Author: Chris Kodo

  • 3rd Ghana Teacher Licensure Exams results out

    The National Teaching Council (NTC) has released the results of the third Ghana Teacher Licensure Examination (GTLE).

    A total of 27,171 out of the 34,724 candidates who sat for the examination representing 78.2 per cent passed the examination, while, 7,553 representing 21.8 per cent failed.

    A statement from the NTC explained that six of the candidates, who were impersonated, had their entire results cancelled, while the seventh candidate, who carried unauthorised materials to the examination hall during the Numeracy paper had that paper cancelled.

    Read:7,432 teachers fail teacher licensure exams

    Checking of results

    The statement asked candidates, who wrote the examination, to check ?their results online from the NTC portal at www.exams.ntc.gov.gh

    It directed the candidates to check using the PIN assigned to them during the registration or their GTLE index number.

    The statement further asked candidates, who passed in all the examinations, to print their certificates from the NTC portal instead of visiting the offices of the NTC for the purpose of collecting their certificates.

    “Candidates, who sat for the March 2019 GTLE and passed, should also print their certificates online from the NTC portal,” the statement further instructed.

    Read:Ghana to export teachers after licensure exams NTC hints

    Role of NTC

    The licensure examination is designed and conducted by the NTC to ensure that schools across the country have quality teachers, improvement in professionalism in school teaching and to prepare Ghanaian teachers to be accepted globally.

    The first examination came off on September 10-12, 2018 and it covered essential teaching skills, numeracy (basic calculation) and literacy (verbal aptitude and essay writing).

    Mandate/b>

    The NTC is mandated by the Ghana Education Act 2008 (article 778) to design and execute professional development programmes and licensing pre-tertiary teachers, development and periodic review of teaching practices and ethical standards for teachers and teaching; advising the minister of education on matters relating to professional standing and status of teachers.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • Akufo-Addo mourns Dompoase crash victims

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is mourning the death of some 34 persons including a baby under a year old, who perished in a car crash on the Accra-Takoradi road in the Central Region.

    The accident occurred around 12 a.m. on Tuesday, 14 January 2020 when a Hyundai bus with registration number GN 3780 10 collided with a Man Diesel bus with registration number GR 5704 18.

    Read:Over 20 perish in gory crash at Dompoase in Central Region

    “My sympathies and condolences go to all the families and loved ones of the deceased in the horrific accident on the Cape Coast-Takoradi Highway, which occurred earlier today. May their souls Rest In Peace. I also wish the injured, a speedy recovery,” Nana Akufo-Addo tweeted.

    A reporter with Elmina based-Brenya FM, Kojo Atta Abrowah, reported that the Hyundai bus, which was moving from Accra to Takoradi, overtook the Man Diesel bus, resulting in a fatal head-on collision.

    The injured passengers who survived the crash have been sent to the Cape Coast Regional Hospital.

    Read:Reckless overtaking, overspeeding caused death of 34 passengers MTTD

    The dead passengers include 20 adult males, 11 adult females, and three children 2 girls and one boy.

    Fifty-four survivors are being treated.

    Source: citinewsroom.com

  • Cocoa farmers urged to patronise PBC’s services to enjoy pension

    Cocoa farmers have been encouraged to patronise the services of the Produce Buying Company (PBC) to benefit from the new pension scheme instituted by the Government.

    Madam Andrea Franz, the PBC Central Regional Human Resource Manager, said the only means to sustain the Company was for the farmers to continually patronise its services.

    She made the call in an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) at Swedru in the Central Region in her New Year message to cocoa farmers.

    Read:70% of Cocoa farmers believe COCOBOD does not serve their interest IMANI Report

    Madam Franz said the PBC, with almost 80 per cent shares by government, had put in place comprehensive mechanisms that would cater well for the welfare of cocoa farmers.

    She stated that the farmers could enjoy the Pension Scheme instituted by the Government if they continued to sell their cocoa beans to the PBC, which had a track record of trustworthiness in the industry.

    Madam Franz indicated that the Company was directly under the Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) and had quality administrative plans, which would go a long way to ensure better living conditions for farmers.

    Read:Cocoa farmers in Ghana, Ivory Coast to get $400 more on every tonne cocoa produced

    She warned that if cocoa farmers allowed foreign companies to bait them to sell their produce to them it would affect growth of the state owned company.

