23. It is also clear to us from concrete facts we have discovered that Aisha Huang’s charges are deliberately scanty, narrow and superficial with the obvious intention of protecting guilty accomplices in high places;

    24. We believe as a responsible and patriotic opposition, we are now adequately armed to keep an eagle eye on a government that cannot be trusted on this and many matters;

    25. We are stronger in our conviction that this astonishing Aisha Huang scandal requires a full independent Article 278 Commission of Enquiry which must be broadcast live to all Ghanaians.

  • High dollar rate could cause more job losses – GEA warns

    Ghana Employers’ Association (GEA) lamented the high dollar rate in the nation in September 2018.

    The Association claims that job losses could result from the Cedi’s weakening against major trading currencies, particularly the US dollar.

    The GEA urged the government to adopt more comprehensive strategies to prevent any employment losses.

    According to the Ghana Employers’ Association (GEA), the government must take into account more general policy issues that can force companies to fire employees in the wake of recent job cuts.

    Between July and August this year, an estimated 1800 people lost their jobs as a result of bank-takeovers by the BoG. In 2017, the collapse of UT and Capital Bank affected the employment of some 900 people who lost their jobs.

    However, the GEA noted that some broader policy issues must have a place on government’s priority list in order to tackle further job losses.

    “As we speak, the business environment is very critical. The question is how do businesses survive and grow in an environment where though inflation is still in a single digit currently at 9.9 percent in August from 9.6 percent in July, the dollar rate is nonetheless creating difficulties for businesses,” GEA’s CEO, Mr. Alex Frimpong told the Goldstreet Business.

    Members of the association, Mr. Frimpong said, sometimes borrow at 30 percent from the banks to run their businesses.

    “This and many others are the key issues bothering us and it’s not in the interest of companies to dismiss workers, but such could happen when it gets off the limit. GEA members will look at the environment and situate the survival and otherwise of their business and see whether dismissals are a thing to consider,” he said.

    GEA is worried, that the influx of counterfeit goods and substandard products in the Ghanaian market from approved and unapproved border posts, could trigger further collapse of businesses.

    The problem, is gradually compromising the health of citizens, and revenues which are supposed to accrue to government for national development are being diverted and thereby reducing potentials for job creation, he worried.

    With participation of up to 900 members, the GEA reveals it will engage various governmental agencies concerning major policy issues which are militating against business growth.

    The association admitted that current issues concerning layoffs goes beyond the Employment and Labour Relations Ministry.

    “We are preparing discussions with the Trade Ministry concerning the influx of counterfeit goods. We’ll approach the Finance Ministry on the micro-economic management and the BoG which controls the banking environment. The conversation will be escalated beyond the Employment Ministry,” Mr Frimpong maintained.

    Established in 1959, The GEA promotes and protects the basic interest of employers and serves as their mouthpiece in negotiating wages, minimum wage and allowances, human resource and industrial relations matters on behalf of employers.

  • ‘Be ready for what is coming’ – NDC warns EC

    Ahead of the 2020 general elections, the Director of Elections of Ghana’s biggest opposition party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Elvis Afriyie Ankrah, sent out a strong caution to the Electoral Commission (EC).

    In his estimation, the EC had plans of rigging the elections in favour of the incumbent candidate, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

    He explained that one of the ways the body responsible for the organization of elections in Ghana planned on doing that was by denying it (the NDC) of a copy of the voter register.

    Below is the full original story as first published by GhanaWeb on Sunday, September 22, 2019:

    NDC’s Director of elections, Elvis Afriyie Ankrah, has cautioned the Electoral Commission against what he described as plans to manipulate the 2020 election process.

    He warned, the party and Ghanaians for that matter, will resist every attempt by the EC to temper with the general election process by all means possible.

    Mr Afriyie Ankrah who briefed the press in Accra, accused the Electoral Commission of refusing to give the NDC a copy of the register upon request, yet went ahead to give a copy to a national security operative.

    He established, the failure to make the provisional electoral roll available severely hampered the party’s ability to monitor the exercise.

    Thereby alleging names of over 25,000 people who registered in the recent registration exercise cannot be found in the voter’s register.

    In effect, the NDC is claiming to be at a disadvantage in the 2020 general elections due to the EC’s act of omission.

    “We’re telling them that Ghana is not other countries. If they think that they can be manipulated and influenced as it happened in other countries then they must be ready for what is coming. This is Kwame Nkrumah’s Ghana… at any given time the will of the people of Ghana cannot be suppressed, there is no man or woman or devil that can stop the will of the people of Ghana. If they think some party or government is influencing them to favour somebody, then they should be ready because the people of Ghana will resist it with our blood.” He angrily expressed.

    Ghanaians will resist any attempt to manipulate electoral system with our blood – NDC tells EC

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • The Ghanaian black Jews who found their ancestry through a vision

    Until 1976, the only identity the black Jews residing in the West African nation of Ghana had was that they were a special breed of people who migrated to their present settlement about 300 years ago.

    The Tirefeth Israel community in Ghana’s farming settlement of Sefwi Wiaso believe they descended from one of the lost tribes of Israel.

    Though the black Jew community is unable to back with documentary proof which of the 12 tribes of Israel they belong to, oral tradition handed over from generation to generation had transmitted knowledge of the observation of Jewish customs with regard to the observance of Shabbat, circumcision of their newborns, refraining from eating pork and abiding by the rituals of purity.

    Many lost tribes of Israel settling in isolated communities like the Tirefeth settlement have been linked to the destruction of Israel by the Assyrian empire in 722 BCE.

    The disclosure of the true identity of the Tirefeth Israel community was revealed to one of their members in 1976 and that’s how the community came to the realization of the Judaism customs they have been practicing for centuries, according to the Canadian Jewish News.

    The community in their pilgrimage to their present location settled in the Sahara desert, moved to Niger, Mail, Côte d’Ivoire and finally Ghana.

    Some scholars are of the view that this tribe descended from Jews who were pushed out from the Iberian Peninsula in 1492 and settled in Morroco. As part of their activity in the trans-Sahara trading, they migrated to other parts of Africa over time.

    Archaeological excavations at Jewish cemeteries and synagogues in countries like the Mail and Gambia have confirmed the existence of black Jews and their trading activities.

    The Tirefeth Israel community enjoys religious freedom and practices its customs in rural settings. The community leaders believe they are the only tribe that draws inspiration from the Torah.

    It is the hope of the community to have some of their members go on a pilgrimage to Israel to learn more about their identity and their religious customs.

    Corine Forward, a researcher who authored a paper for Georgetown University in the United States on Jewish civilization and African American studies, said when many think of Jews, they assume they are all whites until she visited the Jewish community in Ghana.

    She said when the Tirefeth Israel found their identity in 1976, they reached out to the Israel Embassy in Ghana which assisted them. Forward said in her research, which was mainly fieldwork, she observed the community identified themselves as Jews.

    According to her, they believe they were descendants of Abraham and that legitimizes their association with Judaism. She said presently the community is learning Hebrew, they light candles, observe the sabbath and celebrate Jewish holidays.

    Her worry is that even though many have confirmed the existence of the Tirefeth Israel community, little efforts have been made into researching them extensively.

    Source:face2faceafrica.com

  • African countries’ pre-colonial and post-independence coins

    The Aksumite of Northern Ethiopian are the early tribes of Africa to introduce coins in the 2nd to the 9th century as a means of trading. These coins were made of gold, a little bronze and a minute quantity of silver.

    The Aksumite kings initially decreed the coins should bear Greek inscriptions, but, was later amended and Amharic text was embossed on the coins, according to Britannica.

    The traditional coins which were used by the Ethiopians temporarily went into extinction as a result of foreign alliances and allegiance.

    King Menelick, emperor of Ethiopia between 1889 and 1913, restored the coins but rather as silvers with an embossment of the Lion of Judah. He believed he was the direct descendant of King Solomon and Queen Sheba.

    The Ethiopians were not the only African nations to have started using coins as means of transaction before the arrival of the Europeans.

    The Ottoman Empire of Egypt in 1914 used coins with Arabic inscriptions. The coins were made of gold and silver. Under the reign of Fu Ad I and Farouk I, the Arabic inscriptions were replaced with the royal portrait. The currency was known as the piastre.

    The gold and silver coins were later changed to aluminum-bronze alloy accompanied with rare silver and gold.

    Libya is also another African country that adopted the piastre as its currency after a period as an Italian colony. Until the takeover of power by Col. Muammar al-Qaddafi, the coins had fine portraits under the kingdom of Idris from 1951 to 1969.

    The piastre was also the means of exchange for transactions among Tunisia until 1891 when the colony adopted the francs and centimes after they gained independence from France in 1956.

    Sudan also relied on the piastre as its coinage in 1956 while Morocco used the Arabic silver dirham in the early 20th century as a protectorate of France.

    The silver dirham was later replaced with silver rial in 1902. This currency was later phased out with the franc in 1921.

    The West African nation of Ghana used gold as its coinage after the declaration of the country as a republic in 1960. The British colony prior to its independence however used shilling and penny traditionally.

    Northern and Southern Rhodesia presently Zimbabwe, Nyasaland later Malawi, and Nigeria also used shilling and penny. Liberia, however, used mainly copper and bronze as its currency with an elephant displacing the head of the liberty.

    In South Africa, the currency was assimilated into that of Great Britain after the Southern African nation became a member of the Commonwealth.

    French colonies like Cameroons French West Africa, Madagascar and French Togoland used the cockerel as their coinage.

    Macutus, centavos and silver escudos were the currencies used by Angola and Mozambique. In the Belgian Congo which is presently the Democratic Republic of Congo, the people used silver francs and copper centimes.

    The objective of using metals for currency is that they can be reused and reshaped in the manufacturing process.

    Source:face2faceafrica.com

  • 50 years on, the mantra ‘Nkrumah Never Dies” rings on

    “All people of African descent wherever they live, and in whichever part of the world are Africans and belong to the African nation.”- Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah

    As fate would have it, the first bullet missed him. The first bombing missed him also, heralding a plethora of assassination attempts on his life. After surviving so many plots, it became apparent to many that indeed, ‘Nkrumah never dies’. Five decades have passed since his passing, but the appellation to his name which casually rings of the lips of African people the world over, is still popular.

    For certain, Francis Nwia Kofi Nkrumah, as were his proper names, will occupy the high and lofty commentary of history as sparking off the Independence struggle against colonialism in Africa. Perhaps the most astonishing feature of his life, was, his audacity to give it to the course of a ‘United States of Africa’ – his vision, scorned as a fantasy by his opposers. His fierce rhetoric on nationalism and socialism would him to be viewed with stern suspicion by Western powers and loathed at home.

    Nkrumah was viewed as pompous and out of touch with reality. In the years following the Independence of Ghana, the effects of the economic downturn began to bite, the voices of descent began to sound louder, with calls for his removal from office.

    After Ghana’s independence, many Ghanaians felt that Nkrumah’s attention had wandered off from issues of immediate concern to the internal affairs of his country, to something more grandeur; the total liberation and unification of the Africa continent. Is there a case to be made for why Nkrumah never dies?

    Well, before Ghana gained independence, the first attempt on Nkrumah‘s life occurred in the early months of 1956. While he was having a meeting with many government ministers, a bomb went off in his Accra home. Nobody was hurt. This was a year before he led to Ghana gaining its independence in 1957.

    Subsequently, four more attempts were made on his life. On August 2, 1962, Nkrumah was injured in another attempt on his life at the Upper Volta border in Ghana when a grenade was hurled at him (now Burkina Faso). Near him amid the crowd, several people were slain.

    On accusations related to the attempted assassination, the Special Criminal Division of the Ghana Court sentenced seven people to death.

    In Ghana’s capital city of Accra, on September 9, 1962, a bomb went off in Kwame Nkrumah’s official mansion, killing a little girl and injuring numerous others. Nearly 2000 visitors were present in Nkrumah’s official residence, Flagstaff House, at the time of the attack to commemorate his escape from a prior assassination attempt in October. As a result of the attack being attributed to the Kumasi Command, a new anti-Nkrumah group, numerous militants were detained nationwide to quell the growing opposition to Kwame Nkrumah’s government, which had chosen “scientific socialism” and one-party dictatorship over multiparty democracy.

