Author: Chris Kodo

  • 30 players get Black Princesses’ call up

    Black Princesses Head Coach, Yusif Basigi, has invited a provisional squad of thirty players into the team to begin camping ahead of a friendly with the Moroccan U-20 female national team on November 26.

    Players and officials of the team are to report to the Ghanaman Soccer Centre of Excellence, Prampram on Thursday, November 19, and are scheduled to undergo the mandatory COVID-19 test.

    The invited players are expected to report at 2 pm.

    Below are the players who have been invited to camp:

    Grace Baanwa

    -Hasaacas Ladies FC

    Kerrie McCarthy

    -Kumasi Sports Academy

    Cynthia Kolan

    -Pearl Pia Ladies FC

    Justice Tweneboah

    -Ampem Darkoa Ladies FC

    Tedina Sekyere

    -Dreams Ladies FC

    Nina Norshie

    -Valued Girls FC

    Faustina Aidoo

    -Hasaacas Ladies FC

    Queenabel Amankrah

    -Hasaacas Ladies FC

    Cecilia Hagan

    -Sea Lions Ladies FC

    Evelyn Badu

    -Hasaacas Ladies FC

    Azumah Bugre

    -Army Ladies FC

    Jaqueline Owusu

    -Dreamz Ladies FC

    Suzy Dede Teye

    -Ladystrikers FC

    Peterson Kundock

    -Ampem Darkoa Ladies FC

    Fuseina Mumuni

    -Pearl Pia Ladies FC

    Grace Acheampong

    -Ashtown Ladies FC

    Mukarama Abdullah

    -Northern Ladies FC

    Milot Abena Pokua

    -Hasaacas Ladies FC

    Doris Boaduwa

    -Hasaacas Ladies FC

    Rahama Jafar

    -Northern Ladies FC

    Lauratu Issaka

    -Mfantseman Ladies FC

    Faustina Akpo

    -Berry Ladies FC

    Joyce Larbi

    -Kumasi Sports Academy

    Abigail Tutuwa

    -Prisons Ladies FC

    Rafia Kulchire

    -Hasaacas Ladies FC

    Diana Antwi

    -Ampem Darkoa Ladies FC

    Comfort Yeboah

    -Soccer Intellectuals FC

    Sophia Dadzie

    -Sea Lions Ladies FC

    Selina Abalansa Soccer

    -Intellectuals Ladies FC

    Sandra Owusu Ansah

    -Supreme Ladies FC

    Source: ghanafa.org

  • Ghanas Nasiru Mohammed delighted with current status at Bulgarian side Levski Sofia

    Ghanaian forward Nasiru Mohammed has expressed his excitement over his current status at Bulgarian side Levski Sofia.

    Mohammed joined the Sofia-based club on a three-year deal from Swedish side Hacken BK in 2019.

    The 26-year-old endured a difficult debut season at the club.

    He was heavily linked with a move away from club after struggling to churn out regular playing time.

    Mohammed has however turned his situation at the club around, making 7 appearances and netting one goal so far this term.

    He appeared to be in good spirit after taking to social media to indicate joy over his current situation.

    “The best feeling in the world is to watch things go.”

    Mohammed was previously the captain of the Ghana national under-17 football team.

    He has played for the Ghana national under-20 football team since 2011.

    He was called up to the senior Ghana squad for a World Cup qualifier against Egypt in October 2017.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Godfred Donsah feels at home at Turkish side Çaykur Rizespor

    Ghanaian midfielder Godfred Donsah says he feels settled at Turkish Supalig side Çaykur Rizespor.

    Donsah, 24, joined Çaykur Rizespor on a loan deal from Italian Serie A club Bologna in the off-season.

    During an interview with journalists at Mehmet Cengiz Facilities before training, Donsah remarked that he has settled well at his new habitat.

    “Despite everything, I have to develop more personally. I am getting much better in terms of knowing the team. My contribution will increase as I get to know my friends. A midfield should contribute more to the score. I’ll try. I want to score more goals, make assists.”

    “This place like Ghana, everyone is helping. Everyone treats me very close helps. The city is very close and I’m walking. I myself feel here at home.”

    He continued: “We are aware of our strength. We know what we can do. We are working to improve ourselves. It is very important what we will do. We think of ourselves, not what our competitors will do. Not us, they need to think more about us.”

    He has made 4 appearances for the club so far this season.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Assembly to “remove” Ashaley Botwe storey building

    The Adentan Municipal Assembly has assured that it will soon remove a multi-storey structure at the Ashaley Botwe School junction because the developer does not have a building permit.

    The Assembly in a press release said it has not received any application or documentation for a permit to put up the six-storey structure.

    The assembly added that the developer has failed to heed its directives to stop the construction despite multiple attempts by its Municipal Assembly’s Works Engineer to stop him.

    The release did not disclose the identity of the developer but said it has also ignored two ‘Stop Work’ notices.

    “The Adentan Municipal Assembly Works Engineer and his team have visited the site several times to stop him but all have not yielded any positive results,” the statement said.

    “Stop work notices were served to the developer, on the 22 of June 2020, 4 of August 2020, while the Assembly undertook the necessary steps to work with the relevant state agencies for their assessment and recommendations before proceeding to demolish the property or otherwise. This was to ensure that the Assembly keep its commitment to act fairly and reasonably in the protection of the public in all cases”.

    “Finally, on the 29 of September 2020, the developer was formally written to, to cease all on-going construction works on-site and proceed to take necessary steps in demolishing the structure. The Adentan Municipal Assembly is taking all needed steps and liaising with the relevant state agencies, to assess and ensure the safe removal of the structure with immediate effect”.

    The release assured that “within the shortest possible time an action would be taken on the building to ensure safety within the area”.

    On social media, those arguing that there was nothing wrong with the project concludes that you cannot determine a structural integrity of a project by a mere look at a video or a picture.

    They have therefore called for structural engineers to examine it and conclude whether it was safe or not.

    Others however have argued that, there was everything wrong with a mere look of the project.

    The Executive Director of the EPA, Mr Henry Kwabena Kokofu, who visited the project site Monday morning, [November 16, 2020] ordered that construction work should immediately cease.

    He said the EPA had not given a permit for the project  and was not sure whether other agencies with such responsibilities have also given permit for it.

    He consequently asked that the owner of the building to visit the office of the EPA with the necessary documentation covering the project.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • Prof Benneh murder: Second accused person at Korle-Bu for treatment

    Opambour Agya Badu Nkansah, the second accused person in connection with the murder of Professor Yaw Benneh, is scheduled to receive a “particular treatment at Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital on November 25, 2020”, the prosecution has told the court.

    At the last court date, lawyer for the accused persons, Emmanuel Larbi demanded from the court for his client to be transferred to a different health facility.

    This was because, his client who was in a critical condition at the Police hospital was not being properly being taken care of. But prosecution denied that assertion.

    The court presided over by Her Worship Ama Adomah Kwakye, of the Kaneshie District Court prior to adjourning the case, asked prosecution to produce a medical report of him if he was not going to be brought to court.

    In court on Wednesday, when the case was called, the accused persons were again absent.

    Inspector Teye-Okuffo, the prosecutor told the court that the said accused person is still undergoing treatment.

    According to the prosecutor, the second accused person is scheduled to receive “a particular treatment at Korle-Bu on November 25 and the case investigator is working on that.

    He told the court that, the accused person is responding to treatment and “we pray that the court gives us a date beyond November 25, so that the accused person can be brought to court or in his absence a medical report would be brought to the court as ordered by the court.”

    The mother of the accused person corroborated the point of prosecution and told the court that her son is responding to treatment.

    The case has been adjourned December 8, 2020 a date after the December 7 General Election.

    Background

    Following the death of the university Law Professor, Prosecution has arraigned three persons in connection with the murder.

    The prime suspect, James Nana Womba who was said to have confessed his role in the death of the Law Lecturer died in custody on October 17. 2020.

    A third suspect Ebenezer Kwayisi, alias Junior who is said to be an accomplice of the late Womba and Badu Nkansah was arraigned.

    The remaining two Nkansah and Kwayidi are on provisional charges of conspiracy and murder.

    Source: Starr FM

  • Mason remanded into custody for stealing

    A 26-year-old mason has been remanded into police custody by the Nkawie Circuit Court for stealing gold nuggets at Kotokuom, in the Atwima-Mponua District.

    The plea of Kofi Frimpong was not taken and he would reappear before the court, presided by Mr. Johnson Abbey, on November 30, this year.

    Prosecuting Detective Inspector Anthony Acheampong told the court that the complainant, Mumuni Yakubu, had a small scale mining site at Kotokuom.

    He said on November 12, this year at about 2100 hours, the suspect together with three other accomplices now at large, went to the site and loaded some of the heaped sand containing the nuggets into a sack.

    Detective Acheampong said a security man at the site who saw them loading the sand, fired warning shots and they bolted.

    He said Frimpong in the course of running away fell into a gutter and was arrested and handed over to the Nkawie police.

    The prosecution said in his cautioned statement, Frimpong admitted the offence and was therefore charged and brought before the court.

    Source: GNA

  • Opoku-Agyemang visits Odawna Market fire scene

    The Vice-Presidential candidate for the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Professor Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang has visited the Odawna market to solidarize with the traders who lost their wares and stalls in the fire outbreak early Wednesday morning.

    She assessed the extent of damage the fire had caused while listening to their harrowing stories.

    Prof Opoku-Agyemang called for assistance for the victims in the “restoration and rehabilitation process.”

    The Odawna market near the Kwame Nkrumah Interchange in Accra was gutted by fire at around 1 am on Wednesday, 18 November 2020.

    Personnel from the Ghana Fire Service and the Ghana Police Service were on the scene fighting the inferno and protecting lives and property.

    The cause of the fire is unknown.

    However, most traders in the market have completely lost their wares to the fire.

    Source: Class FM

  • Over 2000 Ghanaian children got coronavirus Child Rights International

    A total of 2,180 children in Ghana have contracted COVID-19, a research conducted by Child Rights International has disclosed.