    She said it was regrettable that some cocoa farmers allowed some Licensed Buying Companies (LBCs) to sell fresh cocoa beans to them at lesser costs, a practice, she indicated, that could affect the quality of Ghana Cocoa on the world market.

    “Ghana’s cocoa is classified as one of the best among all cocoa producing countries in the world and it is vital to maintain the quality to meet international standards,” she said.

    Read:Stop paying spot premiums to cocoa farmers COCOBOD warns agents

    Madam Franz appealed to the farmers to exercise restraint as they would receive every package planed for them in the 2020 cocoa season.

    She gave the assurance that the PBC would continue to pursue policies and programmes to their benefit to ensure the country met the one million tonnes target it had set for 2020.

    Source: www.ghananewsagency.org

  • Dozens killed by heavy rain in Angola

    Torrential rain in Angola has killed 41 people and caused widespread destruction, the government has confirmed.

    Twelve out of 18 provinces were hit by a violent downpour which began in the early hours of Monday and lasted late into the afternoon, Interior Minister Eugenio Laborinho said in a statement.

    Read:Floods and power cuts hit South Africa

    Forty-one people died and more than 300 homes were destroyed by flooding, he said.

    “In recent days we have been witnessing heavy rainfall, causing flooding, destruction of infrastructure and plantations,” he said.

    Read:Teenage girl dies trying to rescue man in Kenyan flood

    More than 2,000 families had been affected, said Laborinho, warning that drinking water and electricity supplies had been cut off in some areas.

    The rain comes on the heels of a severe regional drought caused by years of erratic rainfall and record-high temperatures.

    Read:Angola decriminalises homosexuality

    Source: nation.co.ke

  • UN faces many challenges as It prepares to mark 75th Anniversary

    Preparations for the observation of the United Nations’ 75th anniversary are underway as the world body’s ability to maintain global peace and security appears ever more tenuous.

    The United Nations was founded in the aftermath of World War II on October 24, 1945, to prevent another devastating conflict. The 51 founding members hoped this new body would succeed where its predecessor, the League of Nations, had failed in maintaining global peace and security.

    Read:United Nations calls for end to virginity testing

    U.N. Undersecretary General Fabrizio Hoschschild is special adviser on the preparations for the commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the United Nations. He acknowledges the world body has fallen short of this mark, but he tells VOA conflicts would have been more intense and frequent, and longer without the United Nations. Moreover, he adds, some superpower confrontations have certainly been averted.

    “But at the moment, the conflict resolution aspect of the United Nations, the principle body of which is the Security Council, is clearly not fulfilling its promise. And, perhaps the most painful testimony of that is the hundreds of thousands of dead that have come out of the Syrian conflict,” he said.

    Read:Wakanda Forever: United Sates removes fictional country from free trade list

    Against these setbacks, Hoschschild says, are significant achievements made over the last 75 years in the betterment of the social, economic and human rights of people throughout the world.

    “If we think of health, the average life expectancy when the U.N. was founded was around 50 years. Today it is around 75 years. People are living 25 years longer … if we think of poverty eradication — when the U.N. was founded global poverty levels were 50%. Today they are down to 10%,” he said.

    Read:Kofi Annan was the United Nations Guterres

    Special events are being planned in the lead up to the U.N.’s 75th anniversary on October 24. These include a large-scale youth forum at the end of March in New York and a ceremony in San Francisco on June 26 to mark the signing of the U.N. charter there on that day in 1945.

    On September 21, world leaders will gather in New York at a U.N. Summit coinciding with the opening of the U.N. General Assembly. They will discuss opinions and suggestions gathered throughout the year on ways to increase global cooperation.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • 2019/20 GPL week 4 match preview: WAFA SC v Hearts of Oak

    WAFA SC has never lost at home in Sogakope to Hearts of Oak and on Wednesday they will be out to maintain that tradition.

    The Academy Boys have won three and drawn one- 13th September 2015- against the Phobians.

    It was a week 30 fixture during their first season as WAFA.

    Read:GPL: NSA gives clearance for evening matches

    WAFA SC will be hoping to have the four players who missed their last match against Elmina Sharks back for this huge assignment.

    Hearts won their first league match of the season on Sunday at home against a limping Ebusua Dwarfs at the Accra Sports Stadium.

    That could be the elixir needed to get their season back on track after losing their opening two matches against Berekum Chelsea-at home-and Medeama.