    Another attempt was made on January 2, 1964. A shot rang out as Nkrumah left his office at the Flagstaff House for lunch at the Christianborg Castle. He was accompanied by two security guards, one of whom was Dagarti, a British-trained professional police officer, and the other was provided by the president’s party, the Convention People’s Party (CPP). It came from a police officer who had just started working as a guard at the Flagstaff House. Later, he was recognized as Constable Ametewee. Ametewee had fired a shot at the president from a close distance. The president’s car’s driver vanished right away. According to a story, the President and Salifu dove for shelter as the CPP security guard hid behind the car.

    By this time the people had come to realize that Nkrumah was a force to reckon with and there was no way they could get rid of him, the people of the then Gold Coast coined the phrase ‘Nkrumah Never Dies’ which eventually became a song.

    Nonetheless, another assassination attempt was made on Nkrumah’s life. At an Independence Day celebration at Kulungugu, in Ghana’s Upper East Region, on March 6, 1964, President Dr. Kwame Nkrumah narrowly escaped a new murder attempt when a girl gave him flowers that were bombed To survive, Elizabeth Asantewaa, who was just 13 years old at the time, had her leg severed to stop the spread of the bomb explosion’s impact. Elizabeth Asantewaa, who lost her leg in the explosion, was not intended to be the bomb’s target; Ghana’s first president was.

    While Nkrumah survived that, eventually death called and in April 1972 in Bucharest, Romania he gave up the ghost and the people of Ghana mourned the loss of the man whose leadership they trashed and eventually overthrew. That should have put an end to the phrase ‘Nkrumah Never Dies’, but as fate would have it and just like Nkrumah himself said; “As far as I am concerned, I am in the knowledge that death can never extinguish the torch which I have lit in Ghana and Africa. Long after I am dead and gone, the light will continue to burn and be borne aloft, giving light and guidance to all people.”

    He was not wrong, the Pan-Africanist is remembered globally for his efforts to unite Africa and push the African agenda. In his home country, all infrastructures he put up have stood the test of time, and no President after him has been able to match up in that regard.

    Today, not just his memory lives on, but some wish that he was still alive to keep the torch he lit in Ghana burning hot. While that is not possible, the fact cannot be contested that even in death, the mentor to many modern-day Pan-Africanists; Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, the man said to portray himself as a god, never dies.

    Source:face2faceafrica.com

  • Meteo warns of minor rainfall Sept. to Nov.

     

  • How Jamaican maroons used horns to defeat British forces

    They got their name from the Spanish word Cimarron, which means runaway cattle in literal translation. Throughout the history of the Americans, the Jamaican Maroons have resided in the Moore region of the Caribbean.

    They are thought to have been taken by the British from the Ghanaian Akan tribe and transported to Jamaica to labor on the sugarcane plantations.
    Between 1655 and 1807, the British transported more than 700,000 Africans.

    Rebellions and agitations on the sugarcane estates were caused by the enslaved who fled the oppressive conditions in the fields to the Caribbean’s isolated mountains and forests.

    Two prominent Jamaican groups that fled the inhumane treatment on the sugarcane fields were the Leeward Maroons in the west, and the Windward Maroons in the east.

    They fought the British forces with guerilla tactics they mastered like camouflaging themselves in trees, and using animal horns, called abeng, to blow coded messages, instead of engaging in direct combat, according to the national geographic.

    When the British forces came to the realization that they could not conquer the Maroons after bloody wars between 1720 and 1796, they signed peace agreements with them to allow them to remain free men and govern themselves until slavery was outlawed in the British Commonwealth in 1834.

    The Moore Town is considered the ancestral home of the Jamaica’s legendary Maroons. Oral tradition celebrates them as freed slaves who fought against being recaptured by British forces until they became permanently free.

    A Georgia State University associate professor of history, Harcourt Fuller, said the Maroons led the fight for Jamaican independence with their unrelenting spirit for freedom.

    He said the Maroons would rather die than live in bondage and many inhabitants are passionate about this proud history.

    He explained that for the Maroons, they were not born to be bound, subdued and have a fighting spirit that seeks justice and improvement in their welfare.

    Professor Harcourt said it is this history which has informed the Jamaican adage “we likkle, but we tallawah” which literally means they are small, but, a mighty people.

    He said despite being a community with a population of three million, they have been known to go beyond how they have been perceived by many people and cultures.

    According to him, the Maroons have shattered the ceiling in areas of music, language, athleticism, cuisine and intellectualism.

    When the British drew the curtains on its rule in 1962, the government of Jamaican had honoured the century old treaties signed by the Maroons.

    The Moore communities do not pay tax and their land cannot be sold or used as a collateral at the bank. The government has however honoured it social obligation to them by constructing roads, bridges, schools and clinics.

    Maroon communities Charles Town, Moore Town, Accompong Town and Scotts hall are governed by a colonel chief despite the presence of judicial system in Jamaica.

    The Maroons’ history has been cemented in the minds of generations as a day has been set aside to celebrate and commemorate their heroes by the government.

    Source:face2faceafrica.com

  • Eight European countries to participate in diversity campaign during Qatar World Cup

    Ten European football teams – the NetherlandsEnglandBelgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland and Wales – will participate in a season-long “OneLove” campaign promoting inclusion and opposing discrimination.

    Every country except Sweden and Norway has qualified for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar and each captain of these eight nations will wear a distinctive OneLove armband – which features a heart containing colors from all backgrounds – during the tournament.

    The Netherlands FA, which is spearheading the campaign, chose the colors to represent all heritages, backgrounds, genders and sexual identities; the armband will be worn in Qatar where same-sex relationships are a criminal offense.

    Sweden and Norway will participate in the initiative during the upcoming Nations League matches, while England will also wear black armbands during both its UEFA Nations League matches to mark the death of Queen Elizabeth II.

    “This is an important message which suits the game of football: on the field everybody is equal and this should be the case in every place in society. With the OneLove band we express this message,” said Virgil van Dijk, the Netherlands captain.

    “On behalf of the Dutch team I have been wearing this band for quite a while now. It is good to see that other countries are joining this initiative.”

    Source:CNNsports

  • How comedian Trevor Noah of the Daily Show amassed a huge net worth

    The South African comedian, author, and television personality Trevor Noah is reputed to be among the highest-paid hosts in America.

    He currently serves as the host of Comedy Central’s American satirical news show The Daily Show.

    Career 

    When he was only 18 years old, Noah began his career with a small part in an episode of the South African TV series “Isidingo.” He later went on to host his own radio program called “Noah’s Ark” on YFM.

    He also served as the host of the educational TV show “Run The Adventure” from 2004 to 2006 and the 2007 season of the gossip program “The Real Goboza.”
    He also served as co-host of the dating game program “The Amazing Date” due to his versatility in the media.

    Along with hosting radio and television shows, he also co-hosted the South African Music Awards in 2009 and 2010 and eventually received his own TV show, “Tonight with Trevor Noah.” He also presented the South African Film and Television Awards in 2009.

    He also performed as a comedian in programs like ‘The Blacks Only Comedy Show,’ the ‘Vodacom Campus Comedy Tour,’ the ‘Heavyweight Comedy Jam,’ the ‘Cape Town International Comedy Festival,’ ‘Bafunny Bafunny’ and the ‘Jozi Comedy Festival.’ His comedy career also saw him perform renowned comedians like Paul Rodriguez, Gabriel Iglesias, and Russell Peters.

    As he became famous in South Africa and across the globe, he began attracting endorsement deals. He also became a recurring contributor on the late-night talk and news satire program ‘The Daily Show with Jon Stewart’. His career reached a milestone when he became the regular host of The Daily Show in 2015.

    Career earnings

    Noah is one of the highest-paid show host in the world and reportedly has a higher net worth than the likes of Jimmy Kimmel and James Corden. When he was first signed to host The Daily Show, his salary was somewhere around $5-8 million per season. However, in 2017, his salary hit $16 million per season.

    His memoir, “Born a Crime” became a best-seller, selling over one million copies from 2016 to 2019 and according to The Hollywood Reporter, he made seven figures from his book deal.

    Also, a 2019 profile of Noah by the Hollywood Reporter claimed that he grossed almost $14 million from his comedy tours. In 2018 alone, the platform noted that Trevor grossed $5 million.

    According to Celebrity Net Worth, Noah has a net worth of $100 million with his source of worth coming from comedy, endorsement deals and events as earlier noted. In addition, he is also into real estate, splashing $20 million on a Bel-Air mansion in 2019 and flipping it for $21.5 million two years later.

    Also, in January 2021, Trevor bought another Bel-Air mansion for $27.5 million and flipped it for $30 million in October of the same year.

    Early life 

    Noah was born to a Black mother and a White father. He was brought up by a fiercely loving and tenacious mother.

    He childishly made fun of his mother’s Christianity, to which she was devoted, only to later learn and rely on her ethical compass that saw him through a mischievous rebellion and slightly criminal youth.

    Noah earned his smarts the hard way on the streets of Johannesburg’s slum townships. Survival was a matter of learning to navigate the racial and political turmoil.

    Coming of age at the moment when apartheid was finally crushed, he was branded an outsider not white and not completely accepted as Black.

    Noah slipped comically between racial barriers by fragile deception and duplication, making sure that he came out ahead of the game always. Well mostly.

    Little short of a miracle being tossed out of a moving vehicle and surviving, Noah would later be introduced to a brutally abusive stepfather.

    He also juggled an education in a vigorously disciplined Catholic School with the chaos of the streets and his own unruly spirit that rejected every social norm.

    Source:face2faceafrica.com

  • Neymar suffers injury in Brazil training ahead of Ghana game

    Brazil could miss their star player Neymar Junior in their game against Ghana on Friday, September 23rd, 2022 at the Stade Océane.

    The PSG player had a clash with his teammate Fabinho during their third training session held on Wednesday.

    The Brazilian forward cut his knee and needed to be attended to immediately by the medical team.

    According to reports, Neymar spent 5 minutes on the ground as the medical team attended to him with tension growing among his teammates and coaching staff.

    Neymar was able to return to his feet and continued the training later on as the technical team monitored his performance at training.

     

    The Selecao have been training in Paris-France ahead of the game and have been busy for the last three days.

    The Brazilians who have lined up a star-studded side have been training with players like Raphinha, Allison, Antony, Firminho Thiago Silva, Casimero, Vinicius, Militao, among others.

    The Black Stars have not won a game against Brazil in history. Ghana lost to the Selecao by 3-0 back at the 2006 World Cup and lost by a lone goal in two other friendly matches.

    The match between Ghana and Brazil forms part of preparations for the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

    Source:Ghanaweb

  • It feels like a family – Tariq Lamptey on first camping with Ghana

    Brighton & Hove Albion defender Tariq Lamptey speaks for the first time ahead of Black Stars friendly matches against the Selecao and Nicaragua.

    The 21-year-old right back was included in the Black Stars squad by coach Otto Addo for the first time ever after shifting his allegiance to represent the West African nation ahead of England.

    Lamptey, who was born in England to Ghanaian parents, had already represented the Young Lions at U18 and U21 level before Ghana Football Association approached him to shift his nationality, which he obliged and was confirmed in July, 2022.

    Lamptey is not the only player to have changed his nationality in the Black Stars squad for the two build-up matches. Addo also named Athletic Bilbao forward Inaki Williams alongside Southampton defender Mohammed Salisu, and Stephan Ambrosius, who features for 2. Bundesliga club Karlsruher SC on loan from Hamburger SV.

    Speaking for the first time after the Black Stars had concluded their training session at the Le Stade du Commandant Herbert in France on Tuesday, Lamptey told Ghana FA media team: “Training has been really good. Getting to know everybody. There is very high quality here and we are working hard in training and listening to what the coach has to say.

    “Everyone has been fantastic, everyone has been welcoming, it feels like a family here. It’s been so good. I’m very proud to be here and I’m really just trying to train hard to give the best I can for the team.”

    He added: “I’m looking forward to the game on Friday. In this game, we are preparing very well and we all want to be ready for Friday.”

    With the 2022 Fifa World Cup in Qatar just around the corner, Lamptey will hope to use the build-up matches as a stepping stone to winning the heart of the Black Stars’ technical bench and make the squad for the world competition.

    Source :Goal.com

  • Some exciting African cities that never sleep

    As a continent with diverse cultures and landscapes, Africa is blessed with many cities that prospective tourists should definitely keep on their ‘bucket list’.

    There’s no better experience in life than traveling and exploring several unique and exciting destinations.

    But if you have your mind set on heading to a location that is always buzzing, then you might want to pick from one of these cities that never sleeps.

    From the flashing lights to blazing hangouts, there are so many options worth checking out and definitely a lot of packed activities that come with it.