    The children, aged 0 to 18, were asymptomatic.

    They were not hospitalised.

    The research used both qualitative and quantitative methods for collecting data.

    It said 589 towns, communities and cities were sampled using the data collected.

    Nationwide data provided by the Ghana Health Service (GHS) on the deadly virus was also sampled.

    “The nationwide data shows that from March 11 to November 9, 2020, out of 49,202 who contracted the COVID-19 virus, 2,180 children below 18 years contracted the virus representing 4.43 per cent of the total contraction rate in Ghana,” the report noted.

    Also, it said the “majority of them are girls but if you also look at those who have died as a result of COVID, majority of them are boys. So that is the outlook of COVID situation in Ghana and what we have not determined is whether or not children have the capacity or are potential spreaders or transmitters of the COVID to their age cohorts or to the vulnerable”.

    Meanwhile, Ghana’s active COVID-19 cases stand at 1,424, according to the latest figures from the Ghana Health Service.

    The death toll is 323.

    The Ministry of Health has said the reduction in compliance with the preventive protocols is to blame for the rise in cases across the country.

    The government and the ministry are, therefore, asking Ghanaians to adhere to mask-wearing, hand-washing and social distancing protocols as well as use hand sanitisers.

    Source: Class FM

  • Oduro Sarfo to report Nana Yaw Amponsah to the Police for threatening him

    Executive Council Member of the Ghana Football Association, Nana Oduro Sarfo has said that he will report the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Asante Kotoko, Nana Yaw Amponsah to the Ghana Police Service for allegedly threatening him.

    According to the CEO of Berekum Chelsea, Nana Yaw Amponsah called to insult and threaten him for asking a question on how Asante Kotoko managed to register their new Brazilian midfielder, Fabio Gama Dos Santos for the 2020/21 Ghana Premier League season when the player just came to Ghana.

    “I only asked after seeing the arrival pictures of Fabio Gama on social media that how was he registered since he just arrived in Ghana?. It was a harmless question asked.”

    Narrating his ordeal to Kumasi-based Oyerepa FM, Nana Oduro Sarfo stated that though he has reported the issue to the Executive Council, Accra Hearts of Oak Board Member Mr. Frank Nelson, and GFA President Kurt Okraku, he will still report the Asante Kotoko CEO to the police for the threats.

    “You are stupid, old fool, I am not like you who begs to eat, be very careful or else Ghana can’t contain both of us,” Nana Oduro Sarfo told Oyerepa FM that these were the words of Nana Yaw Amponsah to him.

    “He told me I have no sense that I should stop acting foolishly, I swear by my dead father, my children, and the car I drive that these were the exact words he told me.”

    “I have reported him to the GFA Prez, Mr. Frank Nelson, and EXCO members and the next is to report him to the police for threatening me that he will show me the other side of him and that Ghana can’t contain both of us,” Nana Oduro Sarfo concluded.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Mohammed Anas on the verge of joining South African side Black Leopards

    Ghanaian international striker Mohammed Anas is set to join South Africa outfit Black Leopards on a free transfer.

    The 25-year-old has become a free agent after ending his spell with fellow Premier Soccer League side Polokwane City.

    According to report, the former Maritzburg United marksman is currently into negotiations with the Thohoyandou-based club and could soon put pen to paper on the deal if both parties reach an agreement over his entitlements.

    In disclosing the imminent capturing of the Ghanaian forward together with other two players by Black Leopards FC, a source to the club told Kickoff.com:

    “The players that are going to be unveiled are Ramagalela and Anas,” he disclosed.

    “Ramagalela came today and he has signed. Oh and Masalesa is here. He has already signed. As for Anas, he is still negotiating salary issues.”

    Anas is famous for thanking his wife and girlfriend during an interview.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Trump fires top US election security official who contradicted fraud claims

    US President Donald Trump announced in a tweet on Tuesday that he had fired Chris Krebs, the director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA).

    CISA, which falls under the Department of Homeland Security, was established by the Trump administration in 2018 after accusations of Russian interference in the 2016 election.

    In a series of tweets, Trump said that Krebs’ recent statement defending the security of the recent election was “highly inaccurate.”

    Trump has so far refused to recognize the victory of Democratic President-elect Joe Biden and has repeatedly made unfounded claims of widespread fraud and glitches in voting machines.

    CISA and state election officials released a statement last week that said there was “no evidence” of compromised ballots or voting machines, saying the 2020 election was one of the “most secure” in the country’s history.

    ‘Honored to serve’

    Krebs appeared to confirm his removal from the post in a Tweet on his personal account.

    “Honored to serve. We did it right. Defend Today, Secure Tomorrow,” he wrote. He was also prompt to change his bio description on Twitter to “1st Director @CISAgov (former)”.

    According to local media reports, Krebs reportedly found out about his dismissal from Trump’s tweet. Mark Warner, the vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, supported Krebs after the news of his dismissal.

    “Chris Krebs is an extraordinary public servant and exactly the person Americans want protecting the security of our elections. It speaks volumes that the president chose to fire him simply for telling the truth”, said Warner.

    The CISA is tasked with securing voting and ballot-counting machines from foreign and domestic interference.

    Debunking site sparks Trump ire
    Krebs also reportedly angered the White House over a CISA-run website called “Rumor Control” which debunked misinformation about the election.

    In the past few days, he had regularly fact-checked claims regarding the election, posted by Trump and his supporters — often using the red siren emoji. On the day of the election, Krebs had asked Americans to “treat all sensational and unverified claims with scepticism.”

    This is the second dismissal by Trump this month through Twitter. Last week, the president fired Defense Secretary Mark Esper the same way.

    President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris are yet to comment on Krebs’ dismissal.

    Source: dw.com

  • Hurricane Iota makes landfall in Nicaragua

    Central America braced for its second major hurricane in as many weeks as Hurricane Iota, now a record-setting Category 5 storm, roared ashore in Nicaragua Monday night.

    The storm made landfall in nearly exactly the same place as Eta, a Category 4 hurricane that battered the area two weeks ago. Iota is forecast to bring catastrophic winds, life-threatening storm surge as high as 20 feet, and nearly two feet of rain to Central America.

    Eta’s death toll is 150 and still rising, including a Guatemalan village with dozens of residents that was wiped off the map by a devastating mudslide.

    Iota was moving west at 9 mph on Monday and was about 35 miles east-southeast of Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua, according to the National Hurricane Center’s7 p.m. update. It held onto its 160 mph winds, which officially made Iota the latest Category 5 to form in the Atlantic Basin.

    “Strong winds are expected near the core and in coastal areas of Honduras for about a day after landfall, along with torrential rainfall,” forecasters wrote.

    A hurricane warning is in effect for the coast of Nicaragua from the Honduras-Nicaragua border to Sandy Bay Sirpi and the coast of northeastern Honduras from Punta Patuca to the Honduras-Nicaragua border. A hurricane watch and a tropical storm warning are in effect for San Andres.

    A tropical storm warning is also in effect for the coast of Nicaragua from south of Sandy Bay Sirpi to Bluefields and for the northern coast of Honduras from west of Punta Castilla to the Guatemala/Honduras border, including the Bay Islands.

    Iota is expected to weaken after landfall and should be a tropical storm by the time it moves over Honduras and a tropical depression by the time it nears El Salvador and Guatemala, according to the hurricane center.

    “Through Thursday, heavy rainfall from Iota will likely lead to life-threatening flash flooding and river flooding across portions of Central America. Flooding and mudslides in Honduras and Nicaragua could be exacerbated by Hurricane Eta’s recent effects there, resulting in significant to potentially catastrophic impacts,” forecasters wrote.

    Forecasters predict 10 to 20 inches of rain will be possible through Thursday in Honduras, northern Nicaragua, Guatemala and southern Belize. Some isolated areas will possibly see up to a total of 30 inches, especially from northeast Nicaragua into northern Honduras, according to the hurricane center.

    The hurricane center also expects the coast of Nicaragua and Honduras will see a life-threatening storm surge as much as 15 to 20 feet above normal tide levels, with large and dangerous waves near the coast.

    El Salvador and Panama are forecast to see 4 to 8 inches of rain, with isolated areas possibly seeing up to 12 inches. Costa Rica and southern Nicaragua should expect 3 to 5 inches, with isolated areas possibly seeing up to 10 inches.

    Source: GNA

  • 13 killed in explosion in Mexico after car collided with transporter

    Thirteen people were killed in Mexico on Monday when a car collided with a liquid gas tanker truck.

    The collision, on a motorway in the western state of Nayarit, caused a huge explosion in which both vehicles and two others were totally destroyed, state prosecutors said.

    The bodies would be identified using DNA analysis, the prosecutors said. A 31-year-old woman with severe burns was saved.

    Rescuers were initially hindered by the extreme heat of the ground following the explosion, which burnt an area of two hectares.

    Source: GNA

  • Ethiopia resists mediation in Tigray conflict

    The Ethiopian government said on Monday it had not asked any country to mediate in a conflict in its northern region as the federal air force bombed the Tigrayan capital Mekelle, according to diplomatic and military sources.

    Uganda’s president Yoweri Museveni had tweeted a call for the conflict to stop. Mr Museveni’s tweet would later be deleted.

    Kenya and Djibouti urged a peaceful resolution and the opening of humanitarian corridors while former Nigerian leader Olusegun Obasanjo went to Ethiopia.

    Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed announced Tuesday that the ongoing military operation in the breakaway region of Tigray (North) will enter its “final” phase in the “coming days”.

    On November 4, Abiy sent the federal army to attack the northern region after months of tensions with the regional authorities of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF).

    The fighting has left several hundred people dead, according to Addis Ababa, and has forced more than 25,000 people to flee to neighboring Sudan.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Nigeria highest in drug use prevalence – UNO

    The National Programme Officer of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Mrs Folusho Adelekan, said on Tuesday that Nigeria has been ranked as the highest in drug use prevalence rate in the world.

    She said the nation accounted for 14.3 percent as against 5.3 percent of the entire global community.