    Read:Dan Kwaku Yeboah hands over new GPL website to GFA

    The Phobians have also bolstered their squad with the signing of Emmanuel Nettey and Frederick Ansah Botchway.

    Prediction:

    WAFA SC 2-1 Hearts of Oak

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • Kwesi Arthur to perform at Legon Cities vs AshantiGold clash

    Hiplife artiste Emmanuel Kwesi Danso Arthur Junior known in music circles as Kwesi Arthur will be performing on matchday 3 of the Ghana Premier League in the match between Legon Cities and AshantiGold.

    The “Woara” hitmaker will be thrilling fans at the Accra Sports Stadium on Wednesday, January 15.

    This is the second time an artist will be performing to delight fans at the Accra Sports Stadium after Shatta Wale’s electrifying performance last week in the match between Legion Cities vs Asante Kotoko.

    Read:GPL: Legon Cities announce special packages for fans ahead of Dreams FC showdown

    The Legon Cities clash against AshantiGold will be played under floodlights on Wednesday at 7:00 pm.

    The cheapest ticket which is for the Popular stand will be selling at GH?10, while the VIP Upper/Lower will goes for GH?25.

    For the centre line, the supporters are expected to pay GH?15 for a seat.

    Read:VIDEO: Watch Legon Cities FC pre-match conference against Dreams FC

    Legon Cities ahead hoping to secure their first win as well as hand the Miners they first defeat of the season. Their confidence is high after their stalemate with Dreams FC on Sunday at Dewu.

    Coach Goran Barjaktarevic has called on the club supporters to have patience as he builds a formidable squad to mount a strong challenge in the Ghana Premier League.

    Legon Cities lie 13th on the standings with 2 points after 3 games.

    Source: Primenewsghana.com

  • I’m not jealous of Man City or Liverpool – Mourinho

    Jose Mourinho says he is not jealous of the Manchester City or Liverpool squads and drew similarities between his time at Porto with his role at Tottenham.

    Injuries to key players at Spurs has left Mourinho short of options with Christian Eriksen, who was jeered off by sections of the Spurs’ support during their defeat to Liverpool, linked with a move to Inter Milan.

    Read:Ghanaians react to the sacking of Jose Mourinho as Man United manager

    Mourinho has been a dealt a harsh hand with long-term injuries to Harry Kane, Hugo Lloris, Ben Davies and Moussa Sissoko, while record-signing Tanguy Ndombele has often had niggles.

    Mourinho is accepting of the situation and knows Spurs have a different profile.

    Read:PL: Jose Mourinho gets first Tottenham victory against West Ham

    “Come on, it is what it is,” he said. “We cannot have a squad like some other teams. It’s not us.

    “Yesterday, I was watching Man City and I looked to the bench – (Raheem) Sterling, Bernardo Silva, (Ilkay) Gundogan, (Nicolas) Otamendi. You know?

  • Barcelona sack Ernesto Valverde and appoint Quique Setien

    Barcelona have sacked coach Ernesto Valverde and replaced him with former Real Betis coach Quique Setien.

    Valverde, 55, helped the club to two successive La Liga titles and they lead on goal difference this season.

    However, the Catalan side have produced a series of unconvincing displays under his leadership and have failed to reach the Champions League final.

    Setien, 61, led Betis to their highest finish since 2005 and to the Copa del Rey semis before leaving in May.

    Read: Barcelona bus gets lost in Saudi Arabia

    He has agreed to a two-and-a-half-year deal and will be presented to the media at 13:30 GMT on Tuesday.

    In a statement, Barca said they had reached an agreement with Valverde to terminate his contract and thanked him “for his professionalism, his commitment, his dedication and his always positive treatment towards all that make up the Barca family”.

    Setien’s success at Betis

    Valverde was under pressure towards the end of last season following the ignominious Champions League semi-final defeat by Liverpool, having led 3-0 after the first leg, and the Copa del Rey final loss to Valencia.

    The defeat by the Reds particularly rankled, because it was reminiscent of the collapse at the hands of Roma in the competition the previous season and suggested he had failed to correct a weaknesses in his team.

    Valverde did guide the Catalans to the top of the table at the halfway stage of this season, but the fluid displays that fans had become accustomed to during the past 15 years were only sporadic.