    Let’s take a look at some exciting African cities that tourists should consider

    Osu (Accra)

    Experience the Osu Night Market, where for over 125 years, people have been coming for food, drink and household items, sharing stories and laughs among friends, and listening to local music blaring in the streets.

    There is an amazing feast for the eyes and ears and the mouth. Come hungry for local foods and feel the life of this unique market.

    Osu is popular for carnivals, live band displays, art fairs, and lots more. These events ultimately drive traffic to the night market.

    Kampala

    Located in the heart of Uganda, East Africa, Kampala is packed with fun activities all day and all night.

    Ever heard of the “famous Kampala nightlife”?

    Well, asides from the city’s incredible safari parks and lake tours, there are tons of Casinos and nightclubs that keep buzzing from dusk till dawn.

    Interestingly they are noted for their insatiable cravings for “flavored beers” and you might find these at almost every pub.

    Nairobi

    Situated in the capital of Kenya, Nairobi has also been touted as a hub for real entertainment.

    Nairobi gathers Kenya’s diverse cultures, cuisines, and people into one city.

    There is always so much to see and do, such that it’s hard to know where to start.

    One gets to experience more adventure that includes Safari parks, free cultural dances, crafts, music, and so on.

    Also, Nairobi has carved a great niche for itself on the nightlife front.

    Locals, expats, and visitors mingle at various venues that range from exclusive champagne bars to nightclubs that are flooded with the sounds of electrifying African beats.

    Cairo

    While many plan to do little in Egypt like just visiting the pyramids, those with more time will find this city possibly even more enchanting.

    There are around-the-clock activities including romantic dinners and belly dancing shows on the legendary river Nile.

    Also, there are tons of mind-blowing rooftop bars and night tours at some of its wonderful places.

    Cairo asides from being noted for sightseeing also offers good fun.

    Marakesh (Morroco)

    Being the fourth largest city in Morrocco, Marrakech promises all sorts of wild sensations.

    Horse-drawn carriage rides, Architectural tours, sunny terraces, desert rides, and other activities give a taste of a wishful comeback.

    When the sun sets, Marrakech offers a “stress-free” experience.

    The city overwhelmingly offers a good taste of food, dance, and music every day after sunset.

    Disclaimer: This is subject to the writer’s discretion, research, and views from travelers. Readers might have their own favorites outside the list

    Source:Ghanaweb.com

  • I am well known in Nigeria by my name – Yaw Tog

    Thorsten Owusu Gyimah, well known as Yaw Tog and winner of the Vodafone Ghana Music Awards (VGMA), has explained why he was recently observed in Nigeria.

    “I traveled to Nigeria for radio interviews, and I’m also collaborating with many artists on my record. In addition, I also made some recordings there,” he admitted in a MyNewsGh.com-eared interview.

    The major reason I traveled to go and do some work, he continued, “was going to Nigeria was about my album personally and doing some radio tours for my ‘Sophia’ song.”

    Talking to Amansan Krakye about the great reception he had, Yaw Tog said he regards Nigeria as home and his name is well-known after his breakthrough song ‘Sore’ which featured Stormzy from the UK.

    “Nigeria is home and they are family so anytime I go there, the love is different and linked up with different artistes and the industry people,” he said in an interview on Cape Coast’s Kastle FM.

    “When I went to Nigeria, it was fun; we talked about business, personal issues and other things so I will say that they know the name already,” he concluded on the show.

  • Asamoah Gyan, Jonathan Mensah, Kwesi Appiah, others react to Ransford Yeboah’s funny dance in Black Stars camp

    Black Stars new boy Ransford Yeboah Konigsdorffer cracked the ribs of Asamoah Gyan, Jonathan Mensah, Kwesi Appiah and others with his dance moves at the initiation ceremony held in the Black Stars camp on Wednesday, September 21, 2022.

    Ransford Yeboah Konigsdorffer who is one of the Black Stars’ newbies left many laughing as he performed some funny dance moves which has gone viral on social media.

    The German-born Ghanaian was all over the place with his dance moves as he exhibited some comical moves.

    Some Ghanaian players like Asamoah Gyan, Jonathan Mensah, Kwesi Appiah and others who could not hide their joy took to social media to comment.

    The initiation ceremony is held by the teams to formally welcome new players to teams.

    Watch video below

    Read some of the comments below

     

     

     

    Source; Ghanaweb

     

  • Ghanaian filmmaker Kojo Little in the spotlight with ‘The Avenue’ series

    Ghanaian filmmaker, Emmanuel Kojo Antwi known in the movie circles as Kojo Little, is gaining the spotlight on the African continent with his new series titled “The Avenue”.

    The melodramatic series, which is being shown on Digital Satellite Television (DStv), has won the hearts of many fans of serial dramas because to its intriguing cast of actors.

    Top movie actors including Desmond Elliot, Joselyn Dumas, and Roselyn Ngissah were among those who appeared in “The Avenue” series, which was produced by Kojo Little.

    Kojo Little, an intriguing young performer with shrewd maneuvers, is interestingly also featured in the series.

    According to Kojo Little, who starred in the popular YOLO series, his dream was to become a top movie producer on the continent and he believes his latest project would gain the needed recognition.

    “I have worked with some top directors in the film industry, including Ivan Quashigah, Pascal Amanfo, and director Diji from Nigeria, and I have learnt a lot from them.

    “It has not been an easy journey thus far, but I am making progress, especially with my new project ‘The Avenue’ which is getting traction not only in Ghana but across the continent,” he said.

    Kojo Little was delighted to have combined both directing and acting, having worked with top actors including Basketmouth, Jackie Appiah, Adjetey Annan, among others.

    He has also featured in movies including Ghana Jollof, African Couple, Catel the Genesis, No Man’s Land, Candle in the Wind, among others.

  • ‘Aisha Huang loves Ghana’ – Lawyer vows to secure bail even if at Appeals Court

    Lawyer for illegal small-scale mining, galamsey, queen Aisha Huang, Captain (rtd) Nkrabea Effah-Dartey, has protested the failure of the courts to grant his client bail.

    Effah-Dartey says he, however, remained undeterred in his bid to secure temporal freedom for Aisha because she is entitled to same under Ghana’s laws.

    In a recent interview with Citi FM, he submitted: “My client is entitled to bail and since this virtual hearing denied her bail, my colleague lawyers and I are debating the next move which is most likely to repeat the application and if it is turned down, we will head to the Court of Appeal. We will press on till we get the bail.”

     

    The virtual hearing is in respect to four new charges the Attorney General proffered against Aisha last Friday in the High Court.

    “Aisha Huang loves Ghana and wants to be in Ghana and continue doing business here. She has a family in Ghana. To say that she is a foreigner and is a flight risk is unfair,” he added.

    Huang and three others are before a Circuit Court facing two charges relating to galamsey. They were denied bail after their last appearance.

    Source: Ghanaweb

     

  • Reduce prices to boost sales – Akofa Edjeani urges textile producers

    Akofa Edjeani, a filmmaker, Pan Africanist, and Executive of the Ghana Culture Forum, has advised Ghanaian textile manufacturers to lower the price of their goods.

    She claims that by doing this, the market for textiles created in Ghana will develop and more employment possibilities will be generated.

    She added, “I think the government would have to sit down with the textile makers and find a method for our textiles to be inexpensive,” in an interview with Eunice Tornyi on the “African Women’s Voices” program on e.tv Ghana.
    Some Ghanaians purchase Chinese fabrics because they are less expensive than Ghanaian fabrics because we can’t advertise made-in-Ghana products when they are expensive.

    She noted that although Ghana also produces these fabrics, it is not benefiting as much as it is supposed.

    “Textile producers in Ghana should be able to make the fabrics affordable so that we don’t t have to go and print in China for people to buy. That stuff coming into the country is the business for the Chinese and it keeps making them rich which makes our businesses here suffer,” she emphasized.

    She believes that whatever the challenge might be, “they can come together and work on it so the money stays in Ghana and we create the wealth here instead of it going out”.

  • Ban on small scale mining unlikely to yield results – Small Scale Miners

    President of the Concerned Small Scale Miners Association in Ghana, Michael Kwadwo Peprah, has shared little belief in the recent measures instituted by the Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources to aid the fight against illegal mining.

    According to him, the decision which includes ‘Operation Halt II’ is unlikely to produce any profitable outcome.

    In an interview with Don Kwabena Prah on Happy98.9 FM’s “Epa Hoa Daben” socio-political talk show, Mr. Peprah reiterated that the government’s approach to using brute force has never served any party right.

    In his view, digging out and having a comprehensive understanding of the root problems of ‘galamsey mining is the way forward rather than brute force.

    “The decision from the ministry I would say it would not yield any results not withstanding everything said. We have said that using the military approach will not solve this problem.

    “The government thinks it’s always best to use brute force because they think people involved in small scale mining are recalcitrant. Until we understand the root problem of galamsey, we can never solve this,” he told Don Kwabena Prah.

    He further alleged that Chinese nationals have flooded the various sites with heavy machinery engaging in illegal mining. Therefore, dragging them out of hidden tunnels and prosecuting them would be the right step in the fight against galamsey.

    “In 2012, Former President Atta-Mills together with John Mahama took a decision against mining. The current government need to finger out what happened both the positives and negatives. At that time the Galamsey threats reduced totally. That was the time the Chinese were being deported.

    “All these things that have led to us and Ghanaians talking about this is because everywhere our waters have been destroyed because of mining there are Chinese working. Ghanaians are fearful in nature and even as a result have redrawn their equipments because of the Minister’s statements.

    “The problem is with the Chinese and it’s almost as if our politicians are afraid if them when we mention their names,” he added.

    Mr. Peprah’s comments come after the Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, Samuel Abu Jinapor together with stakeholders reviewed some steps and strategies that have been implemented so far in the fight against the menace in a meeting on Friday.

    The aftermath of the meeting outlined new measures including, red zoning river bodies and forest reserves, ‘Operation Halt II’ to ramp up support for the various measures being implemented to clamp down on illegal mining among several others.

    Source: Happyghana.com

  • Why Korle Bu Teaching Hospital is a death trap – Ayariga shares terrifying experience

     Leader of the All People’s Congress party (APC) Dr. Hassan Ayariga, has shared a terrifying experience at the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital to explain his recent remarks about the health facility.

    The politician cum business mogul had remarked that country’s premier health centre was nothing but a death trap where people could die at any given time.

    Dr. Ayariga narrated in an interview with Roselyn Felli on Prime Morning that medical directors nurses of the hospital leave the facility and return the next day, abandoning attention-needing patients to their fate.

    “The doctors left the place by 11:30 pm. Patients were crying because their oxygen had finished. Mine got finished around 2 am, and no doctor or nurse came there until 5:30 am in the morning. So, we were on our own from 11:30 pm to 5:30 am,” he alleged.

    Dr. Ayariga also claimed that some patients, including himself, ran out of oxygen, but there was no doctor or nurse to attend to them, leading to the death of some patients who could have survived.

    In his case, without mincing words, Dr Ayariga recalled: “After three and a half days, Korle Bu was now taking me to go and check my lungs when I was to be transferred to IMAH Hospital. My saturation was reduced from 85 to 65. I tell you Korle Bu is a death trap.”

    In his view, refurbishing and restructuring the hospital is the way to go, and that’s exactly what he will do if elected as President of Ghana.

    “I’ll refurbish and change the management of Korle Bu. I’ll make sure that nurses and doctors there have to go for extra training because when you go there, people don’t really care because they see death every day,” he said.

    He blamed the lack of monitoring and supervision as well as misplaced priority on the part of the central government for the woeful state of the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital and others across the country.

    “There’s no control and monitoring in all institutions in this country, and that’s the reason why institutions in this country cannot pay workers. Government has to borrow. The reason why we have borrowed 341 billion and yet there’s nothing to show.”

    The management of the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital has not yet responded to the claims by Dr Ayariga.

    Source: Ghanaguardian

     

  • Gladys Akyere Rockson set to take pageantry international

    The Miss Health Ghana pageant will be recreated in other African nations, according to Madam Gladys Akyere Rockson, Chief Executive Officer of Lamrock Agency, the organizers of the event.

    In order to stage Miss Health Africa in Liberia, Rwanda, Zambia, Botswana, and Kenya, among other African nations, Lamrock Agency partnered with “Kr8tive” Media. This is when she made this declaration.

    Over the years, the Miss Health Ghana platform has given aspiring medical professionals the tools they need to lead projects aimed at preserving lives and encouraging healthy living.