    Mrs Adelekan stated this in Abuja at a sensitisation workshop on Drug Abuse and Rape organised by Christabels Initiatives and facilitated by the National Assembly Joint Committee on Drugs and Narcotics.

    She said available statistics showed that there were 14.4m drug users in Nigeria at 14.3 percent prevalence rate.

    She said, “The National Drug Control Master Plan Nigeria which came up within the last two years is not being funded adequately and the menace requires action-packed operational strategy that must be well funded.

    “Apart from the lack of well funded operational plan, there are no enough treatment or rehabilitation centres in the country for drug addicts.”

    A Deputy Director with the National Agency for the Control of AIDS, Dr Yinka Falola-Anoemuah, said the seriousness of actions applied in tackling the scourge of HIV/AIDS in the country, should be used in confronting the menace of drug abuse and rape in Nigeria.

    She said, “Two million people are living with AIDS in Nigeria, but being managed without much havoc in the country. Even at that, the operational master plan has been put on the ground to end AIDS in Nigeria by 2030, the way Polio was eliminated.”

    Also, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, who was represented by the House Leader, Hassan Doguwa, said most of the drug addicts in the country lacked the required discipline and decent upbringing at the home front.

    He added, “This is the very reason curricular at the primary and secondary school levels need to be reviewed for the inclusion of subjects against drug abuse and violence against women, particularly rape.”

    Source: punchng.com

  • DR Congo announces end of latest Ebola epidemic

    The Democratic Republic of Congo on Wednesday declared the end of the country’s latest Ebola epidemic after the outbreak killed 55 people over the past five months.

    “I am happy to solemnly declare the end of the 11th epidemic of the Ebola virus in Equateur province” in the vast country’s northwest, Health Minister Eteni Longondo told journalists.

    The World Health Organization said the latest outbreak had killed 55 people among 119 confirmed and 11 probable cases since it began in June.

    The outbreak was “the longest, most complex and deadliest” in the 60-year history of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Health Minister Eteni Longondo said.

    It has only been surpassed by the 2013-16 Ebola epidemic in West Africa that killed 11,300 people.

    Source: africanews.com

  • ‘Dismembered bodies’: Refugees recount horrors of Tigray fighting

    For Ethiopians who escaped intense fighting in their northern homeland of Tigray by fleeing into Sudan, they are now safe; but the terrifying nightmare of what they witnessed still haunts them.

    “I saw bodies dismembered by the explosions,” said Ganet Gazerdier, a 75-year-old sitting alone in the dust at Um Raquba refugee camp in eastern Sudan, newly opened to cope with a sudden influx of over 25,000 people fleeing air strikes, artillery barrages and massacres in Ethiopia.

    “Other bodies were rotting, lying on the road, murdered with a knife”, she added.

    Distraught at having been forced to flee their homes, traumatised by becoming separated from family members in the mad rush, and horrified after witnessing killings, refugees wander as if dazed in the camp.

    “I lived with my three daughters,” said Gazerdier, dressed in a blue dress and white headscarf to protect her from the blazing sun. “When the shells started to rain down on our house, we all panicked and fled in the dark.”

    The bombardment not only destroyed her house in the western Tigray town of Humera, the site of reportedly some of the heaviest fighting, but also separated her from her family.

    Everyone scattered, and she has yet to make contact with them.

    “I met some friends who were fleeing too, and I followed them,” she added. “I looked around several times in search of my daughters, but to no luck.”

    She has found some help at Um Raquba, 80 kilometres from the border, but conditions are spartan, with so far only basic emergency relief set up at the isolated camp.

    She stops other Ethiopians to tell them her story, but no one pays attention. So many have terrible stories to tell.

    “I have a daughter who lives in Khartoum but I don’t know her address,” she said quietly. “How can I find her in this big city?”

    Ethnic divides

    Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed announced on November 4 he had ordered military operations in Tigray in response to attacks by the regional ruling party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF).

    The conflict has turned ethnic divides deadly, said Gerdo Burhan.

    If you are Tigrayan and captured by government soldiers, you are in trouble, said the 24-year-old.

    “They ask you, with a gun pointed at you, if you belong to Tigrayan forces,” he said. “At the slightest hesitation, you are dead. They shoot you down on the spot and leave the body in the street.”

    Pleading with them that you are a civilian does not make a difference, said Burhan.

    “They beat you, sometimes to death, or they take you with them to an unknown destination – and I doubt if you come back alive from there,” he added. “It’s terror.”

    Burhan managed to escape to Sudan, trekking through the hot bush across the border, but he was separated from his father, mother and two sisters on the way.

    “I don’t know if they’re okay,” he said.

    Faced with long columns of refugees suddenly crossing into Sudan, the government decided to reopen Um Raquba, a camp closed 20 years ago.

    It once housed refugees who fled Ethiopia’s 1983-85 famine that killed more than a million people. Now the basic camp is expected to house 25,000 refugees.

    ‘Slaughtered like sheep’

    For the Ethiopians who arrive, there is an initial sense of relief that they are safe.

    But for many, a sense of guilt soon kicks in, as they sit and wait in the hope that those they love — and who they were separated from in the panic – may also turn up.

    To escape, Messah Geidi split from his wife and four-year-old son – and he cannot forgive himself.

    “I don’t know where they are, and if they are still alive,” he said.

    Geidi comes from the Ethiopian town of Mai-Kadra, where Amnesty International said last week that “scores, and likely hundreds, of people were stabbed or hacked to death.”

    “I fled Mai-Kadra, because the army slaughtered the young people like sheep,” Geidi said.

    The United Nations last week warned of possible war crimes in Tigray, and condemned “reports of targeted attacks against civilians based on their ethnicity or religion”.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Saudi giants Al-Ahli ready to pay $50m to sign Andre Ayew from Swansea City

    Saudi Arabian giants Al-Ahli Jeddah are preparing an audacious $50million transfer fee to sign Andre Ayew from English Championship side Swansea City, Ghanasoccernet.com can exclusively reveal.

    The 30-year-old will be tempted with an offer of $200,000 per week without tax to force the superstar to make a quick decision to play in the Asian country – insiders have told Ghana’s leading football news outfit.

    Agents involved in the deal held a meeting on Tuesday night with officials of the Jeddah-based side to agree on the offer to make to the player and his club.

    The insiders told Ghanasoccernet.com on Wednesday morning that they have agreed to table $50million to Swansea City and will lure the Ghana captain with $200,000 per week offer to play for them.

    A meeting with Ayew’s agents will be lined up in the coming days before the offer is made to the south Wales club to release their most important player for the past two seasons.

    Ahli’s interest in the son of Ghana legend Abedi Pele was sparked by the club’s coach Vladan Milojevic who has been fascinated by Ayew’s playing style and leadership qualifiers.

    The Serbian coach was monitoring his player Samuel Owusu, who plays as a winger for Al-Ahli on loan from Al-Fayha, during last week’s 2021 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Sudan.

    The performance of Ayew who scored both goals during the match and his leadership style attracted the coach who has now told the ambitious side to sign Ayew to boost their campaign this season.

    It is in furtherance of this request for the Ghana captain that top agents operating in the Middle East have been approached to help secure the deal to sign the utility player.

    Ahli are keen on signing Ayew during the January transfer window but it is not known if Swansea City would be keen on releasing their key player who has been instrumental in their successes so far this season.

    He has been in a blistering form for the Swans so far this season having scored five goals in 11 matches from midfield.

    Ayew is one of the most experienced players in world football today after playing from Olympique Marseille and Lorient in France, Fenerbahce in Turkey and West Ham in England.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Black Queens coach Mercy Tagoe invites thirty players for camping ahead of Morocco friendly

    Black Queens coach, Mercy Quarcoo Tagoe has invited thirty players to begin camping ahead of their upcoming friendly game against Morocco.

    The called up players and technical team members are to report to camp at the GFA Technical Centre (GSCE), Prampram on Thursday and undergo the mandatory COVID-19 test on arrival.

    Ghana will host Morocco in a friendly on November 30, 2020.

    Below are the invited players for the match:

    Fafali Dumehasi – Police ladies FC

    Abigail Tawiah-Mensah – Berry Ladies FC

    Azume Adams – Prisons Ladies FC

    Mary NiiQuaye – Immigration Ladies FC

    Janet Egyir – Hasaacas Ladies FC

    Linda Eshun – Hasaacas Ladies FC

    Philicity Asuako – Police Ladies FC

    Victoria Osei – Berry Ladies FC

    Selina Animah – Berry Ladies FC

    Gladys Anfobea – Lady Strikers FC

    Beatrice Sasu – Police Ladies FC

    Ellen Coleman – Lady Strikers FC

    Edem Atovor – Lady Strikers FC

    Juliet Acheampong – Prisons Ladies FC

    Mary Essiful – Soccer Intellectuals

    Priscilla Okyere – Ampim-Darkoa ladies FC

    Grace Adams – Berry Ladies FC

    Basira Alhassan – Pearl Pia Ladies FC

    Henrietta Annie – Police Ladies FC

    Alice Kusi – Fabulous Ladies FC

    N-yanyimaya Gnabekan – Berry Ladies FC

    Bridget Adu – Berry Ladies FC

    Rashida Ibrahim – Berry Ladies FC

    Sandra Owusu-Ansah – Supreme Ladies FC

    Faustina Kyeremeh – Immigration Ladies FC

    Deborah Afriyie – Police Ladies FC

    Georgina Aoyem – Pearl Pia Ladies FC

    Grace Animah – Police Ladies FC

    Rita Okyere – Prisons Ladies FC

    Alberta Ahialey – Portugal

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • ‘Soldier of democracy’: Mali buries former president Toumani Touré

    Mali held a state funeral on Tuesday for former president Amadou Toumani Toure, an emblematic figure who steered the troubled nation to free elections and led it for a decade before being ousted in a coup.

    Toure, sometimes called Mali’s “soldier of democracy,” died on November 10 at the age of 72 after he had been transferred to Turkey for medical care following heart surgery.