    Their away form was especially disappointing with losses at Athletic Bilbao, Granada and Levante plus draws at Osasuna, Real Sociedad and Espanyol.

    Setien arrives at the Nou Camp as a highly-regarded coach.

    After managing lower-league sides, he led Las Palmas to 11th in La Liga – their best finish for 40 years – and enjoyed further success at Betis, where in his first season he led them to sixth place and qualification for the Europa League.

    Betis also secured wins over Barca, Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid during his two-year tenure. He left the Seville outfit by mutual consent in the summer.

    Former Barcelona midfielder Xavi had been strongly linked with the head coach’s role. He confirmed media reports that he spoke to the club’s sporting director Eric Abidal and chief executive Oscar Grau over the weekend, before he reportedly rejected the club’s offer,.

    Other names to have been linked with the club included former Tottenham manager Mauricio Pochettino, who managed rivals Espanyol, and current B team manager Xavi Garcia Pimienta.

    ‘Setien is a devout disciple of Cruyffian football’ – analysis

    Spanish football expert Andy West

    The most surprising thing about Ernesto Valverde being fired by Barcelona is that it took so long to happen.

    Ever since that earth-shattering night at Anfield in May, Valverde never really looked capable of turning around the team’s pretty aimless path.

    Now that task will fall to former Las Palmas and Real Betis manager Quique Setien, who will be fervently focused on restoring the team’s famed fast-paced, high-pressing, incisive-passing style, which had been slowly eroded by the more pragmatic Valverde.

    Setien – whose stubborn nature makes him a divisive figure across Spain – is a devout disciple of Cruyffian football, and from now on it is certain that Barca will once again play ‘Barca’ football.

    Whether they can play it well, though, is another matter – the ageing legs of Lionel Messi, Sergio Busquets, Gerard Pique and Jordi Alba may struggle to maintain the physical intensity required to make that approach successful, and the coming months will be fascinating test of whether a high-minded football philosophy can still deliver results.

     

  • Gas explosion wipes out entire family at Ablekuma

    A 45-year-old police officer together with her three children perished in a gas explosion on Sunday at Ablekuma, a suburb of Accra

    The officer, identified as Inspector Kate Abban was reportedly preparing food for her family when the incident happened last Sunday.

    Narrating the incident in an interview with Adom FM monitored by theghanareport.com, Sarah, sister of the deceased said, the family had just returned from church and Kate was preparing food when the gas cylinder exploded.

    Ebenezer Abban and Joyce Abban, who were washing bowls in the kitchen also sustained serious injuries and later lost their lifes at the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital.

    21-year-old, Emmanuel Agyei, a student at the Ghana Telecom University, also sustained severe injuries when he tried rescuing his mother and siblings.

    According to Sarah, Emmanuel and Joyce died on Sunday, January 12, 2020.

  • Growing phenomenon of streetism is a powder keg waiting to explode

    The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which Ghana subscribes to and the African Union Agenda 2064 among others calls for an end to all forms of barriers to the well-being of all persons particularly children.

    A group of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in the country have noted that government’s record on the protection of children in the country is awful and are therefore urging government to disburse allocated funds and increase the funding for protecting children while fully implement policies that have been adopted in that regard.

    Read: Hawkers can have bright future if society supports them Samuel Amo Tobin

    The NGOs, which participated in the 2010 Ghana NGO Forum held last year, note that although a lot of work by the NGO sector, and UNICEF in collaboration with teams from the various ministries has gone into various well-crafted and fully costed policies and plans for the protection of Ghana’s children, they have lacked full and effective implementation.

    Data screened through national, ministerial and agency budgets show that in 2017, GHC 72.6 million was allocated for child protection of which only 33.1 was disbursed.

    Child protection allocations are critically important as they address the needs of the most vulnerable children, and the economic benefits of preventing abuse, or addressing existing abuse are substantial. The growing phenomenon of streetism is becoming alarming due to population pressure and neglect and the need for child protection is even more pronounced.

    Thus, the call by the NGOs is not be viewed as an indictment but rather, the state ought to step up its child protection efforts to forestall the any future eventuality.

    Ghana’s report on the implementation of the United Nations Convention on the rights of the child will be submitted to the United Nations this year (2020). It is therefore in the country’s interest to ensure its child protection regime meets internationally-acclaimed standards.