    According to Madam Akyere Rockson, their efforts in sensitising the public about various health issues in Ghana caught the attention of other African countries who find the pageant concept unique.

    “We want to change the narrative of pageantry by giving it a unique touch. That is why we decided to use health professionals and students to spearhead this agenda of healthy living.

    “As we know, Africa faces numerous challenging health concerns, and we have partnered with ‘Kr8tive’ Media to lead similar agendas in other African countries,” she said.

    Madam Akyere Rockson further added that the queens from various countries would converge in Accra in the near future for an international pageant.

    She noted that this year’s Miss Health Ghana pageant would come on soon with Miss Health Africa to be held next year.

    The Miss Health Ghana pageant won the Best Beauty Pageant at the 2020 Ghana Outstanding Women’s Award.

    It was also named among the 2021 Ghana Startup Club 100 in 2021.

  • 26th GJA Awards: Deadline for submission of entries extended to Sept. 23

    The Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) has extended the deadline for the submission of entries for the 26th GJA Awards to Friday, September 23, 2022.

    A statement signed by the Association’s President, Albert Dwumfour, said, “The Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) wishes to inform members that it has extended the deadline for the submission of Entries for the 26th GJA Awards to Friday, September 23, 2022, at 5 PM”

    Read the full statement below:

    September 21, 2022

    PRESS RELEASE

    EXTENSION OF DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION OF ENTRIES FOR THE 26TH GJA AWARDS TO FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2022.

     

    The Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) wishes to inform members that it has extended the deadline for the submission of Entries for the 26th GJA Awards to Friday, September 23, 2022 at 5PM.

    The original entries submission deadline ends today, September 21, 2022 at 5PM.

    The extension of the deadline has become necessary following calls by some members pleading for additional days to enable them file their entries.

    GJA is therefore urging members to use this extension period to file their entries before and on Friday, September 23, 2022 at 5PM.

    It is instructive for members to note that there will not be any further extension after the Friday deadline.

    Thank you.

    SIGNED

    Albert Kwabena Dwumfour

    President

  • Eastern Region records 62 maternal deaths in 8 months

    The Eastern Regional Health Directorate has bemoaned the high rate of maternal deaths in the region, describing the situation as worrying.

    This followed the shocking revelation that 62 maternal deaths occurred in the Region from January to September of this year, with the majority of cases occurring in rural areas.

    Addressing a press conference in Koforidua to update the media and public on the Maternal Death situation in the Region and to amplify measures to address the challenge of attaining Zero Tolerance for Maternal Deaths, Ellen Darkoa Asare, Regional Public Health Nurse said the failure of pregnant mothers to visit the hospitals when referred coupled with poverty are among the causes of the High Maternal Cases in the Region.

    She, therefore, called on pregnant mothers to prioritize their safety during pregnancy periods by frequenting health facilities for antenatal care rather than relying on herbalists and prayer camps.

     

    However, the Regional Director of Health Services, Dr. Winfred Ofosu mentioned that the maternal mortality ratio remains high and requires strenuous efforts if Ghana must achieve the Sustainable Development Goal target of 70 per 100,000 live births in 2030.

    He said that to address the challenges and achieve SDG, hence the launching of the “Zero Tolerance for Maternal Deaths” campaign which primarily aims at reducing unintended pregnancies among women and girls through the provision of safe abortion and family planning (FP) services to reduce maternal deaths.

    According to him, even though the campaign is seeking additional support for these unfortunate people to access the best and safest techniques for terminating unwanted pregnancies to save their lives and for timely family planning to prevent further unintended pregnancies, there is still a high death rate.

    Source: Atinkaonline

  • Nkrumah’s political, economic ideologies still relevant for Africa’s development – Pan Africanist

    Mr Harrison Owusu, a Movement Coordinator of Africans Rising, a Pan-African movement, has paid tribute to the late Osagyefo Dr Nkrumah, Ghana’s first President, for championing the cause of the continent’s progress.

    He said, Dr Nkrumah’s belief in “a united and wealthy Africa independent of foreign aids and donors to realise the people’s development agenda, is still relevant today.”

    “To us as a Pan-African movement, there cannot be a better time for the continent to begin to embrace the late Dr Nkrumah’s ideologies than now.

    “His vision in seeing to a united Africa, where the people could interact and trade freely, utilising the continent’s mass resources for the benefit of the people, should be considered critically, in the wake of the current development challenges facing the people,” the Movement Coordinator told the Ghana News Agency, in an interview in Accra.

    Ghana on Wednesday, September 21, marked the Kwame Nkrumah Memorial Day, a holiday commemorating the birthday of Ghana’s first prime minister, and first president.

    Nkrumah was born Kwame Francis Nwia Kofie in the south-west of the Gold Coast in 1909.

     

    His educational career would see him study economics and sociology in America in the late 1930’s, where he nursed the ambition to lead the emancipation of the African continent.

    His charismatic leadership advanced the cause of independence for most countries on the continent, especially sub-Saharan Africa.

    Political scientists argue that Nkrumah’s philosophy dictated his political career and his quest for national and continental unity.

    Mr Owusu bemoaned the current plight of the continent – poverty, travel restrictions across the borders, hunger, language barrier, and over-dependence on the western world for economic activities.

    The time has come for the continent to work hard, engender self-confidence and pull resources together within the Pan-Africanism context for its sustainable development.

    He advocated for the use of a common currency across Africa in order to facilitate business and economic activities.

    Additionally, the respective governments ought to ensure that their borders were not that restrictive to enhance the movement of the people in the name of African unity.

    Source:GNA

  • Black Sherif to release new single ‘Soja’ on September 22

    Black Sherif, a Ghanaian musician, will be making a comeback with the release of a new track.

    The song, titled “Soja,” is expected to be released on September 22, 2022, a Thursday.

    This follows the successful release in March of his number-one single, “Kwaku The Traveller.”

    Black Sherif to return with new single 'Soja' on September 22

    The song which topped charts across the various digital streaming platforms with its enormous global crossover prowess was co-signed by a lot of industry greats such as DJ Khaled, Timberland among others.

    The musician recently received the enviable Golden Club plaque from Boomplay.

    This was after he became the first Ghanaian artist to reach the 100 million streams milestone on the streaming platform.

    Meanwhile, Black Sherif’s announcement has set social media agog with fans taking to the various social media platforms to share their excitement.

    Find more below:


  • The Bawku conflict is unfortunate — Peace Council

    Alhaji Sumaila Issaka, the Chairman of the Upper East Regional Peace Council, says the recurrent conflict in Bawku is unfortunate.

    He said the sporadic shooting and killing of innocent people were unnecessary and criminal.

    “We don’t know who is fighting who, is it Mamprusis fighting Kussasis or Kussasis fighting Moshies, or vice versa or is it an ‘all for all war’ or people want to sell their arms, because those dying belong to all the tribes”, Mr Issaka said.

    He said the Bawku area was cosmopolitan with different tribes living together.

    The Regional Peace Council Chairman, who shared his experience with the Ghana News Agency after a recent working visit to the Bawku Municipality and its environs, said he had to take a long detour from Binduri district to Garu to Pusiga District before arriving at Misiga, just to avoid volatile areas.

    He said businesses at the shops, markets, vehicular and human movement within Bawku had virtually slowed to a halt except the Highways area towards the middle of the Township, where commercial vehicles load passengers and goods.

    Meanwhile, the Upper East Regional Coordinating Council in collaboration with the Regional Security Council (REGSEC) at its emergency meeting on Monday, September 19, reviewed the security situation in the area, as part of efforts to enforce additional measures, following recent shootings and fighting in Bawku.

    In a letter signed by the Chief Director, Regional Coordinating Council, Mr Inusah Abubakari Alhaji, on behalf of the Regional Minister and copied to the Bawku Municipal Security Council, REGSEC directed that, “only the Ghana Police Service, Ghana Immigration Service and the Military are allowed to use official motor bikes between 0600hours to 1800hours”.

    Other measures include a temporary ban on Tricycle, commonly called ‘Yellow Yellow’ operations until further notice and extension of curfew to cover Nayoko, Kpalgu and Manga communities.

    Source: GNA

  • OccupyGhana petitions RTI Commission over public lands

    Occupy Ghana, a pressure group, has petitioned the Right to Information (RTI) Commission to order the Lands Commission to provide details on all public lands that the Commission had allegedly returned to owners.

    The petition dated September 20, 2022 and addressed to the Executive Secretary of the Commission, said the action had been necessitated due to the Lands Commission’s “conceivable trick to frustrate” access to the documents.

    The Group has, therefore, asked the RTI Commission to make the Lands Commission provide it (the Group) with a list of all public lands over, which Government’s ownership or control had been relinquished and the names of the persons to whom those lands had been released.

    They are also asking that the respective sizes and locations (suburbs, towns/cities, and regions) of all such lands, and the conditions of release, whether free, sale, lease or license be provided.

    OccupyGhana is also asking that the Lands Commission be made to tell the Group the amount of rent paid or payable, and any other amounts paid to or received by Government, if any, for the release of a land.

    According to the Group, the Lands Commission had purportedly returned some public lands to the original owners in compliance with article 20(5) and (6) of the Constitution.

    However, the Group said such action by the Commission was contrary to the Supreme Court’s ruling that those provisions did not apply to lands acquired before the Constitution came into force.

    “Checks with both the Lands Ministry and Lands Commission have confirmed that contrary to article 258(2), there is no government policy that authorises these alleged returns of lands to purported original owners,” the pressure group noted.

    The Group said it had between June 2 and September 15, 2022, engaged with the Commission to be given the needed information in line with the right to information and to be accounted to, as Ghanaians per constitutional provisions.

    It said reasons for, which the information had not been given included a demand to name an individual with whom the Commission would deal with, request for time to compile the information from the regions, and the calling for a meeting to discuss the Group’s concerns.

    According to OccupyGhana, the Commission also said it needed the advice of the Attorney-General on the request in the light of the provisions of the Data Protection Act and the Right to Information Act.

    “At this stage, we are concerned that unless and until compelled by the Right to Information Commission to do so, the Lands Commission will keep coming up with one unsustainable excuse after another,” the Group said, hence, the petition.

    Source: GNA

  • FULL TEXT: Akufo-Addo’s Address at 77th United Nations’ General Assembly

    ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF GHANA, NANA ADDO DANKWA AKUFO-ADDO, AT THE 77TH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS’ GENERAL ASSEMBLY, ON THE THEME “A WATERSHED MOMENT: TRANSFORMATIVE SOLUTIONS TO INTERLOCKING CHALLENGES”, ON WEDNESDAY, 21ST SEPTEMBER, 2019, NEW YORK.

    Mr President, I congratulate you on your election to lead us through this 77th gathering of the General Assembly of the United Nations. I wish you the best of luck, as you take on this onerous task at this most difficult period of the world.

    Mr President, as we would say in Ghana, our world is currently not in a good place. The World Bank observed, last Thursday, that the global economy was enduring its steepest slowdown since 1970. Two years ago, our world came to a thundering halt, as we cowered from a health pandemic from an unknown, malicious virus, coupled with a devastating global economic pandemic. High budget deficits were no longer concerns of only developing nations.

    By 2021, COVID-19 had pushed Africa into the worst recession for half a century. A slump in productivity and revenues, increased pressures on spending and spiralling public debts confronted us without relent.

    As we grappled with these economic challenges, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine burst upon us, aggravating an already difficult situation. It is not just the dismay that we feel at seeing such deliberate devastation of cities and towns in Europe in the year 2022, we are feeling this war directly in our lives in Africa. Every bullet, every bomb, every shell that hits a target in Ukraine, hits our pockets and our economies in Africa.

    The economic turmoil is global with inflation as the number one enemy this year.

    It hit a 40-year-high in the US and UK in recent months. There is record inflation in the euro zone. Several African countries have inflation rates surging three to four times higher than what they were just two years ago. In Ghana, we are experiencing the highest inflation for 21 years. The high costs of food are hurting the poor, especially the urban poor, the most.

    Moreover, the spillover from central banks raising interest rates to combat inflation has been severe beyond borders, as global investors pull money out of developing economies to invest in bonds in the developed world.

    This has led to depreciating currencies and increased borrowing costs; meaning we need to raise and spend more of our own currencies to service our foreign debts in US dollars.

    It has become clear, if ever there was any doubt, that the international financial structure is skewed significantly against developing and emerging economies like Ghana. The avenues that are opened to powerful nations to enable them take measures that would ease pressures on their economies are closed to small nations.