    A coffin draped in the national flag and borne by six soldiers was slowly carried into the centre of a square in the capital Mali for ceremonies attended by the leaders of the country’s latest putsch and by foreign dignitaries.

    “A great man has fallen,” the master of ceremonies declared.

    “It is an incalculable loss for Mali. He came bringing the breath of life, he leaves with the wind of hope.”

    Those in the VIP stand included Bah Ndaw, a former military officer who is currently president of Mali’s transitional government, and the vice president, Assimi Goita, who led the August 18 coup.

    Niger and Guinea-Bissau were represented by their prime ministers, and other countries in the region sent their envoys.

    Ceremonies were to conclude with a parade by troops and aircraft, according to the programme.

    Toure, a former soldier, first took charge of the country for a year in 1991.

    He helped overthrow the iron-fisted regime of Moussa Traore, who had been in power since 1968.

    He then took the helm of a transitional committee, exercising the duties of head of state and steering the country to elections.

    These were won in 1992 by Alpha Oumar Konare — the first democratically-chosen president in Mali’s post-independence history.

    Popularly known by his initials as ATT, Toure won presidential elections in 2002 and again in 2007.

    His presidency was abruptly curtailed in 2012 by rebel troops who accused Toure of failing to support their battle against Tuareg and jihadist insurgents in the north of the country.

    Toure fled to Senegal, only returning from exile in 2017.

    The chaos that followed his downfall wrecked Mali’s poorly-equipped and demoralised army.

    The jihadists swiftly overran the north of the country before being forced out in 2013 by French intervention.

    They regrouped and advanced into central Mali, a flashpoint region where they ignited ethnic conflict, and then headed into neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.

    Thousands have died and hundreds of thousands have fled their homes.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Several killed, others hurt in suicide bombing in Somalia

    At least five people were killed in Mogadishu on Tuesday after a suicide bomber detonated an explosive belt near a police academy, according to a Somali Police official.

    Spokesperson Sadiq Adan Ali said eight other people were wounded in the blast in the Somali capital.

    He said the bomber targeted a restaurant frequented by police.

    The Somalia-based al-Shabab extremist group often targets Mogadishu.

    Experts for the United Nations have warned that the al-Qaida-affiliated group is improving its explosives-making skills.

    Al-Shabab remains the most active and resilient extremist group in Africa, controlling parts of southern and central Somalia.

    It has fired several mortars this year at the heavily defended international airport, where the US Embassy and other missions are located.

    Source: africanews.com

  • ‘The governor called us’: Nigeria army tells inquiry it was asked to break up protest

    A senior officer in the Nigerian army has told a judicial panel investigating the deadly shooting against protestors in October that soldiers intervened following an appeal by Babajide Sanwo-Olu, governor of Lagos state.

    But Brigadier General Ahmed Taiwo denied accusations that security forces fired at protestors who had gathered at the Lekki toll gate.

    “I spoke with the governor and said the army was unhappy that he (the Governor) said he did not ask the army to intervene but I am sure, after we have watched everything, we saw he had more than reasonable grounds to ask the army to intervene, perhaps it was the way everything went that made him say so”, Taiwo told the investigating panel.

    Taiwo’s testimony could help unravel the events that preceded the deadly violence, with officials not keen to accept responsibility.

    Several officials have denied giving security forces orders to use force.

    “We saw he (Governor) had more than reasonable grounds to ask the army to intervene, perhaps it was the way everything went that made him say so,” Taiwo added.

    Nearly 70 people were killed in the violence as Nigeria moved to end weeks of protests against police brutality.

    Rights groups have urged president Muhamadu Buhari to ensure that victims get get justice.

    Nigeria says the rallies had been infiltrated by looters and criminal gangs.

    Source: Bernard Avle

  • Cairo’s ‘City of the Dead’ comes back to life

    In Egypt’s “City of the Dead”, centuries-old monuments are being restored and artisanal heritage revived, turning a corner of the vast historical cemetery into a vibrant neighbourhood full of life.

    Wood, leather and jewellery workshops have joined those of glassblowers and others near the 15th-Century mosque of Sultan Qaitbay, in the east of the capital Cairo.

    From the Mamluk period, the celebrated structure — featured on Egypt’s one-pound notes — is surrounded by monumental tombs, dusty alleys and informal housing.

    Since 2014, a series of projects financed by the European Union has changed the face of this small section of the sprawling necropolis — home to many people who are unable to afford Cairo’s prohibitively high rents.

    Authorities began construction on a major road in July a short distance from the Qaitbay mosque, drawing strong criticism online for the resulting demolitions and evictions of residents of the “City of the Dead”.

    A final resting place for illustrious figures, including singer Farid al-Atrash and writer Ihsan Abdel Kouddous as well as ordinary Egyptians, the Islamic necropolis founded in the seventh century stretches over 6.5 kilometres (four miles).

    “Before the projects, there was rubbish all over the streets”, said 57-year-old Issem Abou Rami, who owns a small restaurant facing the mosque. “Now, a truck comes every day to collect it.”

    Products made in the impoverished neighbourhood are now sold in elegant booths under restored stone arches — and even online.

    Social development

    The renovation efforts started six years ago with the refurbishment of a drinking trough for animals, and then, the reception area of a residential complex of the sultan.

    The EU contributed nearly a million euros ($1.1 million) toward the latest project, “T_he Heritage for the Living, in the ‘City of the Dead’_”, which launched in 2018 and focuses on social development.

    The project coordinator, architect Agnieszka Dobrowolska, was a linchpin to the area’s metamorphosis.

    She supervised the restorations of the monuments and the renovation of the workshop and their signage, as well as designed jewellery and leather products inspired by Mamluk motifs.

    “When we first came here, our main object was to conserve the monuments,” she told AFP.

    “And we quickly realised that we cannot simply conserve the monuments, in disrespect to the people who live and work in the area,” adds Dobrowolska, founder of Archinos Architecture, which has worked on numerous conservation projects in Cairo.

    Work in the ateliers was interrupted for several weeks due to the Covid-19 pandemic, but now the workshops are again up and running, with some 50 women making leather products and jewellery, all stamped with the local brand Mishka.

    Aida Hassan, 45, has worked in the leather workshop for three years, and said she is happy to be earning “1,500 pounds ($96) per month — and sometimes more”.

    “This project has helped improve my income,” she added, saying she had gone on to train other women in leatherwork.

    Hundreds of women and children in the neighbourhood have benefited from courses and workshops on subjects as diverse as science and technology, English language and sports.

    Object of superstition

    For the EU, the primary donor to the project — due to end in 2021 — the social elements of the programme were key, said Christian Berger, head of the EU delegation in Egypt.

    “Our intention is to support this type of project that benefits immediately vulnerable groups and disadvantaged groups, projects that have a broader socio-economic impact,” Berger said.

    The neighbourhood has hosted concerts, from jazz to folk and traditional Egyptian music, and visual artists from Egypt and abroad have come to show their work.

    The aim is to bring “contemporary art and culture here to enhance the diversity of cultural expression (and) artistic expression, to build bridges between east and west,” said Dobrowolska.

    Another hope of the project in transforming the neighbourhood is to draw in tourists.

    The “City of the Dead” is sometimes an object of superstition due to its status as a necropolis and is not a usual stop on mainstream Cairo tours.

    But it is the tourists who are looking for something out of the ordinary that Dobrowolska said the project is counting on.

    “We seek to attract tourists who are off-track from the mass tourism destinations — people who might appreciate and enjoy the unique urban character of the necropolis,” she said.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Ethiopia’s spiraling conflict threatens regional stability

    Deadly fighting between Ethiopian federal forces and the regional government of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) has already claimed hundreds of military and civilian lives, according to the scarce reports coming from the region.

    Internationally, there are fears that the conflict, which is quickly escalating into a civil war, will threaten regional security in the Horn of Africa.

    Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed ordered a military operation against the TPLF on November 4, accusing the Tigray militia of attacking a government military base.

    Meanwhile, Ethiopia’s defense minister, Dr Kenna Yadeta, remained bullish about the government’s ability to quickly end the violence.

    “All the TPLF’s actions testify to their high level of frustration.They have no more strength, capability and time to intensify wars in the region. The Tigray junta has only a very short time left to be captured,” according to Kenna Yadeta, who was appointed defense minister in August 2020 as part of a major — and controversial — cabinet reshuffle by Ahmed.

    “We can achieve a crushing victory any day from now,” Yadeta told DW.

    Regional stability under threat
    The victory may come at a severe cost to stability in the Horn of Africa, though.

    To win it, there is a danger that the federal government’s focus on Tigray could weaken its involvement in backing the government in Ethiopia’s western neighbor, Somalia, against al-Shabab militants.

    Ethiopia has already withdrawn about 600 soldiers from Somalia’s western border. However they were not part of the African Union’s Mission in Somalia (Amisom), which Ethiopia also supports.

    “Now, this is going to severely affect the efforts of the African Union mission that’s currently involved in stabilizing Somalia and ensuring there is a functional government, and organize the elections in the next few months,” said Hassan Khannenje of the Nairobi-based think-tank the Horn Institute.

    The huge numbers of refugees likely to cross the borders of an already volatile region and the likely proliferation of light weapons and small arms could lead to a “catastrophe,” according to Khannenje.

    “If Ethiopia goes, then there goes the Horn of Africa region. And that’s something they should worry everybody, both regionally and internationally,” Khannenje told DW.

    Conflict spills over into Eritrea

    Also complicating the Ethiopian government’s conflict with the TPLF is the involvement of Ethiopia’s northern neighbor, Eritrea, which borders Tigray.

    Over the weekend, multiple rockets — fired from Ethiopia’s Tigray region — hit the Eritrean capital, Asmara.

    The TPLF’s leader, Debretsion Gebremichael, said his troops fought Eritrean forces “on several fronts” for the past few days. He accused Eritrea of providing military support to the Ethiopian government and sending troops across the border, allegations that Eritrea denied.