    Source: Business & Financial Times

  • Four sustain cutlass wounds in Sissala East violent chieftaincy clash

    At least four persons have sustained varying degrees of cutlass wounds in a violent chieftaincy clash at Sakai in the Sissala East Municipality of the Upper West Region.

    The incident which happened on Sunday evening at about 4:30 pm has left several others, particularly women in fear and panic after a heavy joint police-military team raided the area to restore calm.

    The Sissala East Municipal Police Commander, ASP Stephen Abanga, confirming the incident to Citi News said the four injured persons are currently receiving treatment at the Sassala East Municipal hospital in Tumu.

    He said investigations have since been launched to arrest the perpetrators of the clash.

    Citi News sources indicate that the Sissala East Municipal Chief Executive (MCE), Karim Nanyua is currently in an emergency security council meeting with the various security agencies to find a swift solution to the impasse.

    Issues of chieftaincy dispute keep reoccurring in the Northern parts of the country.

    In most cases, residents are left with no other option than to flee the affected communities.

    Last week at Choggu-Naa Kuraa for instance, two persons died as a result of gunshot wounds in a chieftaincy dispute.

    Usually, these disputes are protracted ones lingering for years and triggering violence.

    The various regional security councils have resorted to placing curfews on the communities in order to maintain law and order and protect the safety of residents.

    Source: citinewsroom.com

  • Talks to resume over Ethiopia’s mega-dam

    The latest talks to resolve the dispute between Ethiopia and Egypt over the future of a giant hydropower project on the River Nile are due to resume in Washington DC later on Monday.

    Ethiopia’s mega-dam has caused a row with Egypt which some fear could lead to war, and the US is now helping to mediate.

    Egypt fears the project will allow Ethiopia to control the flow of the Nile which Egypt relies on for 90% of its water.

    Read:Nile dam dispute: Egypt needs water, Ethiopia seeks electricity, Sudan wants both

    At the center of the dispute is the speed with which Ethiopia fills the mega-dam.

    This will affect the flow downstream as the longer it takes to fill the reservoir the less impact there will be on the level of the river.

    Ethiopia wants to do it in six years but Egypt has proposed a longer period.

    The latest round of talks, last week, ended in deadlock.

    Read:Troubled waters for Egypt as Ethiopia pushes Nile dam

    Last year a deadline of 15 January was set to solve the long-standing impasse.

    The next step will be for the water ministers, along with their countries’ foreign ministers, to try and come to a deal before the deadline.

    If they still can’t agree by 15 January, the negotiators will request another mediator, or refer the matter to the heads of states.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Retired Pope warns against celibacy change

    Retired Pope Benedict XVI has issued a defence of priestly celibacy in the Catholic Church as his successor considers easing a ban on married men serving as priests.

    Pope Benedict made the appeal in a book co-authored with Cardinal Robert Sarah.

    It comes in response to a proposal to allow married men to be ordained as priests in the Amazon region.

    Read:Pope Francis summons bishops to Vatican amid sexual abuse claims

    Pope Benedict, who retired in 2013, said he could not remain silent on the issue.

    In the book, Pope Benedict says celibacy, a centuries-old tradition within the Church, has “great significance” because it allows priests to focus on their duties.

    The 92-year-old says “it doesn’t seem possible to realise both vocations [priesthood and marriage] simultaneously”.

    It is rare for Pope Benedict, who was the first pontiff to resign in almost 600 years, to intervene in clerical matters.

    Read:Pope scraps pontifical secrecy rule over sex abuse

    The Vatican is yet to comment on the book, which was previewed in part by French newspaper Le Figaro before its full publication on Monday.

    Vatican commentators have reacted with surprise to Benedict’s intervention, suggesting it breaks with convention.

    “Benedict XVI is really not breaking his silence because he (and his entourage) never felt bound to that promise. But this is a serious breach,” Massimo Faggioli, a historian and theologian at Villanova University, tweeted.

    The comments by Pope Benedict were described as “incredible” by Joshua McElwee, a journalist for the National Catholic Reporter.

    Read:Pope admits clerical abuse of nuns including sexual slavery

    A theological conservative with traditional views on Catholic values, Pope Benedict pledged to remain “hidden from the world” when he retired, citing poor health.