    To make matters worse, credit rating agencies have been quick to downgrade economies in Africa, making it harder to service our debts. The tag of Africa as an investment risk is little more than, in substance, a self-fulfilling prophecy created by the prejudice of the international money market, which denies us access to cheaper borrowing, pushing us deeper into debts.

    The financial markets have been set up and operate on rules designed for the benefit of rich and powerful nations, and, during times of crisis, the façade of international co-operation, under which they purport to operate, disappears. These are the savage lessons that we have had to take in, as the world emerged from the grip of the coronavirus to energy and food price hikes, and a worldwide rise in the cost of living. The necessity for reform of the system is compelling.

    Mr President, I am a modest student of history, and I would say it is doubtful that any generation of inhabitants of this earth has ever witnessed such a perfect storm of global economic chaos, a war with global consequences, and an unwillingness or inability to find a consensus to deal with the catastrophe.

    It is under such circumstances that we have gathered under the theme: “A Watershed Moment: Transformative Solutions to Interlocking Challenges.”

    The problems we face are, indeed, many, and vary in level of importance, depending on where you are in the global order of things. Just last year, the focus was on energy transition. This year, it is about energy security, as Europe goes back to burning coal to replace Russian gas.

    Nevertheless, we do not have the luxury of being able to pick and choose which big problem to solve. None of them can wait; the economic turbulence requires urgent and immediate solution; the turmoil and insecurity in many parts of the world require urgent attention; and so does the need to tackle the problems posed by climate change.

    A watershed moment, indeed, it is, and history will judge us harshly if we do not seize the opportunity to make the changes that will enable us deal with the many problems we face.

    Mr President, a case in point is the destabilising conflict in the Sahel. It might look to many, today, as a local conflict which affects only the
    countries in that region. We, in Ghana, know differently, we have watched in horror as the unrest has moved from the Sahel, inexorably, to the West African coastal countries. All of Ghana’s neighbours have suffered terrorist attacks, and some have lost territorial space to the invading forces.

    Furthermore, the terrorist pressure has provided a pretext for the unhappy reappearance of military rule in three (3) of the fifteen (15) member ECOWAS Community, two (2) of whom have borne the brunt of the terrorist outrages in the Region – Mali and Burkina Faso. It is a development we are determined to reverse, so that the ECOWAS space remains a democratic one.

    All of us in the Region are being forced to spend huge amounts of money on security. This is money we should be spending on educating and giving skills to our young people; on building much needed roads, bridges, hospitals and other such infrastructure, which we are spending to fight terrorists or to keep them out from destabilising our countries.

    This is a global problem, deserving the attention of the world community for a global solution. Mr President, I am contributing to this debate on a date that has special significance for us in Ghana. 21st September is the date we mark the birth of our first President, Dr Kwame Nkrumah.

    He would have been one hundred and thirteen (113) years old today, and it is worth recalling on this day the driving force of his political career, which was to contribute to the birth of a united Africa, i.e., a United States of Africa.

    We recognise today, more than ever before, the importance of the strength in unity of Africa, and we are working to shed that image of a helpless, hapless continent.

    There is a renewed commitment towards an inclusive and sustainable industrialisation and economic integration and the intensity of the challenges we face today is only matched, like never before, by the immensity of the opportunity before us. We, the current leaders of Africa, should be determined not to waste the crisis that confronts us.

    Incidentally, 2022 is billed as Africa’s Year to take action on food and nutrition development goals. We see the current geopolitical crisis as an opportunity to rely less on food imports from outside the continent and use better our sixty per cent global share of arable lands to increase food production.

    We have seen the devastating impact of relying on Russia and Ukraine for seventy per cent of our wheat consumption. We have enough land, enough water, enough gas and enough manpower to produce enough fertiliser, food and energy for ourselves and for others.

    But, we also recognise that we cannot do it all by ourselves. Our message to the global investor community is, therefore, this: Africa is ready for business. Africa needs you and you need Africa. You need Africa because Africa is busily building the world’s largest single market of 1.3 billion people.

    Soon we will have a customs union, and soon we will have a continental payment system that will accelerate and facilitate trade amongst ourselves. Already, goods and services are flowing more freely across our artificial borders. See Africa for what it is: the new frontier for manufacturing, for technology, for food production. That is why six years ago, I launched in Ghana the successful policy of ‘One District One Factory’.

    A policy, with government incentives, that has directly seen, so far, some one hundred and twenty-five (125) factories being set up in various districts across the country, leveraging on each area’s competitive advantage. That is why, six years ago, my government embarked on an aggressive policy of planting for food and jobs, which has helped our farmers increase their yields in folds. Indeed, we are recognising that many of the things we import can be found or produced in Ghana, or in other African countries.

    The African Continental Free Trade Area, whose Secretariat is located in Accra, Ghana’s capital, is driving intra-Africa trade and creating an unparalleled momentum for our continent’s economic diversity and transformation. We know that industrialisation is the way to go and, with the single market as the added incentive, we have taken policy measures in Ghana to add value to our natural resources. For example, we are processing more of our cocoa, refining more of our gold, and we are determined to exploit the entire value chain of our huge lithium deposits.

     

    We are busily building an integrated bauxite and aluminium industry and an integrated iron and steel industry, building new oil refineries and have, so far, attracted six (6) of the world’s biggest automobile manufacturers to set up assembling plants in Ghana, prior to producing them in the country.

    In line with the African Union’s Agenda 2063 and the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Africa’s ambition is to transform our food systems over the next decade, anchored in the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) and the Malabo Declaration on Accelerated Agricultural Growth.

    What we require now is support from the investor community for the rolling out of Africa’s lucrative agro-industry, and for the community to see agribusiness in Africa as much more an opportunity than the perceived, exaggerated risk which has been the false, but dominant narrative.

    In conclusion, Mr President, on 25 July 2016, the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution A/RES/70/293, proclaiming 2016-2025 as the Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa (IDDA III), with UNIDO tasked to lead it in collaboration with a range of partners.

    I believe it is time for the UN to take proper stock of this initiative and ask a few searching questions, recognising what could have been achieved with greater commitment and focus.

    Working together, we can get our world back into a better and happier place.

    I thank you very much for your attention.

    Source; presidency.gov.gh

  • We do not have the luxury of choosing which issues to address – Akufo-Addo

    President Akufo-Addo has urged international leaders to work together to address the many issues the world is facing.

    We don’t have the luxury of choosing which problems to solve, the President stated on Wednesday during his address to the 77th UN General Assembly.

    Since “none of them can wait,” according to the President, it will be wise to treat each issue with equal priority.

    President Akufo-Addo emphasized issues including insecurity, climate change, economic and energy difficulties, among others, and emphasized that each one needs urgent response.

    “History will judge us harshly if we do not seize the opportunity to make the changes that will enable us to deal with the many problems that we face,” he stated on Wednesday.

    The President also used the platform to bemoan the unfair treatment of African countries on the international financial market.

    According to him, avenues that are available to powerful nations are not the same for developing countries,consequently, impeding growth in these countries.

    “The tag of Africa as investment risk is a self-fulfilling prophecy created by the prejudice of the international money markets which denies us access to cheaper borrowing, pushing us deeper into debts.

    “The financial market has been set up and operates on rules designed for the benefit of rich and powerful nations and during times of crisis, the façade of international cooperation under which they purport to operate disappears,” he opined.

     

  • Recognizing Founders’ Day is fantastic – Nana Akomea salutes Akufo-Addo

    The Managing Director of the Intercity STC, Nana Akomea, has commended President Akufo-Addo for recognizing all founders of Ghana’s independence.

    There seem to be an on and off debate surrounding founder’s or founders’ day celebration in the country. Some claim Ghana’s first President Dr. Kwame Nkrumah is the sole founder of the country while others insist he’s not the only one.

     

    It may be recalled that every Founder’s Day was to recognize Dr. Nkrumah as the founder of Ghana. However, President Akufo-Addo changed that when he came into power in 2017, ensuring that other contributors to Ghana’s independence were included.

    Therefore, August 4th is a national public holiday to commemorate the contributions of all the people who led the struggle for Ghana’s independence, notably called the “Big Six”, while September 21st has been set aside to celebrate Nkrumah’s Birthday.

    Contributing to Peace FM’s ‘Kokrokoo’ programme, Nana Akomea said: “Indeed Nkrumah played a pivotal role but you can’t also neglect those who formed the political party and invited him (Nkrumah) to join. They’re also part and so for Akufo-Addo to recognize all of them is fantastic.”

    Source:Peacefmonline

     

  • Ghana School of Law president impeached over ‘corruption’ allegations

    Wisdom Victor Kutor has been removed as the president of the Student Representative Council, SRC, of the Ghana School of Law after he was impeached.

    The embattled student leader removed after he was found guilty of financial impropriety by the SRC’s Supreme Court.

    Citi News reports that the apex court is yet to provide its full judgement in the matter.

    This is the latest leg of a running saga that dates months back. In April 2022, Kutor, denied all claims of wrongdoing levelled against him by some other executives of the student’s body regarding the purchase of a Toyota Corolla vehicle for the school.

    Other allegations also include his unilateral operation of the MobileMoney account of the organization.

    In April, he said that throughout his life in public service, he has held his integrity intact and stayed away from anything which will dent his image and that of his family.

    “I have seen leaders across the world suffer these hate attacks when you seem to be doing the right thing in the interest of your people but it is well,” he explained.

    He told GhanaWeb that the matter was in court and so he wonders why there would be a rush for him to appear before an independent investigative committee which, for him, does not have such powers under the SRC constitution.

    “As law students, we need to uphold the fundamentals of the laws and to a very large extent, the constitution. We cannot be seen to be engaging in activities which are contrary to established rule of law,” he said.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Akufo-Addo honors Nkrumah in his UN General Assembly address

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, the fifth president under the Fourth Republic, has honored Ghana’s first president, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah.

    He did this during the UNGA, or United Nations General Assembly, which began on September 19 and will be the 77th General Assembly in 2022, an annual gathering of world leaders in New York.

    In his speech on September 21, Akufo-Addo made a special mention of the Osagyefo while also highlighting the necessity of African unity in the face of current global concerns.

    As the first president’s birthday was on September 21, he also emphasized the importance of making the announcement on that day.

    “Mr President, I am contributing to this debate on a date that has special significance for us in Ghana. 21st September is the date we mark the birth of our first President, Dr Kwame Nkrumah.

    “He would have been one hundred and thirteen (113) years old today, and it is worth recalling on this day the driving force of his political career, which was to contribute to the birth of a united Africa, i.e., a United States of Africa.

    “We recognise today, more than ever before, the importance of the strength in unity of Africa, and we are working to shed that image of a helpless, hapless continent,” Akufo-Addo stresed.

    The president harped on the increasing need for Africa to embrace industralization and economic integration to drive collective progress.

    “There is a renewed commitment towards an inclusive and sustainable industrialisation and economic integration and the intensity of the challenges we face today is only matched, like never before, by the immensity of the opportunity before us.

    “We, the current leaders of Africa, should be determined not to waste the crisis that confronts us,” he added.

    Watch Akufo-Addo full address below:

    September 21, 2022 observed a national holiday

    The Minister of the Interior, Ambrose-Dery, declared the September 21 holiday since it marks the birthday of Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah.

    Parliament in 2018 passed the new Public Holidays Act, 2018, to amend the Public Holidays Act, 2001.

    The Act replaced three public holidays, including September 21 and introduced two new holidays, January 7 (Constitution Day) and August 4 (Founders’ Day).

    According to the government, the real fight for Ghana’s independence started on August 4, 1947 (the day the United Gold Coast Convention, UGCC was formed), which is why it replaced the September 21 holiday.

  • Unemployment crisis: Some curriculum teachings not connected to employers expectations – Lecturer

    Business consultant and entrepreneurship lecturer, Isaac Tweneboah-Kodua, has charged students to be committed to acquiring more knowledge to be well packaged and marketable for the job market.

    He said that the country’s curriculum programme merely bridges the gap for students between schooling and readiness in the corporate world.

    “The first one has to with the curriculum we teach the younger people at the universities. Some of them are not really connected with what the employers are looking for.

    “So, when the people come out of school especially those who did not do anything directly with what the industry is looking for, it because very difficult for them to stick themselves into the industry,” he told Samuel Eshun on the Happy Morning Show.


     

    He however, suggested that despite the defects of Ghana’s curriculum activities, students can ready themselves by investing in improving their skills and knowledge in other fields of study.

    “But that does not warrant that if for example someone did a course that there is no readily available job in the market the person shouldn’t prepare him or herself.