    “Asmara has been accused of allowing the Ethiopian Air Force to use its base in undertaking strikes,” said Hassan Khannenje, from Nairobi-based think tank, The Horn Institute.

    “And so, the TPLF sees Eritrea as a fair target because of its alliance or perceived alliance currently with Abiy Ahmed’s government in Addis Ababa.”

    Tigrayan forces and leaders were instrumental in bringing peace and relative prosperity to Ethiopia as part of the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) by removing the brutal Derg military regime from power in 1991.

    However, under its rule, Eritrea seceded in 1993, and the 19982000 war between Ethiopia and Eritrea followed.

    When Abiy Ahmed swept to power in 2018, he made it a priority to normalize relations and make peace with Eritrea — a feat that won him the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019.

    The TPLF’s resentment stems from a sense of being sidelined by Abiy’s government when he formed a new coalition government — known as the Prosperity Party — which excluded the TPLF. Abiy’s overtures to Eritrea are also seen as a betrayal.

    ‘No more brother wars’

    But many Eritreans want peace between Eritrea and Ethiopia.

    Over the weekend, hundreds of Eritrean refugees in the Tigray city of Mekelle protested against the war between Tigrayan and Ethiopian government forces.

    They demanded both sides end the conflict immediately and strike up dialogue.

    The demonstrators also demanded a solution for the growing refugee crisis, saying military violence threatened refugee camps in western Tigray.

    “The war is unnecessary. We know war. It’s destructive. War between brothers is the worst. People have been persecuted and killed. The Eritreans here are against the war. It’s enough!” said one male demonstrator.

    “It’s very sad that people speaking the same language and sharing the same language are fighting,” another protester told DW on condition of anonymity.

    Others fear Eritreans living in Tigray could also become targets.

    “Since we’ve been in Ethiopia, especially Tigray, we have found shelter and live like every other citizen,” a protestor told DW. “This war doesn’t just affect civilian life, it also affects us, the refugees.”

    Regional rivals launch military exercise

    Perhaps worryingly from an Ethiopian perspective, and further complicating matters, regional rivals Sudan and Egypt started joint military exercises over the weekend.

    Both countries are in dispute with Ethiopia, over its Grand Renaissance Dam on the Blue Nile.

    Sudan and Egypt both claim the structure will adversely affect their water supply.

    The exercises include planning and running combat activities, as well as commando groups conducting search and rescue missions, according to an Egyptian defence ministry statement.

    Source: dw.com

  • Politics is a blessed mistake Oppong Nkrumah

    Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah has revealed that his involvement in politics was purely accidental.  

    Speaking to the host of E-vibes, Becky, the Ofoase Ayeribi MP said his plan was to focus on his business but God had other plans.

    “After I left radio and was in law school, the MP in my town had come to the end of his tenure and the party needed a young and energetic person to replace him.

    “The executives came back to me in Accra and said they wanted me to represent, after a number of consultation, I consented,” he disclosed.

    “I always wanted to practice my law, do my business and move on, but I will describe politics as a blessed mistake.

    E Vibes shows on Joy prime every Sunday at 6 pm and on JoyNews every Saturdays at 8:30 am, repeated on Sundays at 10:30 am on the same channel.

    Source: myjoyonline

  • Ayeduase: Man shoots himself after traffic altercation

    A 31-year-old man on Tuesday morning shot himself in the head after a road rage at Ayeduase near the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in Kumasi.

    The 31-year-old Sampson Zabanga shot himself in the head to escape a mob attack after he had shot Kwame Amoah, 52, during the altercation.

    The altercation followed an incident of a reported careless driving at Ayeduase in Kumasi, Tuesday morning [November 17, 2020].

    In the ensuing exchanges, the middle-aged man, Sampson Zabanga reportedly shot Kwame Amoah, who had confronted him over the said careless driving incident before he shot himself.

    He is said to have shot himself at the scene when there was an attempt to disarm him.

    The suspect and the victim are both in critical condition and receiving treatment at the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH) under police guard.

    The suspect was driving a saloon vehicle – KIA Optima – with registration number GR 2019 – 17.

    Eyewitness account

    An eyewitness said they saw the middle-aged man driving “carelessly” in the Ayeduase area.

    And so some people asked him not to drive carelessly and that resulted in verbal exchanges.

    According to the eyewitness, just as they thought the issue had been settled, they saw Amoah move in front of the guy’s vehicle forcing the guy to step out of the vehicle, hit Amoah’s chest and slapped him in the face.

    This resulted in a fight which the eyewitness said he saw the guy picking a gun from his vehicle and shot Amoah subsequently.

    The eyewitness said he heard a second gunshot whilst holding Amoah who had then fallen to the ground before seeing the guy shooting himself.

    Police reaction

    The Ashanti Regional Police Public Relations Officer (PRO), Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), Mr Godwin Ahianyo said both the suspect and the victim are at the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH) receiving emergency medical care under police guard.

    According to the police, preliminary information gathered indicated that after shooting Amoah, Zabanga went into his car and tried to escape because the mob had blocked the road from both sides and were pelting his car with stones and fearing that he might be lynched, he shot himself in the head.

    He said when the police got to the scene, they found both victims and in a pool of blood and initially sent them to the KNUST Hospital where they were referred to KATH.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • Driver shoots painter, then shoots himself to avoid mob attack

    A driver of a KIA saloon vehicle has shot himself after shooting a man who warned him against careless driving at Ayeduase near Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST).

    The victim, Amoah who is a painter, was shot three times in the stomach after returning a slap from the driver.

    The driver, according to the eyewitnesses, was quarreling with a woman who sat in the front seat of the vehicle.

    He shot himself after he was surrounded by the police who had rushed to the scene to prevent a mob action.

    Amoah, had moved in to tell the driver to drive cautiously on the busy road when he was caught in traffic.

    The two who are in critical condition have been sent to the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital for medical attention.

    Source: myjoyonline

  • Amidu returns all sitting allowances since 2018

    Former Special Prosecutor, Martin Amidu has reportedly directed his accountant to return an amount of GH¢12,696 paid to him as sitting allowances from 2018.

    The directive according to a report by CitiNews was issued Tuesday, November 17, 2020.

    Per details of the report, the amount to be returned was from six meetings which spun from 2018 through to 2020.

    These included; August to December Board sitting for which he was paid, GH¢5,560; four board sittings which he was paid GH¢1440 each from July 2019 to February 2020 and an Entity Tender Committee meeting for which he was paid GH¢1376.

    CitiNews also reports that Mr Amidu saw his meetings as Special Prosecutor to be part of his official work thus saw no reason to be paid separately for attending them.

    Martin Amidu who tendered in his resignation letter to the president on November 16, 2020, said he and his deputies had not been paid since their appointment.

    He wrote “It is essential for me to state for the purpose of the records, and contrary to public perceptions, that my appointment letter was received on 5th February 2020 (almost two (2)-years after my appointment). The copy addressees made no efforts to honour any of the conditions of appointment in terms of emoluments and benefits of the appointment ever since my warrant of appointment was issued on 23rd February 2018 to the date of my letter of resignation.”

    The statement further read; “The Deputy Special Prosecutor has also not been paid any emoluments since her appointment, and there is the need to redress that situation for her now that I am out of the way.”

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Religious leaders take turn to sign Rawlings’s book of condolence

    Dozens of religious leaders have taken turns to sign the book of condolence opened for the late former President of the Republic of Ghana, Jerry John Rawlings.

    The book of condolence was opened for the Ex-President who passed away on Tuesday, November 12, 2020, and has since been signed by dignitaries and leaders including president Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and former President John Dramani Mahama.

    Taking their turn today, the religious leaders who thronged the Conference Center included the leaders of the Christian and Islamic faith.

    Notable among the religious leaders were the Metropolitan Archbishop of Cape, Charles Palmer-Buckle, the General Overseer of Perez Chapel International, Bishop Charles Agyinasare and Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Church of Ghana, Rev. Dr. Paul Kwabena Boafo.

    Also signing on behalf of the Chief Imam, was his spokesperson, Sheikh Aremeyaw Shaibu.

    Speaking to the media after the signing, Bishop Palmer-Buckle praised Ex-President Rawlings for the life he lived which he dedicated to ensuring the establishment of Ghana’s current democracy. He also admonished Ghanaians to emulate the principles of probity and accountability which the late former president lived for.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Ill respond to your claims Akufo-Addo to Amidu

    President Akufo-Addo says he will, in due course, respond to accusations of interference against him by the ex-Special Prosecutor in his resignation letter.

    Martin Amidu resigned from his post as Special Prosecutor citing interference by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in his work.

    “The reaction I received for daring to produce the Agyapa Royalties Limited Transactions anti-corruption report convinces me beyond any reasonable doubt that I was not intended to exercise any independence as the Special Prosecutor in the prevention, investigation, prosecution, and recovery of assets of corruption. My position as the Special Prosecutor has consequently become clearly untenable,” a part of the resignation letter said.

    It continued: ”It is essential for me to state for the purpose of the records, and contrary to public perceptions, that my appointment letter was received on 5th February 2020 (almost two (2)-years after my appointment). The copy addressees made no efforts to honour any of the conditions of appointment in terms of emoluments and benefits of the appointment ever since my warrant of appointment was issued on 23rd February 2018 to the date of my letter of resignation.

    Reacting to the claims, the Presidency in a statement said the “President has taken due note of the other matters raised in your letter and the government will issue a statement responding to them in due course.”

    Source: Starr FM

  • Rawlings’s death: Young politicians must stop using abusive language on one another – Agyinasare

    The General Overseer of Perez Chapel International, Bishop Charles Agyinasare has tasked the upcoming generation of politicians to apply decency along their political path.

    Bishop Agyinasare made this statement whiles speaking to the media after signing the book of condolence opened for Ex-President Jerry John Rawlings at the Accra International Conference Center on Tuesday.

    “The young politicians must be determined and focused, they must desire not to just go after money but to be able to serve their nation and be a blessing. Let’s have a generation who are not antagonistic to one another and using a lot of verbal garbage on one another. We want decency in our politics,” he said.