    But since then, he has made his views known in articles, books and interviews, advocating a different approach to Pope Francis, who is seen as more progressive. Pope Benedict still lives within the walls of the Vatican in a former monastery.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Death toll in Niger army base attack ‘rises to 89’

    The death toll from Thursday’s attack by rebel fighters on a Niger army base has risen to at least 89, security sources said, surpassing a raid last month that killed 71 soldiers as the deadliest against Nigerien forces in years.

    The government said on Thursday that 25 soldiers were killed, according to a provisional death toll, adding that it had successfully repelled the attack in the western town of Chinagodrar by assailants on motorcycles and other vehicles.

    Four security sources told Reuters news agency that at least 89 members of Niger’s security forces killed in the attack were buried on Saturday in the capital, Niamey.

    Read:Nigeria army, police smoke out armed robbers holed up in bank

    One of the sources said the actual death toll could be higher because a number of soldiers were buried immediately on Thursday in Chinagodrar.

    Defence Minister Issoufou Katambe said an updated death toll would be announced after a national security council meeting on Sunday.

    The Chinagodrar attack, coming a month after the raid in nearby Inates by fighters from an affiliate of the ISIL (ISIS) group that killed 71 soldiers, highlights the deteriorating security situation near Niger’s borders with Mali and Burkina Faso.

    Read:Mali army loses 24 soldiers in Niger border attack

    Attacks have risen fourfold over the past year in Niger, killing nearly 400 people, according to data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, a non-profit research organisation, despite efforts by international forces to stop fighters linked to ISIL and al-Qaeda.

    French fighter jets were scrambled on Thursday to scare off the attackers, France’s regional taskforce said, possibly averting an even heavier casualty count.

    No group has yet claimed responsibility for the attack, but Katambe said on Friday that the army would launch a new offensive against armed groups.

    Read:Saudi Arabia rules women are permitted to join the army

    Al Jazeera’s Ahmed Idris, reporting from the Nigerian capital Abuja, said the latest attack happened in an area that does not have a heavy security presence.

    “The countries in the Sahel region are vast and largely unmanned. These armed groups are getting bolder. They are having a field day,” Idris said.

    “According to sources, the attack was carried by attackers who came from Mali. Many people in the region believe these kinds of attacks will continue simply because the governments in the region do not have the manpower to deal with these fighters,” he added.

    West Africa’s Sahel region, a semi-arid belt beneath the Sahara, has been in crisis since 2012, when ethnic Tuareg rebels and loosely aligned rebel fighters seized the northern two-thirds of Mali, forcing France to intervene to temporarily beat them back.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • Why the football fan was shot in the eye in Kumasi

    A football fan believed to be a Kotoko supporter, was Sunday evening shot beneath the eye by a police officer on duty at the Baba Yara Sports Stadium in Kumasi.

    It was not clear exactly what the fan did but the rubber bullet fired by the police officer hit the fan in the face and made him bled profusely.

    He was rushed to the Emergency Unit of the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital for medical attention.

    The Public Relations Officer of Kotoko, Kennedy Boakye Ansah described the action of the police as senseless since the referees who most of the supporters had amassed outside of the entrance of the dressing room and were waiting for, had already been put into a police armored vehicle and driven away.

    Read:Stadium shooting: Injured fan stable, responding to treatment Kotoko

    As a ressult, he said there was no need for the police to have fired that shot.

    According to him, the Kumasi Asante Kotoko would be lodging a formal complaint with the police to investigate the issue.

    Meanwhile, he said the club would be footing the hospital bill of the wounded fan.

    The match Day 3 of the on going Ghana Premier league between Asante Kotoko and Berekum Chelsea was marred by officiating.

    This compelled the supporters to throw missiles onto the pitch and halted the game for about 10 minutes.

    It all started when an off the ball incident on the blind side of the central referee, Charles Bulu who was told by the fourth referee that the culprit of the incident was Ampem Dacosta.

    Read:GFA condemns Kotoko-Berekum Chelsea post-match violence

    Without wasting much time, Bulu flashed the yellow card to Dacosta who had already received a yellow and therefore was marched off to the dressing room.

    This angered the supporters who started throwing missiles including sachet and bottle water onto the pitch.

    Even after the game, not even the shield provided by the police would spare them from attacks from the supporters.

    Even after the match, the supporters still waited for the referees in front of the mixed zone area.

    It was at that spot that the police fired the rubber bullet and injured the fan.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • Round Up of Ghanaian players in the CAF Champions League and Confederation Cup this weekend

    The CAF Champions League and Confederation Cup entered the round four with TP Mazembe, Mamelodi Sundowns and Pyramids FC only sides to book their spot in the quarter-finals.