    “I did Geography and Political Science when I was in Legon but at the time I got to know that if I didn’t find myself something to improve myself, I would be unemployed after school.

    “So right away I did Marketing at along my main courses as did my roommate. From that time till now I have never known unemployment. Not that I’m superhuman but the fact is I got to understand my talent alone doesn’t warrant me to automatically get a job after school.

    “If I did my main courses alone, my best bet would have been to teach in the classroom. At the same time my colleagues at Winneba and UCC were doing the same course with education. If we both were looking for the teaching jobs, they would be favorited ahead of me,” he added.

    Source:happyghana.com

  • Every bullet, bomb that hits a target in Ukraine hits our pockets – Akufo-Addo tells UN

    The effects of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on the world economy, particularly for African nations, have been emphasized once more by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
    According to the President, the conflict, which broke out in February 2022, made an already bad position even worse for African economies, which were just beginning to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic’s consequences.

    Akufo-Addo said the war had direct impact on Africa especially in the area of food supply triggering importantly, inflation.

    “Two years ago, our world came to a thundering halt, as we cowered from a health pandemic from an unknown, malicious virus, coupled with a devastating global economic pandemic. High budget deficits were no longer concerns of only developing nations.

    “By 2021, COVID-19 had pushed Africa into the worst recession for half a century. A slump in productivity and revenues, increased pressures on spending and spiralling public debts confronted us without relent,” he submitted.

    On the specific case of the Russian invasion, even though Moscow insists it was a military operation, Akufo-Addo stated: “As we grappled with these economic challenges, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine burst upon us, aggravating an already difficult situation.

    “It is not just the dismay that we feel at seeing such deliberate devastation of cities and towns in Europe in the year 2022, we are feeling this war directly in our lives in Africa.

    “Every bullet, every bomb, every shell that hits a target in Ukraine, hits our pockets and our economies in Africa. The economic turmoil is global with inflation as the number one enemy this year,” he added.


    Government has routinely explained that recent economic headwinds are attributable largely to the ravages of the COVID-19 pandemic, the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war and the banking sector clean-up.

    The rippling effect has been an increase in the cost of living, record high inflation rates and downgrades of the economy by rating agencies such as S&P and Fitch – a situation which has dealt a heavy blow to government’s ability to access the international capital market.

    The Cedi has also been on a free fall compelling the Bank of Ghana to resort to hiking its monetary policy rate to deal with the situation.

    The worsening economic situation compelled the government in July to initiate contact with International Monetary Fund for an economic support programme.

    Ghana is targeting an amount of US$3 billion over three years from the Fund once an agreement on a programme is reached.

    Government hopes to complete negotiations by end of the year in order to receive the funds in the first quarter of next year.

     

  • Reforms needed because the International Financial system is tilted towards emerging nations – Akufo-Addo to world leaders

    President Akufo-Addo, has demanded that the global banking system be immediately reformated.

    He contends that while emerging nations suffer under the current system, an equitable alternative that would benefit all nations should be taken into consideration.

    During his Wednesday speech to the 77th UN General Assembly, the President issued this urgent demand.

    “The labeling of Africa as an investment risk is minimal in fact.

    It is a self-fulfilling prophecy made possible by the bias of the global financial markets, which prevents us from accessing more affordable financing, increasing our debt.

    He pointed out that “the financial market has been set up and functions under rules created for the benefit of rich and powerful nations.”

    Recalling incidents during the Covid-19 crisis, President Akufo-Addo said many powerful countries “disappeared” despite the partnerships the said countries had established in Africa.

    “These are the savage lessons that we’ve had to take in as the world emerged from the grip of the coronavirus, to energy and food price hikes and a world rise in a cost of living.

    “The necessity for reform of the system is compelling,” he stressed.

    Ghana’s creditworthiness has recently suffered a downgrade by top ratings agencies including S&P and Fitch. This has affected investor confidence amid an ailing economy currently at the International Monetary Fund’s doors for a bailout.

    Addressing the Assembly, the President said the downgrade of economies by rating agencies is further aggravating the hardships of African countries because of difficulties in servicing debts.

  • Every projectile or bomb that strikes a target in Ukraine hits our pockets – Akufo-Addo tells UN

    The President of Ghana, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has emphasized the negative effects of the Russia-Ukraine war on the world economy, particularly for African nations.

    According to the president, the conflict, which broke out in February 2022, made an already bad position even worse for African economies, which were just beginning to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic’s consequences.

    Akufo-Addo claimed that the conflict directly affected Africa, particularly in the field of food supplies, which in turn, significantly, caused inflation.

    “Two years ago, a pandemic of disease caused by an unidentified, hostile virus and a catastrophic worldwide economic pandemic brought our world to a crashing halt.

    No longer were only underdeveloped countries concerned about large budget deficits.

    “By 2021, COVID-19 had pushed Africa into the worst recession for half a century. A slump in productivity and revenues, increased pressures on spending and spiralling public debts confronted us without relent,” he submitted.

    On the specific case of the Russian invasion, even though Moscow insists it was a military operation, Akufo-Addo stated: “As we grappled with these economic challenges, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine burst upon us, aggravating an already difficult situation.

    “It is not just the dismay that we feel at seeing such deliberate devastation of cities and towns in Europe in the year 2022, we are feeling this war directly in our lives in Africa.

    “Every bullet, every bomb, every shell that hits a target in Ukraine, hits our pockets and our economies in Africa. The economic turmoil is global with inflation as the number one enemy this year,” he added.

    Goverment has routinely explained that recent economic headwinds are attributable largely to the ravages of the COVID-19 pandemic, the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war and the banking sector clean-up.

    The rippling effect has been an increase in the cost of living, record high inflation rates and downgrades of the economy by rating agencies such as S&P and Fitch – a situation which has dealt a heavy blow to government’s ability to access the international capital market.

    The Cedi has also been on a free fall compelling the Bank of Ghana to resort to hiking its monetary policy rate to deal with the situation.

    The worsening economic situation compelled the government in July to initiate contact with International Monetary Fund for an economic support programme.

    Ghana is said to be targeting an amount of US$3 billion over three years from the International Monetary Fund once an agreement on a programme is reached. The new amount requested as a loan was double the government’s initial target of $1.5 billion.

    Government hopes to complete negotiations by end of the year in order to receive the funds in the first quarter of next year.

     

  • No NPP member is displeased with how Nkrumah is honored – Presidential staffer explains

    A national holiday was declared on September 21, 2022, to honor Ghana’s first President, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah.

    However, commemorating the day frequently leads to political debates about Nkrumah’s contribution to the creation of the modern-day state of Ghana.

    The phrase “Nkrumah Never Dies” has been used by many to mock people who they feel are hurt by the respect – or primus inter pares status – that Nkrumah receives in comparison to his contemporaries in the infamous “Big Six.”

    Samuel Bryan Buabeng, a presidential staffer weighed into the conversation via a tweet that explained why no member of the New Patriotic Party, NPP, was pained by how Nkrumah was celebrated.

    “No one in the NPP is pained or hurt about how Nkrumah is being celebrated, his contribution or what he stood for.

    “Our forebears brought him and we currently being led by President Nana Akufo-Addo have also celebrated him than those who claimed to love him more than H. R. Fathia Nkrumah,” his tweet of September 21, 2022 read.

    The Minister of the Interior, Ambrose-Dery, declared the September 21 since it marks the birthday of Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah.

    Parliament in 2018 passed the new Public Holidays Act, 2018, to amend the Public Holidays Act, 2001.

    The Act replaced three public holidays, including September 21 and introduced two new holidays, January 7 (Constitution Day) and August 4 (Founders’ Day).

    According to the government, the real fight for Ghana’s independence started on August 4, 1947 (the day the United Gold Coast Convention, UGCC was formed), which is why it replaced the September 21 holiday.

     

  • Ukraine conflict: Russia arrests hundreds at anti-war protests

    Russian police are reported to have arrested hundreds of protesters rallying against the Kremlin’s decision to call up thousands of extra troops to fight in Ukraine.

    Russian human rights group OVD-Info put the total at more than 900. The largest number arrested was in Yekaterinburg, a major city east of Moscow.

    Dozens were also detained in Irkutsk and other Siberian cities, and Moscow.

    Flights out of Russia sold out fast after Vladimir Putin’s announcement.

    Russia’s president ordered a partial mobilisation, meaning some 300,000 military reservists – but not conscripts – will be drafted to bolster Russia’s forces who have suffered recent battlefield reverses in Ukraine.

    The move came a day after occupied areas of Ukraine announced snap referendums on joining Russia.

    And in remarks condemned by Ukraine and its allies, Mr Putin stressed that he would use “all available means” to protect Russian territory – implying this could involve nuclear weapons.

    Tough warnings to protestors

    Moscow protest - scuffle with police, 21 Sep 22Image source, AFP
    Image caption,

    Scuffles broke out in Moscow as police made arrests

    The Moscow prosecutor’s office on Wednesday warned that calls on the internet to join unauthorised street protests, or participation in them, could incur up to 15 years in jail. They could be prosecuted under laws against discrediting the armed forces, spreading “fake news” about Russia’s military operation in Ukraine, or encouraging minors to protest.

    Russia’s tough penalties for spreading “disinformation” about the Ukraine war and police harassment of anti-Putin activists have made public anti-war protests rare.

    But the anti-war opposition group Vesna called for widespread protests, and on Telegram it reported many arrests across Russia. A video clip from Yekaterinburg showed police violently bundling protesters into a bus.

    The protests appeared relatively small. Vesna called its action “no to mogilisation” – a play on words, because “mogila” in Russian means grave.

    Pavel Chikov, a lawyer for the Russian human rights group Agora, said Agora had received 6,000 inquiries to its hotline since Tuesday morning, from Russians wanting information about soldiers’ rights.

    Meanwhile, flights to popular destinations such as Istanbul in Turkey and Yerevan in Armenia were snapped up, and prices for remaining seats skyrocketed.

    ‘Absolutely everyone is afraid’

    Vesna slogan on TelegramImage source, Vesna/Telegram
    Image caption,

    On Telegram opposition group Vesna called for anti-war rallies

    The Kremlin’s mobilisation move follows heavy losses in Ukraine, where Kyiv’s forces have recaptured a huge area east of Kharkiv.

    President Putin’s control of the state media has ensured that many Russians support his claim that Ukraine’s “neo-Nazi” government and Nato threaten Russia, and that ethnic Russians in Ukraine have to be defended. In reality Ukraine’s government was democratically elected and has no far right politicians.

    The scale of Russian opposition to the Kremlin line on Ukraine is hard to gauge, as media restrictions are so tight.

    Pro-Putin Russian regional governors, who now have to organise the mobilisation, voiced support for it.

    “We won’t be weakened, divided or exterminated,” said Ulyanovsk governor Alexei Russkikh. “Our region, like all the others in our country, has a duty to mobilise citizens for military service.”

    Chelyabinsk governor Alexei Teksler said the mobilisation was needed to ensure Russia’s “sovereignty, security and territorial integrity”.

    But young Russian men have told the BBC of their fears about the call-up.

    Matvey in St Petersburg said “I was hoping it would never happen”. “Now it’s obvious that Putin won’t step back and he’s going to continue his stupid fight to the last Russian citizen.” He said “I shouldn’t be recruited during this step of mobilisation, but there are no guarantees that things won’t get worse”.

    Evgeny, a 31-year-old Russian living in the UK, told the BBC: “Absolutely everyone is afraid, everyone is sending around different information on mobilisation. It is very difficult to figure out what is true and what isn’t. Nobody trusts the government.”

    Source: BBC

  • Covid: Reserve Bank of Australia takes $30bn hit on bond purchases

    Australia’s central bank has revealed that it has lost A$44.9bn ($30bn; £26.3bn) on the bonds it bought as part of its efforts to support the country’s economy during the pandemic.

    The Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) deputy governor says that wiped out the bank’s profit for the 2021-22 year, leaving a net loss of A$36.7bn.

    The bonds were accumulated under a A$300bn emergency stimulus programme.

    “If any commercial entity had negative equity, assets would be insufficient to meet liabilities and therefore the company would not be a going concern,” RBA deputy governor Michele Bullock said.

    “Since it has the ability to create money, the Bank can continue to meet its obligations as they become due,” she added.

    The RBA said it plans to keep the bonds until they mature, which means it is likely to eventually make a profit.

    Ms Bullock also highlighted that other central banks around the world face similar losses on their emergency stimulus programmes.