    Ex-President Jerry John Rawlings was pronounced dead at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital last Thursday, following what his family says was a brief period of sickness.

    Hundreds of persons have since the demise of the former President eulogized him for his principles of probity and accountability which characterised his actions and pronouncements.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Rawlings never troubled persons who worked sincerely and honestly – Osafo-Maafo

    Senior Minister, Yaw Osafo-Maafo has eulogized former President Jerry John Rawlings as someone who has never had issues with persons who exhibited traits of sincerity and honesty.

    According to the Senior Minister, the former president made sure his actions were guided by the principle of sincerity and honesty even when he had to topple the government of the day through coup d’etats.

    “When he made the coup I was the Managing Director of a bank and in all the things which happened, he showed so much admiration for honesty, courage and hard work. And he never really troubled people who had worked sincerely and honestly. I never had any problem from president Rawlings,” he told the media after signing the book of condolence opened for Ex-President Rawlings at the Accra International Conference Center on Tuesday.

    Describing the former president as genuine, forthright and courageous, Mr Asafo-Maafo said Ex-President Rawlings had the welfare of the less privileged at heart so much that it created problems between him and others.

    “He is very genuine, forthright and courageous, and he cared for the underprivileged people generally. His main occupation is to take care of those who are not privileged in the society. This was so dear to him that sometimes his anxiety to do it right even created problems for others”.

    Former President Jerry John Rawlings died on Thursday, November 12, 2020, and the state, following his death, has opened a book of condolence at the Accra International Conference Center.

    President Akufo-Addo, Vice President Dr Mahamadu Bawumia and several government officials have all penned their condolence to the former president.

    Others, such as religious leaders, political leaders and foreign diplomats have so far signed.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Akyem Batabi: Collapsed church building constructed with weak concrete, expired permit Report

    A report by the four-member committee set up to investigate the causes of the collapse of the Church of Prosperity in Akyem Batabi in the Eastern region has cited poor quality workmanship and institutional failure.

    According to the key findings of the report put together by the committee from the Institution of Engineering and Technology-Ghana (IET-GH), the four-storey building “was constructed with very weak concrete strength of 12.00N\mm² averagely for structural elements.”

    The report also found out that the four-storey church building was constructed with an expired permit dated in the year 2000.

    The permit, which was acquired from the Birim Central Municipal Assembly, was meant for a single storey church building, the report further disclosed.

    “In the course of the construction, the church changed the building design to a four-storey building with the Prophet’s residence on top, without retrofitting the original foundation meant for a single-story church auditorium, or without consulting any building professional,” the report further stated.

    The Church of Prosperity located in Akyem Batabi, founded by Prophet Akoa Isaac collapsed on 20 October 2020, entrapping and killing 22 members, leaving eight others injured.

    The report stated that one person was also reported missing.

    Source: Class FM

  • Akufo-Addo accepts Martin Amidus resignation

    President Akufo-Addo has accepted the resignation of Martin Amidu as Special Prosecutor.

    In a letter Tuesday, the Chief of Staff, Akosua Frema Osei-Opare, stated that the President “has taken due note of the other matters raised in your letter, and government will issue a statement responding to them in due course”.

    Three years after his appointment, Mr Amidu wrote to the President on Monday explaining his decision to resign from office to enable his appointing authority “to take steps to appoint a replacement to that position as required by law.”

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1GhqjDrIjzsshm6j7jJw2gxlgtYIf2o7O/preview

    In his resignation letter, the former Attorney General also revealed that his appointment authority made no effort to ensure that he was paid for his work since the state engaged his services in 2018.

    Accordingly, the President has directed Mr Amidu is remunerated for his services to the State.

    “The President has directed me to ensure that all emoluments benefits due you under law are paid to you accordingly,” the Chief of Staff said.

    Source: myjoyonline

  • Borrowing goes through the roof as East Africa amasses $73b in external debt

    Countries in the region have seen increased borrowing over the past decade, amassing $73.8 billion in external debt.

    The International Debt Statistics 2021 report by the World Bank shows that between 2009 and 2019, countries in the region increased external borrowing by nearly four times, from $19.9 billion to $73.8 billion.

    During the period, Kenya was the biggest borrower raising the stock of external debt from $8.5 billion to $34.2 billion, followed by Tanzania, from $7.6 billion to $19.5 billion.

    Uganda and Rwanda accumulated $13.9 billion and $6.2 billion in external debt over the decade, from $2.7 billion and $1.1 billion respectively.

    Burundi, however, saw the stock of its external debt decline from $607.2 million in 2009 to $578.4 million in 2019.

    SLOW GROWTH

    “The overhang of debt may slow investment and growth for years to come, a burden on the poor that now needs to be addressed by creditors across the world taking prompt steps to permanently reduce unsustainable debt stocks for the poorest countries,” said David Malpass, the World Bank Group president.

    In the region, the report shows that in 2019 Kenya spent $3 billion in principal repayments and $1.2 billion in interest repayments, while Tanzania spent $1.1 billion and $200 million respectively.

    For Uganda, $166 million went into principal repayment and $115 million in interest repayment, with Rwanda spending $31.5 billion and $133.2 million respectively.

    The report states that with almost half of all low-income countries either already in debt distress or at a high risk of it, the burden of debt is bound to worsen with countries borrowing more to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Many countries applied for debt relief with the International Monetary Fund in October, which granted a six-month extension to 28 low income nations with Rwanda being among the beneficiaries.

    Total external debt stocks of low-income countries eligible for debt service suspension rose by nine per cent in 2019 to $744 billion, equivalent on average to one-third of their combined gross national income.

    “The risk is that too many poor countries will emerge from the Covid-19 crisis with a large debt overhang that could take years to manage,” said Mr. Malpass.

    He added that to build durable economic recoveries, countries will need to achieve long-term debt sustainability.

    The report shows that the external debt stock of 120 low and middle-income countries rose by 5.4 percent in 2019 to $8.1 trillion, a rate of accumulation almost identical to that in 2018, but close to half the 10.5 percent rise in external debt stock recorded in 2017.

    The increase in external debt stocks in 2019 was the outcome of net debt inflows of $383 billion.

    Countries in sub-Saharan Africa accounted for the largest share of net long-term inflows at 24 per cent, followed by the East Asia and Pacific region.

    Source: theeastafrican.co.ke

  • COVID-19 vaccine candidate nearly 95% effective – Moderna claims

    US biotech firm Moderna on Monday announced its experimental vaccine against Covid-19 was almost 95 percent effective, marking a major breakthrough in the quest to end the pandemic.

    Moderna released early results from a clinical trial with more than 30,000 participants, after American pharmaceutical company Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech last week said their vaccine was 90 percent effective.

    The news came as virus infections surged across Europe and the United States.

    Both vaccines are based on new technology that uses synthetic versions of molecules called “messenger RNA” to hack into human cells, and effectively turn them into vaccine-making factories.

    “This positive interim analysis from our Phase 3 study has given us the first clinical validation that our vaccine can prevent COVID-19 disease, including severe disease,” said Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel.

    “Today’s news of a second vaccine is further reason to feel hopeful,” tweeted President-elect Joe Biden, but he cautioned that its widespread distribution was months away.

    “Until then, Americans need to continue to practice social-distancing and mask-wearing to get the virus under control,” he said.

    Moderna plans to submit applications for emergency approval around the world within weeks, and says it expects to have approximately 20 million doses ready to ship in the US by the end of the year.

    The company, which has received $2 billion from the US government under “Operation Warp Speed,” added it is on track to manufacture between 500 million to a billion doses globally in 2021.

    Global infections from Covid-19 have soared past 54 million with more than 1.3 million deaths since the virus emerged in China late last year.

    China and Russia also say that they have manufactured effective Covid-19 vaccines.

    China is developing several vaccines, of which five are undergoing large-scale global trials

    Questions remain
    The promising results of both vaccines are seen as a validation for mRNA technology, which has never before been brought to regulatory approval.

    It works by providing human cells with the genetic instructions to make a surface protein of the coronavirus, which trains the immune system to recognize the real virus.

    Making a traditional vaccine is a longer process that normally involves developing a weakened form of a pathogen.

    It is not yet clear how long lasting the protection will be from either the Moderna or Pfizer vaccines, nor how well they work for the elderly, the age-group at highest risk from Covid-19.

    Another open question is whether they stop people who are exposed to the virus from transmitting it on to the other people, even though they may be themselves protected from the disease.

  • Zuma before commission probing corruption claims

    Former South African president Jacob Zuma on Monday appeared before a state commission investigating serious allegations of corruption during his tenure as head of state between 2009 and 2018.

    It was the first time Zuma had appeared before the judicial inquiry since he abandoned his testimony at the hearing more than a year ago.

    The commission has no powers to prosecute, however other law enforcement agencies may follow up on information revealed at the commission and pursue criminal cases against those implicated.

    Zuma was forced to step down from his position as president in 2018 by his African National Congress party amid allegations of fraud and corruption.

    On Monday he launched an application for the chairman of the commission, Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo, to recuse himself from the inquiry, claiming Zondo was biased against him because they used to be close friends.

    Responding during Monday’s proceedings, Zonda admitted to having a “cordial relationship” with Zuma, but said the claim they were friends was “not accurate”.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Ethiopia says it has seized another Tigray town as conflict embroils Eritrea

    Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government said on Monday it had captured another town in the northern Tigray region after nearly two weeks of fighting in a conflict already spilling into Eritrea and destabilizing the wider Horn of Africa.

    Hundreds have died, at least 20,000 refugees have fled to Sudan and there have been reports of atrocities since Abiy ordered airstrikes and a ground offensive against Tigray’s rulers for defying his authority.

    The conflict could jeopardize a recent economic opening, stir up ethnic bloodshed elsewhere around Africa’s second most populous nation, and tarnish the reputation of Abiy who won a Nobel Peace Prize last year for a peace pact with Eritrea.