    For example, in July the Swiss National Bank reported a first-half loss of 95.2bn Swiss francs ($98.7bn; £87bn). That was its biggest loss since it was founded more than a century ago.

    Getting back to normal

    On Tuesday, the minutes of the RBA’s last meeting said its interest rates are now getting closer to “normal settings” after a series of cuts during the pandemic.

    The bank raised its main interest rate by half a percentage point for the fourth month in a row at its meeting on 6 September.

    Central banks around the world are putting up the cost of borrowing and removing other emergency economic stimulus measures as try to keep the the soaring cost of living in check.

    Source: BBC

  • US interest rates hit 14-year high in inflation battle

    The US central bank has pushed interest rates to the highest level in almost 15 years as it fights to rein in soaring prices in the world’s largest economy.

    The Federal Reserve announced it was raising its key rate by another 0.75 percentage points, lifting the target range to 3% to 3.25%.

    Borrowing costs are expected to climb more – and remain high, the bank said.

    The move comes despite mounting concern that the cost of controlling inflation could be a harsh economic downturn.

    Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell has said the rate rises are necessary to slow demand, easing the pressures putting up prices and avoiding long-term damage to the economy.

    Banks in nearly every country – with the big exceptions of Japan and China – are taking similar steps as they wrestle with their own inflation problems.

    Inflation is a global problem

    The Bank of England is widely expected to announce its seventh consecutive rate rise at its meeting on Thursday, while Indonesia and the Philippines are among the other countries also poised for increases.

    Analysts are starting to worry that the global sweep of the rate hikes, which ripple out to the public in the form of more expensive mortgages, loans and credit card debt, could lead to greater economic slowdown than policymakers expect.

    “That is definitely one of the downside risks – that the synchronised nature of the tightening could make it that much more powerful,” said Brian Coulton, chief economist at Fitch Ratings.

    How much will interest rates go up?

    In the US, the Fed is raising rates at one of the fastest paces in its modern history, a sharp reversal after years of low borrowing costs.

    Wednesday’s increase – the fifth in a row – lifts the rate the Fed charges banks to borrow from near zero at the start of the year to 3% for the first time since early 2008.

    Forecasts released by the Fed on Wednesday show policymakers expect it to reach 4.4% by the end of the year – and rise to 4.6% in 2023, sharply higher than its prior forecasts.

    “What is striking is the speed,”Mr Coulton said. “They’re having to move very quickly … and it means it’s more likely to be a surprise to firms and households.”

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    Uncertainty weighs heavily

    Sean V
    Image caption,

    Sean is scrapping holiday plans, uncertain what the economy may bring

    New Yorker Sean V said he felt lucky that he bought a two-bedroom condo last year, before borrowing costs started their climb, locking in a mortgage rate around 2.6%.

    But the 30-year-old works in the home loan industry, which has seen business plunge as mortgage rates cross 6% for the first time since 2008.

    He said he feared losing his job “every single day” and was cutting back spending and scrapping holiday plans amid the uncertainty.

    “I don’t know what 2023 is going to bring,” he said. “All of that weighs heavily – not just on me, on everybody.”

    “I don’t know how stalling the economy is helping anyone.”

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    How do higher interest rates reduce inflation?

    By raising borrowing costs for businesses and households, central banks intend to reduce demand for big-ticket items like cars, homes or business expansions, which should ease the pressures pushing up prices.

    But it also means less economic activity, which typically leads to job losses and other economic pain.

    The World Bank recently warned that the rate rises could tip the global economy into recession next year.

    Even if it avoids the two quarters of contraction that typically define a recession, the 2023 world economy is expected to be at its weakest in more than a decade, excepting the 2020 pandemic year, said Ben May, director of global macro research at Oxford Economics.

    “What has become clear is that if given the choice between allowing inflation to remain high for a sustained period …. or pushing the economy into a recession, [central bank leaders] would rather push the economy into recession and get inflation back towards target,” he said.

    Will rate rises lead to a recession?

    Forecasts released by the Fed show policymakers expect growth in the US to slow to a crawl this year, to 0.2%. They see growth picking up to 1.2% next year, but predict the unemployment rate will rise to 4.4%.

    The forecasts do not show inflation returning to the bank’s 2% target until 2025.

    Many analysts are forecasting a recession in the US next year but remain hopeful it will be relatively mild, noting that household finances are in better shape than in prior downturns.

    But the war in Ukraine and concerns about energy supplies raise the risks, JP Morgan Chase boss Jamie Dimon warned lawmakers at a congressional hearing on Wednesday.

    “There’s a chance – not a big chance – a small chance, of a soft landing, there is a chance of a mild recession, a chance of a harder recession. And because of the war in Ukraine… and the uncertainty that causes in the global energy supply and food supply, there’s a chance could be worse,” he said. “I think policymakers should be prepared for the worst.”

    Source: BBC

  • War in Ukraine: Fact-checking Russian claims that Nato troops are fighting in Ukraine

    Russian President Vladimir Putin says there are military units in Ukraine “under the de-facto command of Western advisers”.

    Claims have also appeared on Russian television and social media channels that Nato troops are actively involved in the war.

    Nato member countries have been providing weaponry and logistical support, but have said they aren’t sending troops into Ukraine, which is not a member of the alliance.

    We’ve looked at the evidence provided for these claims of Nato boots on the ground in Ukraine.

    What is being claimed?

    In his national address on 21 September, President Putin said: “The Kyiv regime has launched new gangs of foreign mercenaries and nationalists, military units trained to Nato standards and under the de-facto command of Western advisers.”

    It’s well known that foreign fighters have joined Ukrainian military units. However, claims are being made by Russian officials and media outlets of serving Nato troops on the ground in Ukraine.

    On 13 September, Ruslan Ostashko, the host of Vremya Pokazhet (Time Will Tell) on Russia’s Channel One said: “In the grand scheme of things, Ukrainian soldiers are there more for appearances, for having photos taken and uploading videos to TikTok, but it’s mainly Nato troops fighting there.”

    RUslan OstanshkoImage source, Channel One
    Image caption,

    Ruslan Ostashko is the host of a daily talk show on Russia’s Channel One

    Throughout the programme, footage taken from social media of foreigners allegedly fighting in Ukraine was shown as “evidence” of Nato boots on the ground.

    Andrei Marochko, a military spokesman for the self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic (LPR) in the east of Ukraine, told Russian state-owned news agency RIA Novosti: “Our intelligence agencies revealed the arrival of regular Nato officers in the Kharkiv region.

    “The purpose of their trip to this area is to organise interaction between foreign and Ukrainian units.”

    Mr Marochko has also told Russian state TV that Nato officers have arrived in Kramatorsk, a city in the Donetsk region of Ukraine.

    Other claims are more generally about the presence of foreign fighters and don’t make the direct connection to Nato – but leave the link implied.

    For example, Vladimir Kornilov, a columnist for RIA Novosti, has said there had been a “dramatic increase in video footage of people who’ve come to ‘liberate’ Izyum, with English being spoken.”

    What evidence is being given?

    It’s important to make a clear distinction between those foreign fighters who’ve travelled independently to Ukraine and troops deployed by Nato member countries.

    Russian media outlets haven’t provided evidence of serving Nato personnel on the ground, only pointing to the presence of individual foreign fighters on the battlefield.

    One of the fighters shown on the Vremya Pokazhet television programme is Malcolm Nance, a former US naval officer, who has regularly posted videos of himself in Ukraine over recent months.

    One video, highlighted in the TV programme, shows Mr Nance with an artillery battery behind him, firing what he describes as “the first artillery shot of a massive combined arms, multi-axis ground offensive.”

    Malcolm Nance tweet: Text: PSA: "What does the first artillery shot of a massive arms, multi axis ground offensive look like? Well according to this Norwegian donated M109 SPG that rolled up next to us I say it sounds distinctly like "What now b*tches?"

    With over a million followers on Twitter, there’s very little that could be considered covert about Mr Nance’s presence in Ukraine.

    He is not currently serving in the US military and back in April, he shared online that he had joined the Ukrainian Foreign Legion.

    A second individual identified in pro-Russian social media posts is another American, Rob-Roy Lane, who grew up in the US state of Idaho.

    Mr Lane also regularly posts online videos of himself embedded with a Ukrainian military unit and names several other foreign volunteers in the team. These videos have been widely shared on pro-Russian social media channels.

    Image of Rob-Roy Lane. Text "The presence of American mercenaries in the Izyum grouping of the Armed Forces of Ukraine was confirmed."

    There’s no online evidence to suggest he has any previous military experience. The US Department of Defense has not responded to requests for comment about his involvement with American military forces.

    On his social media account, Mr Lane names several other members in his unit including two British nationals.

    ​​The UK’s Ministry of Defence said it would not comment on the service records of former personnel, or on their activities in conflict zones.

    What support is Nato giving?

    Nato member countries are providing large quantities of sophisticated weaponry and logistical support to Ukraine, with the United States by far the largest donor.

    This equipment includes several weapon systems which are believed to have played key roles in the conflict so far, such as long-range rocket launchers and anti-tank weapons.

    And there has also been Western media speculation that Nato members have been helping both with intelligence and the selection of military targets.

    Largest providers of military support to Ukraine

    There are around 40,000 Nato troops stationed in alliance member countries in the region, such as in the Baltic states and Poland, with another 300,000 troops on high alert in response to Russia’s invasion.

    Extensive training of Ukrainian forces by Nato members has been taking place outside the country, but no Nato member country has said it has contributed military personnel to fight in Ukraine.

    “There is no evidence of Nato ground forces participating in Ukraine,” says Edward Arnold at the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), a defence and security think tank.

    “Nor of Nato commanders directing Ukrainian units on the battlefield,” he adds. “There is also a very low likelihood of this happening in the future as Nato seeks to mitigate escalation risks.”

    Source: BBC

  • Mahsa Amini: Iran police say woman’s death was ‘unfortunate’

    Tehran’s police chief says the death of a woman in custody was an “unfortunate” incident he does not want repeated.

    Witnesses accused officers of beating her, but Police Brig-Gen Hossein Rahimi denied such “cowardly accusations”.

    Her death sparked protests in the capital and western Iran, where two people were reportedly killed in clashes with riot police on Monday.

    Videos posted on social media appeared to show a crowd throwing stones in the town of Divandarreh and later running after coming under fire.

    Other footage showed protests in the capital, where women removed their headscarves and shouted “death to the dictator” – a chant often used in reference to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
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    Ms Amini, an ethnic Kurd who was from the western city of Saqez in Kurdistan province, died in hospital on Friday after spending three days in a coma.

    She was detained outside a metro station in Tehran on Tuesday by morality police. They accused her of breaking the law requiring women to cover their hair with a headscarf, and their arms and legs with loose clothing.

    According to witnesses, she was beaten while inside a police van that took her to a detention centre.

    Police rejected the allegation and said she suffered “sudden heart failure” while waiting with other women at the facility to be “educated”.

    They released CCTV footage that showed a woman they identified as Ms Amini talking with a female official, who grabs her clothing. She is then seen holding her head with her hands and collapsing to the ground.

    The interior minister said on Saturday that Ms Amini “apparently had previous physical problems”.

    However, her father told pro-reform news outlets on Sunday that she was “fit and had no health problems”. He also said his daughter had suffered bruising to her legs and that the CCTV footage showed an “edited version” of events.

    On Monday, Brig-Gen Rahimi expressed sympathy to Ms Amini’s family, but insisted that she suffered no physical harm.

    “The evidence shows that there was no negligence or inappropriate behaviour on the part of the police,” he told reporters.

    The death triggered widespread criticism of the actions of the morality police, which recently launched a crackdown on “improper clothing”.

    Protests erupted in Saqez after her funeral on Saturday, with security forces reportedly opening fire on a crowd that marched towards the local governor’s office.

    There were also clashes between protesters and riot police in Sanandaj, Kurdistan’s capital, on Saturday and Sunday.

    Kurdish human rights group Hengaw said on Sunday that at least 38 people were injured in the two cities.

    Hengaw reported the deaths of two protesters following Monday’s clashes in Divandarreh, which is located between Saqez and Sanandaj. It also said a 10-year-old girl was shot in the head in Bukan, a city in West Azerbaijan province.

    Source: BBC

  • Mahsa Amini: Protests over woman’s death claim more lives in Iran

    Nine people are now reported to have been killed at protests in Iran sparked by the death of a woman detained for allegedly breaking strict hijab rules.

    Among those reported killed is a 16-year-old boy, shot dead when security forces opened fire on protesters.