    The Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which governs the region of more than 5 million people, has accused Eritrea of sending tanks and thousands of soldiers over the border to support Ethiopian federal troops. Asmara denies that.

    Tigray forces fired rockets into Eritrea at the weekend.

    A task force set up by Abiy to handle the government’s response to the crisis, said troops had “liberated” the town of Alamata from the TPLF.

    “They fled, taking along around 10,000 prisoners,” it added, without specifying where those were from.

    With communications mainly down and media barred, Reuters could not independently verify assertions made by all sides.

    There was no immediate comment from Tigray’s leaders on events in Alamata, near the border with Amhara state, about 120 km (75 miles) from Tigray’s capital Mekelle.

    TPLF leader Debretsion Gebremichael urged the United Nations and African Union to condemn Ethiopia’s federal troops, accusing them of using of high-tech weaponry including drones in attacks he said smashed a dam and a sugar factory.

    “Abiy Ahmed is waging this war on the people of Tigray and he is responsible for the purposeful infliction of human suffering on the people and destruction of major infrastructure projects,” he said.

    “We are not the initiators of this conflict and it is evident that Abiy Ahmed conducted this war as an attempt to consolidate his personal power,” he added, warning that Ethiopia could become a failed state or disintegrate.

    Fighting spreads

    The fighting has spread beyond Tigray into Amhara, whose local forces are allied with Abiy’s forces. On Friday, rockets were fired at two airports in Amhara in what the TPLF said was retaliation for government air strikes.

    Tigray leaders accuse Abiy, who is from the largest Oromo ethnic group and Africa’s youngest leader, of persecuting them and purging them from government and security forces over the last two years. He says they rose up against him by attacking a military base.

    Amnesty International has denounced the killing of scores and possibly hundreds of civilian laborers in a massacre that both sides have blamed on each other.

    The Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) has around 140,000 personnel and plenty of experience from fighting Islamist militants in Somalia, rebel groups in border regions and a two-decade border standoff with Eritrea.

    But many senior officers were Tigrayan, much of its most powerful weaponry is there and the TPLF has seized the powerful Northern Command’s headquarters in Mekelle.

    There are reports of defections of Tigrayan members of the ENDF. And the TPLF itself has a formidable history, spearheading the rebel march to Addis Ababa that ousted a Marxist dictatorship in 1991 and bearing the brunt of a 1998-2000 war with Eritrea that killed hundreds of thousands.

    Eritrea’s President Isaias Afwerki — a long-time foe of the Tigrayan leaders — controls a vast standing army which the United States’ CIA puts at 200,000 personnel.
    Abiy once fought alongside the Tigrayans and was a partner in government with them until 2018 when he took office, winning early plaudits for pursuing peace with Eritrea, starting to liberalize the economy and opening a repressive political system.

    Source: CNN

  • GPL: Hearts of Oaks week 2 clash with Ashgold rescheduled

    The Ghana Premier League match week two clash between Accra Hearts of Oak and Ashgold SC scheduled for Saturday, November 21 2020, has been postponed to a later date, the Ghana Football Association has confirmed.

    According to the Ghanaian football governing body, their decision to postpone the game is to ensure that members of Accra Hearts of Oak team who will return from isolation this week will get adequate time to prepare for the league game.

    In view of the above-mentioned development, the game will now be played on Tuesday, November 24 at the Accra Sports Stadium.

    Hearts of Oak are yet to kick start their 2020-21 League campaign after their opening game away at Aduana Stars was called off due to covid-19.

    The Phobians have reportedly had several of their players and officials test positive leaving them with less than enough players for the start of the campaign.

    Source: Ghana Guardian

  • Frank Quist, Ministry of Youth & Sports Chief Director dies

    The Chief Director of the Ministry of Youth and Sports Frank Quist is dead, according to media reports.

    Quist is reported to have passed away on Monday, November 16, 2020, after battling with illness.

    Reports indicate that he was pronounced dead at the 37 Military Hospital in Accra where he was on admission for a couple of days.

    Official report of his death is yet to be released by the family nor the Ministry of Youth and Sports as well as Ghana Football Association.

    Quist recently received items for fumigation of all Ghana Premier League centres from Tebel Ghana limited, a Ghanaian company which specialises in disinfection and fumigation.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Ghana unleashes strong starting line-up to face Sudan – Wakaso, Schlupp start

    Ghana coach Charles CK Akonnor has unleased Mubarak Wakaso and Jeffrey Schlupp in his crack starting line-up to face Sudan on Tuesday in their 2021 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier, Ghanasoccernet.com can exclusively reveal.

    The Black Stars coach will also use two proven strikers in Caleb Ekuban and captain Jordan Ayew in his starting team, serving his intention of attacking the opponent even though they would be playing the match as visitors in Omdurman.

    True to the prediction of Ghana’s leading football news outfit, the Black Stars coach has named a largely changed starting team to face the Nile Crocodiles in Group C.

    Injuries to substantive captain Andre Ayew and winger Samuel Owusu has forced the coach to make some changes while augmenting the starting line-up with the arrival of the more experienced Wakaso and Schlupp.

    In-form St. Gallen FC goalie Lawrence Ati-Zigi has been given the nod to start between sticks ahead of returnee Fatau Dauda.

    Surprisingly, central defender Nicholas Opoku will play from the right-back while Baba Rahman maintains his place at the left side of the defence.

    John Boye and Alexander Djiku will also maintain their position at the centre of the defence while Wakaso will partner Afriyie Acquah in central midfield.

    This makes the Black Stars defence and midfield perhaps the strongest in recent times with several in-form or experienced players starting in the match.

    Tarique Fosu will also maintain his place on the right side of the midfield while Schlupp will play from his favourite position of the left side of midfield.

    Ekuban will play as the lone striker while Jordan Ayew will take the role of the playmaker to provide the needed threat to draw out the opponents who have been strong in defending.

    Ghana have a perfect record in the qualifiers for the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations and a victory for the Black Stars on Tuesday take them through to the tournament in Cameroon.

    The Black Stars defeated Sudan 2-0 in their previous fixture played in Cape Coast on Thursday with Andre Ayew scoring both goals in the game.

    Black Stars starting line-up

    Lawrence Ati-Zigi, Nicholas Opoku, Baba Rahman, John Boye, Alexander Djiku, Afriyie Acquah, Tarique Fosu Mubarak Wakaso, Caleb Ekuban, Jordan Ayew, Jeff Schlupp.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Ashanti Region records 434 road accident deaths in 10 months

    The Ashanti Region recorded 434 cases of road crash deaths and 3,110 injuries from January to October this year.

    The deaths and injuries were recorded from 2,688 crashes.

    Superintendent Emmanuel Adu Boahen, the Regional MTTD Commander, said the figure is low compared to road crashes that occurred within the same period in 2019.

    Speaking at the celebration of World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims organised by the Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly (KMA) today, Monday, 16 November 2020, Mr Boahen said 3,214 reported road crashes were recorded in 2019 with 455 deaths and 4,165 injuries.

    He advised motorists to desist from overspeeding and unnecessary overtaking to help reduce road crashes.

    Kumasi mayor Osei Assibey Antwi also advised drivers to drive with care to help reduce road accidents.

    Source: Class FM

  • Rawlings’s quest for human development unmatched – Akatsi South NDC Chairman

    Anthony Owusu, Akatsi South Constituency Chairman of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), has said the demise of ex- President Rawlings has caused many, including him some form of emotional instability.

    He said the tragedy that has engulfed the entire country and Africa was unfortunate and that “we are now devastated”.

    “This is devastating, we were never in anticipation for this during these crucial moments of our political activities,” he said.

    Mr Owusu, popularly known as ‘Westfalia’ told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) the legacies of the late leader would continue to live on.

    “Ex-President Rawlings really expressed compassion and love for one another, he showed much concern for the underprivileged,” he said.

    Mr Owusu further disclosed that his personal relationship with the late former President was never a failed one.

    He said the late Jerry John Rawlings during his visits to his residency over the years, made him understand what he stood for.

    “After all his busy schedules, he spent time with me and I have learnt the best from him.”

    Touching on his personal activities with Mr Rawlings, he said the late leader moved many street children to further their education both in Accra and in the Volta Region, respectively.

    “Those in South Tongu, where his residency is also located could attest to this fact,” he said.

    The private building contractor further said the legacies and principles Mr Rawlings exhibited would not go down, and that “the NDC will continue to build on them for a better Ghana.

    The GNA further observed that all political activities in the Constituency are being put on hold and flags flying at half-mast.

    Source: GNA

  • Stop posting faces of rape victims Gender Ministry to media

    The Ministry of Gender, Children, and Social Protection has asked media houses to avoid exposing the identity of victims of rape and sexual violence.

    A statement issued by the Gender Ministry directed that the faces of victims should be covered or blurred to avoid re-traumatization and re-victimization of the victims.

    “The Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection has observed with great concern the re-traumatization of the victim who survived alleged rape and assault in the hands of a robber whose manhood was bitten off as a result of continuous broadcasting of the issue and exposing her face by various media outlets. This will jeopardize her security, safety, and the psychosocial support being given to her by the Ministry of Gender, Children, and Social Protection.

    “In respect of her safety and healing processes, we kindly plead and request all media houses and social media outlets to stop the circulation, showing and exposing her face and identity.” the statement read.

    Background

    A robbery suspect had the shock of his life when his victim severed his manhood with her sharp teeth.

    Emmanuel Ankor, 23, was said to have asked the victim to lick his penis after raping her and taking some items and money from her room at gunpoint.

    The incident occurred at Abompe New Site, a suburb of Obuasi in the Ashanti Region.

    After forcibly inserting his penis into her mouth, the victim mustered courage and bit off the penis to the shock of Ankor, who retaliated by biting the back of the victim.

    He was arrested at the AngloGold Ashanti Hospital, where he had gone for treatment.

    Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) Mr. Francis Asenso, told Journalists that the victim, who had also gone to the hospital for treatment after making a report to the police, spotted the suspect and alerted the security officials, who arrested him.