    The unrest has spread to more than 20 major cities, including the capital Tehran.

    Videos posted online from Wednesday’s unrest showed women waving their headscarves in the air or burning them.

    “No to the headscarf, no to the turban, yes to freedom and equality!” protesters were heard chanting at a demonstration in Tehran.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
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    In an address to the UN General Assembly, US President Joe Biden said Americans stood with “the brave women of Iran who right now are demonstrating to secure their basic rights”.

    The hard-line Shia Muslim cleric accused them of “double standards”, citing the discovery of unmarked graves of indigenous children in Canada and the treatment of the Palestinian people.

    Mahsa AminiImage source, Mahsa Amini family
    Image caption,

    Mahsa Amini, 22, died in hospital in Tehran on Friday

    Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman from the north-western city of Saqez, died in hospital on Friday, after spending three days in a coma.

    She was visiting the capital Tehran with her family when she was arrested by morality police, who accused her of violating the law requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab and their arms and legs with loose clothing. She collapsed after being taken to a detention centre to be “educated”.

    There are reports that officers beat Ms Amini’s head with a baton and banged her head against one of their vehicles.

    • Who are Iran’s morality police?
    • Fury as woman dies after Iran morality police arrest

    The police have denied that she was mistreated and said she suffered “sudden heart failure”. But her family has said she was fit and healthy.

    Acting UN human rights chief Nada al-Nashif called on Tuesday for prompt, independent and impartial investigation into Ms Amini’s death.

    She noted that her office had received “numerous, and verified, videos of violent treatment of women” by morality police, who have stepped up their enforcement of hijab rules in recent months.

    Ms Nashif also expressed alarm at “the reported unnecessary or disproportionate use of force” against the thousands of people who have taken in part in protests since Mahsa Amini died.

    The death toll comes from Kurdish rights groups, who blamed security forces.

    There has been no confirmation of the deaths from the authorities, but a prosecutor told the Tasnim news agency that two people were killed by “anti-revolutionary elements” on Tuesday.

    The state-run Irna news agency said a police assistant died of injuries he sustained in violent clashes with protesters in Shiraz on Tuesday.

    Internet-monitoring group NetBlocks meanwhile reported that access to Instagram, one of the last available social media platforms in Iran and one used by people to circulate pictures and footage of the protests, had been restricted. The internet service has already been disrupted in Kurdistan province, Tehran and other parts of the country for several days.

    Source: BBC

  • Germany nationalises gas giant amid energy crisis

    Germany is to nationalise gas giant Uniper in an effort to secure energy supplies amid the war in Ukraine.

    The deal will see the German government take on a 98.5% stake in the firm at a cost of €8.5bn (£7.4bn).

    Germany is Europe’s biggest importer of Russian gas, and has been particularly squeezed as Russia has reduced supplies in recent months.

    Chief executive Klaus-Dieter Maubach said the deal would help Uniper’s role as “a system-critical energy supplier”.

    Before Russia invaded Ukraine it supplied Europe with about 40% of its natural gas, and it has responded to Western sanctions by gradually cutting off supplies.

    At the start of this month, Russia halted supplies through the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, claiming repairs were needed – but later said flow would not resume until sanctions were lifted.

    Uniper, which operates gas, coal, and hydro plants across Europe and is currently controlled by Finnish state-owned energy company Fortum, is the biggest buyer of Russian gas in Germany.

    In recent months it has had to replace Russian supplies with alternatives from the open market, where prices have soared.

    Fortum said Uniper had accumulated close to €8.5bn (£7.4bn) in gas-related losses “and cannot continue to fulfil its role as a critical provider of security of supply as a privately-owned company”.

    “The role of gas in Europe has fundamentally changed since Russia attacked Ukraine, and so has the outlook for a gas-heavy portfolio,” Fortum chief executive Markus Rauramo said in a statement.

    “As a result, the business case for an integrated group is no longer viable.”

    The price of shares in Uniper, which also owns the coal-fired Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station in Nottinghamshire, has fallen by more than 90% in the past year.

    Under the terms of the deal, the German government will buy Fortum’s shares in Uniper for €500m (£437m) and inject €8bn (£7bn) of cash into the business.

    Some assets in Russia will also come under Germany’s control, a government spokesperson said, adding that it was still being decided what would be done with them.

    The government had already agreed to take on a 30% stake of Uniper as part of a bailout agreement in July.

    Earlier this month, it also entered discussions with another major gas supplier, VNG, over a possible bailout package.

    Economy minister Robert Habeck said nationalising Uniper was a “necessary” step that would help “ensure security of supply for Germany”.

    He also said that, despite the loss of Russian supplies, Germany had succeeded in filling its gas storage facilities to over 90% capacity ahead of winter.

    “This means that, as a whole, we have coped quite well with the situation,” he said. “But for Uniper the situation became significantly more dramatic and significantly worse.”

    Gas exports
  • Gap to cut 500 office jobs in US and Asia as sales sink

    The move marks the latest shake-up at the company, following the departure of its chief executive this summer after her turnaround efforts flopped.

    Sales at the company, which also owns Banana Republic and Old Navy, are down roughly 10% from a year ago.

    Gap confirmed job cuts at its offices in New York, San Francisco and Asia but declined to comment to the BBC.

    The brand employed roughly 97,000 people at the start of the year, of which about 9% held corporate positions. That would put the cuts at about 5% of staff.

    Some of the reductions in head count will come from open positions, it said.

    It comes after Gap’s once celebrated partnership with Kanye West recently came to an unceremonious close.

    There are increasing concerns about the health of the US economy, which has contracted in recent months.

    Other retailers to announce cuts in recent weeks include Walmart, Bed Bath & Beyond and Abercrombie & Fitch.

    Source: BBC

  • Train strike: How much are rail workers paid?

    Tens of thousands of rail workers are taking part in the biggest strike for decades. The industrial action by members of the RMT union is over pay and redundancies.

    The RMT says it wants a pay rise to match the cost of living and has called an offer of 2% – with the possibility of another 1% – “unacceptable”.

    • Which lines are affected by the rail strike?

    There have been lots of claims about how much rail workers are paid. Let’s start with the highest figure quoted.

    How much are train drivers paid?

    In a debate about the strikes in Parliament on 15 June, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said: “The median salary for a train driver is £59,000, compared with £31,000 for a nurse and £21,000 for a care worker.”

    To work out the median salary, if you put all train drivers in a row in order of their pay, the person in the middle of the row would be earning the median.

    Mr Shapps is mostly right on these figures, which come from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

    For 2021, the median salary for train and tram drivers was £59,189 and for nurses it was £31,093.

    His figure for care workers is a bit high. The median for care workers and home carers was £16,502 and for senior care workers it was £20,105.

    The trouble with using the figure for train drivers in a debate about the RMT strikes is that the drivers are represented by their own union, Aslef – which is not taking part in the national strike.

    Aslef says it represents 96% of train drivers – most of the remaining 4% are not union members at all.

    Aslef drivers are set to strike on Greater Anglia services on 23 June. It is also balloting for action on several other lines.

    Is the median salary for rail workers £44,000?

    Mr Shapps went on to say: “The median salary for the rail sector is £44,000, which is significantly above the median salary in the country.”

    We asked the Department for Transport (DfT) how it got to this figure and it initially said it had taken the median figures from the ONS for four categories of workers, added them up and divided by four:

    • Rail travel assistants – £33,310 – includes ticket collectors, guards and information staff
    • Rail construction and maintenance operatives – £34,998 – they lay and repair tracks
    • Rail transport operatives – £48,750 – includes signallers and drivers’ assistants
    • Train and tram drivers – £59,189

    This wouldn’t have produced a median figure and the DfT subsequently got in touch to say they had actually got the figure from the ONS, which had produced a genuine median figure (£43,747) across everybody in those four categories, along with a fifth – workers who build and repair engines and carriages (their median salary is £46,753).

    It has also produced a median figure excluding train drivers – who are not involved in the RMT strike – of £36,800.

    Striking cleaners at St Pancras on 12 March 2022Image source, Getty Images

    Mr Shapps is right that the figure is above the median pay for all employees in the UK, which was £25,971 last year.

    The RMT figure of £33,000

    The RMT union says the figures used by the government are too high because they include train drivers who are almost all represented by a different union and not people like cleaners who are not categorised in the ONS figures as rail workers.

    The RMT says 10,000 of its members are cleaners.

    It says that if you take the £44,000 figure, exclude the drivers and include cleaning staff you get a median figure of £33,000, which better reflects the pay of the people going on strike.

    A median figure of £31,000 has also been cited by RMT general secretary Mick Lynch.

    We asked the union for its exact workings and which is the correct figure, but have not received a response.

    It’s hard to judge the figures without that information. We know from the ONS that excluding the drivers brings the figure down to £36,800 and adding a number of lower-paid staff such as cleaners to the calculation would certainly produce a lower figure.

    Has pay gone up by 40%?

    Speaking about pay for rail workers, Mr Shapps said there had been a “nearly 40% increase in salaries over the last 10 years”.

    The ONS calculated a median figure for those same five categories of rail workers in 2011, which came out at £35,329. In 2021 the figure was £43,747.

    That means there was an increase of 24% over the last 10 years, not 40%. It’s similar to the 23% increase for all employees over the same period. Inflation over that decade was about 20%.

    Remember that for the people actually involved in this week’s strike the increase will be lower, because this figure includes a 39% increase in pay for the train drivers, who are largely not represented by the RMT.

    Source: BBC

  • ‘Chop bar’ operator arrested for allegedly buying stolen goats

    A 37-year-old chop bar operator at Nkurakan, a town in the Yilo Krobo Municipality is in the grips of the New Juaben District Police Command for allegedly buying two stolen pregnant goats.

    She is believed to have bought it from some suspected goat thieves who constantly steal from residents.

    'Chop bar' operator arrested for allegedly buying stolen goats

    The suspect, Mary Yeboah, who operates “Sweet at home” chop bar was arrested by police in Nkurakan but was later handed over to the New Juaben Police Command for further investigation.

    While in the grips of some residents, she was made to carry the goats and march through the streets amidst booing and jeering.

    The Dademankye (Chief) of the town, Emmanuel Narh, alleges that the suspect is a known buyer of stolen goats for her chop bar dishes.

    'Chop bar' operator arrested for allegedly buying stolen goats

    Police say they have launched investigations to arrest her accomplices who have fled.

     

  • UK Foreign Secretary to call out Russia’s atrocities at UN Security Council

    UK Foreign Secretary, James Cleverly is expected to call out Russia’s atrocities at a UN Security Council meeting on Thursday.

    James Cleverly will be in New York on Tuesday, September 20 to attend United Nations General Assembly high-level meetings as part of the 77th UN General Assembly (UNGA).

    A statement from the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office of the UK said the Foreign Secretary will travel alongside the Prime Minister to meet his global counterparts “to take action on a series of global challenges, including Russia’s malign activity and building stability in the Middle East.”

    Ahead of arriving in New York, Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said: “We live in an increasingly unstable, divided world. As Foreign Secretary, I will work to bring countries together to tackle aggression, overcome challenges and promote our democratic values. We will judge others on actions not words. Every day the devastating consequences of Russia’s barbaric tactics become clearer. There must be no impunity for Putin’s hostility.”

    James Cleverly is also due to hold meetings with his counterparts from the US, Ukraine and India and attend a G7 Foreign Ministers’ dinner.

    This will be the Foreign Secretary’s first overseas trip since he took his new role. His main event of the week will be a special UN Security Council session on Thursday.

    The statement added that the UN Security Council session will focus on the situation in Ukraine.

    “…ensuring that Russia does not get away with its actions unpunished. The Foreign Secretary will give the UK’s intervention at the meeting, exposing Russian aggression and tactics as they seek to justify their illegal war.”

    Cleverly is due to have his first bilateral meeting in his new role with the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken later on Tuesday.

    He is also due to meet Ukrainian Foreign Minister, Dmytro Kuleba, India’s Subrahmanyam Jaishankar and Canada’s Melanie Joly on Wednesday and Australia’s Penny Wong on Thursday.

    On arrival in New York, he is due to attend a global food security event hosted by the United States, European Union and African Union as 50 million people worldwide face being just one step away from famine.

    Also this week, the Foreign Secretary will join partners, including fellow G7 Foreign Ministers, for an event on nuclear safety, as concerns around the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station in Ukraine continue to grow.

    Stability in the Middle East will be a recurring theme on the agenda in New York, with discussions set to take place on Yemen, Syria and the Gulf.

    Source: Myjoyonline