    He said the police, after visiting the crime scene, retrieved the severed penis and sent it to the hospital for preservation, while further investigation was ongoing.

    He said the suspect was on police guard at the hospital and would soon be arraigned to answer the charges.

    Source: Kasapa FM

  • EPA orders stop work on Ashaley Botwe storey building

    The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has ordered for construction work to stop on the storey building at Ashaley Botwe School junction, which has attracted public discussion over safety concerns.

    Construction work is still ongoing on the storey building project located around School Junction at Ashaley Botwe in Accra in the Adentan Municipality.

    The contractor has reached the 6th-floor and indications are that it would go further up.

    It has attracted public attention on social media and some have started talking about safety and structure integrity.

    Whilst some are arguing that there is nothing wrong with it, others think there was a problem with the structural integrity of the building.

    The project has reached the 6th floor and indications are that it will go further up.

    On social media, those arguing that there was nothing wrong with the project concludes that you cannot determine a structural integrity of a project by a mere look at a video or a picture.

    They have therefore called for structural engineers to examine it and conclude whether it was safe or not.

    Others however have argued that, there was everything wrong with a mere look of the project.

    The Executive Director of the EPA, Mr Henry Kwabena Kokofu, who visited the project site Monday morning, [November 16, 2020] ordered that construction work should immediately cease.

    He said the EPA had not given a permit for the project  and was not sure whether other agencies with such responsibilities have also given permit for it.

    He consequently asked that the owner of the building to visit the office of the EPA with the necessary documentation covering the project.

    Graphic Online visited the site on Monday morning at 10:30am.

    Whist there, personnel form the National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO), led by the Director of Inspectorate, Mr Richard Amo Yartey also visited the site.

    Mr Yartey told Graphic Online that the Director General of NADMO had sent them there to assess the project.

    He said NADMO was going to consult with other agencies and take a decision on the project.

    The owner of the building and the contractor as well as workers were not available at the site at the time of the visit.

    Graphic Online observed that the project itself was standing on the fence wall of the adjacent land on its right side.

    There is a shop next to the fence wall.

    Some residents told Graphic Online that the shop owner had closed the shop and stopped operating it after a metal from the project site fell on the shop.

    Another resident told Graphic Online that some government officials have been frequenting the project site since it commenced but the construction work is still ongoing.

    more to follow….

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • COVID-19: KIA releases revised protocols for passengers travelling to Ghana

    The management of the Kotoka International Airport (KIA) has revised the Coronavirus-induced safety protocols for passengers travelling to Ghana amidst the COVID-19 outbreak.

    The new safety protocols, which take effect from Monday, November 16, 2020, require passengers arriving in Ghana to pay the $150 for the PCR test online at https://myfrontierhealthcare.com/Home/Ghana.

    A statement issued by the KIA to highlight the guidelines stated that passengers must not have symptoms suggestive of COVID-19 including body temperature >38 degrees Celsius.

    Also, passengers must possess a COVID-19 negative PCR test from an accredited laboratory in the country of origin and airlines who bring in travellers who have not paid for the test online would be fined $3,500 per passenger.

    As of November 11, 2020, 56,123 tests have been conducted on passengers who arrived in Ghana via the KIA, out of which 190 tested positive.

    Below is the new safety protocols:

    Source: citinewsroom

  • Airlines to face $3,500 fine for each passenger flown in without PCR test

    The management of Kotoka International Airport has stated that airlines that break the COVID-19 protocols by bringing in passengers without PCR tests would be fined.

    “Airlines who board passengers without PCR tests results or transport and disembark passengers with positive PCR test result into Accra will be fined US$ 3,500 per passenger,” KIA noted in a statement.

    The Kotoka International Airport received its first batch of international commercial passengers after six months of closure due to COVID-19 on Tuesday, September 1, 2020.

    Management of the Ghana Airport Company stated that passengers arriving in Ghana will pay a $150 fee for a 30-minute PCR COVID-19 test.

    The new guidelines, which begins today, Monday, November 16, 2020, requires passengers arriving in Ghana to pay the $150 for the PCR test online at https://myfrontierhealthcare.com/Home/Ghana.

    Read the full statement below.

    Source: citinewsroom

  • US: Ghanaian woman killed in scooter accident

    A Ghanaian woman, Sophia Tagoe, 41, died in a motor crash on Thursday, October 22, in Sandy Springs, Georgia State, US.  

    According to authorities, the accident occurred in the eastbound lanes of The Perimeter around the area of New Northside Drive.

    Police confirmed that Madam Tagoe was riding her moped on the highway when another vehicle came up behind her.

    The driver tried to swerve to the left but was unable to do so in time, striking her on her moped.She was immediately knocked down onto the highway where she was struck by another vehicle. She was pronounced dead at the scene due to traumatic injuries.

    Both drivers who hit Madam Tagoe remained at the scene so that they could cooperate with the police.

    The investigation into the circumstances of the collision remains ongoing.

    Madam Tagoe is said to have moved to the US after winning a visa lottery about 22 years ago.

    Moped Accidents in Georgia

    Hundreds of victims lose their lives in motorcycle and moped accidents every year in the state of Georgia. According to recent statistics, approximately 10% of all crashes involve these vehicles. The unfortunate truth is that many of these accidents lead to fatalities due to the fact that motorcyclists are vulnerable parties with few protections. Losing somebody you love due to one of these accidents can have a huge and lasting impact on every aspect of your life. It is essential that you have the help of an experienced attorney on your side after you have lost someone you love.

    Moped accidents might not be the most common accidents on our roads but, when they do occur, they tend to lead to some of the most traumatic harm. Losing somebody you love in a collision can have a huge impact on your life on both emotional and financial levels. As you grieve the loss of a loved one, you may wonder where you can turn for the compensation that you deserve in your dire time of need. Speaking with a Georgia wrongful death attorney can help you through these difficult times.

    Our Georgia accident attorneys at Kenneth S. Nugent, PC are here to help you in your time of need after losing a loved one in a moped collision. We will stand by your side every step of the way as you work toward justice and compensation for a variety of aspects. Some of the most common aspects include pain and suffering, funeral costs, medical bills, and so much more. If you have lost a loved one and wonder where you can turn, you have options. Please do not hesitate to contact a moped accident attorney at (888) 579-1790 to find out what options are available for you.

    Source: Kenneth S. Nugent

  • UNICEF provides medical protective equipment for vaccination sites in Libya

    The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said it has provided medical protective equipment for vaccination sites and health facilities in Libya in a bid to ensure the continuity of immunization schedules of local children.

    “In the aftermath of the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic, vaccinations in Libya were halted in March 2020.

    This was mostly due to lack of preparedness and non-availability of personal protective equipment (PPE) such as masks and sanitizers at vaccination sites,” UNICEF said in a statement.

    “To ensure continuity of the critical Expanded Programme on Immunization, UNICEF procured PPE for targeted health facilities and vaccination sites,” the statement said.

    UNICEF will hold meetings and develop a plan with the Libyan National Center for Disease Control for the provision of masks and sanitizers to benefit 700 vaccination sites across Libya, an amount that is expected to be sufficient for four months, it said.

    UNICEF and the World Health Organization have recently expressed concern over the severe shortage of vaccines for children in Libya, urging local authorities to secure the immediate release of funds to replenish the country’s vaccine supply.

    Source: GNA

  • Kenya’s surging coronavirus infections risk derailing transformation agenda

    Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta has said that a sudden increase in the number of COVID-19 positive cases in the country and fatalities has placed new hurdles towards the realization of the country’s socio-economic transformation agenda.

    Kenyatta said during a televised address to the nation that the pandemic had reversed economic progress achieved in 2019 besides wreaking havoc on livelihoods.

    “The pandemic has slowed down economic growth and disrupted provision of critical services like health and education. We must not backtrack in our commitment to defeat it and hasten our recovery,” said Kenyatta.

    Kenya’s total COVID-19 caseload reached 66,723 on Thursday after 919 people tested positive to the disease while national fatalities rose to 1,203 after 23 patients succumbed to the virus.

    The country’s positivity rate rose from 4 percent in late September to the current 17.5 percent amid concern that flouting of containment measures is to blame for the spike.

    Kenyatta on November 4, announced new measures to curb the spread of coronavirus including extension of night curfew hours, a halt on phased reopening of schools and greater uptake of remote work in the public sector.

    He acknowledged the heavy economic toll the pandemic has on his agenda for growth, shared prosperity, stability and peace, adding that its containment was interwoven with his legacy.

    Kenya is among 10 African countries with the heaviest COVID-19 caseload as efforts to flatten the curve prove elusive amid the emergence of new transmission hotspots like rural counties, schools and entertainment joints.

    The relaxation of containment measures in late September led to a dramatic surge in infections amid fears the East Africa’s largest economy could be on the throes of a second wave.

    The Ministry of Health said on Thursday a total of 60 patients are in intensive care units, out of which 20 are on ventilatory support.

    According to the Ministry, 89 patients are separately on supplementary oxygen, out of which 71 are in general wards and 18 in the high dependency unit.

    The Ministry also confirmed at least 2,207 healthcare workers have contracted the virus since the pandemic was first reported in the country in mid-March.

    Out of this, 23 healthcare workers have lost their lives since the pandemic struck. The Ministry said that there are 1,279 patients currently admitted in various hospitals across the country while another 6,102 patients are in the home-based care programme.

    So far, the total number of COVID-19 recoveries has reached 44,040.
    Public health experts said that a sense of fatigue combined with wanton violation of public health guidelines was fuelling new coronavirus infections and undermining economic recovery after months of slowdown.

    Githinji Gitahi, CEO of Nairobi-based AMREF Health Africa said that surging COVID-19 infections risk overwhelming public health facilities besides destroying livelihoods of vulnerable demographics.

    “The community transmission of coronavirus has escalated against a backdrop of flouting of public health protocols by a large swathe of the population,” Gitahi said at a local television briefing.

    “We must guard against a slide into a second wave that could worsen socio-economic challenges facing the country,” he added.

    Source: GNA