    Here is a wrap of how Ghanaian players fared in the two continental competitions.

    CAF CHAMPIONS LEAGUE

    ISAAC AMOAH was an unused substitute for TP Mazembe when they came from a goal down to beat Angolan champions Primeiro de Agosto 2-1 in Lubumbashi on Saturday.

    The DR Congo have booked their place in the quarter-finals of the competition after the win.

    Read:Performance of Ghanaian players: Andre Ayew bags seventh goal, Kudus on target

    Former Hearts of Oak star ISAAC MENSAH played 68 minutes as Petro Atletico drew 2-2 with Moroccan giants Wydad AC at the Estadio 11 de Novembro in Angola on Saturday.

    AS Vita Club suffered another home defeat at the Stade des Martyrs in when they were beaten 2-0 by defending champions Espérance de Tunis.

    ZAKARIA MUMUNI started and played 66 minutes for the DR Congo giants on Saturday.

    CAF CONFEDERATION CUP

    Striker JOHN ANTWI came on as a substitute in the 65th minute for Pyramids FC to help the Egyptian moneybags to be the first side to secure a place in the quarter-finals with a 2-0 win over Al Masry SC in Cairo on Sunday.

    Read:Performance of Ghanaian players abroad wrap-up

    Defender KEVIN OWUSU AMOH played full throttle for Zambian side Zanaco FC in their 3-0 thrashing of ESAE FC of Benin in Lusaka on Sunday.

    EMMANUEL OKUTU lasted all the minutes of the game on the bench for the Zambian side.

    DANIEL DARKWAH put in a 74 minutes shift for Enyimba International FC as they mauled Algerian side Paradou AC 4-1 in Aba on Sunday.

    NANA BONSU kept the posts for Enugu Rangers FC when they were held by Mauritanian giants FC Nouadhibou to a 1-1 stalemate in Enugu on Sunday.

    GODFRED ASANTE and ENOCK ATTA AGYEI enjoyed 90 minutes for Horoya AC as they travelled to Mali to hold Djoliba AC to a scoreless draw.

    Read:Performance of Ghanaian players abroad: Schlupp, Kudus score for clubs

    HUDU YAKUBU was an unused substitute for the Guinean giants on Sunday.

    MOHAMMED SAABA GARIBA played all minutes for FC San Pedro but that wasn’t enough for Ivorian side to avoid a 3-0 defeat in the hands of Hassania Agadir in Morocco on Sunday night.

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • We beat Kotoko because Maxwell Konadu fell into my trap – Berekum Chelsea coach

    Berekum Chelsea coach Joseph Asare Bediako says his team got the win over Asante Kotoko because he got his tactics to spot on over his fellow opponent Maxwell Konadu.

    The Berekum based club on Sunday stunned the Porcupines at the Baba Yara Stadium. A first-half strike from Kofi Owusu propelled Chelsea to their second win of the 2019/20 which also handed the Kotoko their first defeat.

    Read:2019/20 Ghana Premier League: Week 3 Match Preview Asante Kotoko v Berekum Chelsea

    Speaking after the game on his outfit win, Joseph Asare Bediako maintained that he has studied Kotoko style of play and knew what they were bringing on board.
    He added that the tactics Maxwell Konadu used in the game was the tactics he Asare Bediako used during his coaching days in the Division One and Two.

    ”Our strategy worked well for us and we worked a lot in training for the past week, so we knew what we were going to do and did it to perfection.”

    Read:Stadium shooting: Injured fan stable, responding to treatment Kotoko

    ”This Kotoko is playing whether 4-3-3 or 4-2-3-1, I have been playing since 2005 when coaching in Division One and Two all these years.”

    ”I knew them (Asante Kotoko), I saw them against Hearts of Oak, they played possession football but in their own half and then they just send long searching balls to the wingers Augustine Okrah and Emmanuel Gyamfi because of their speed. So we knew all those things, we practiced on that and won.”

    Source: Primenewsghana.com

  • GFA condemns Kotoko-Berekum Chelsea post-match violence

    The Ghana Football Association has condemned the post-match violence at the Baba Yara Stadium on Sunday.

    Disgruntled Kotoko fans vented their spleen on referee after their 1-0 home defeat to Berekum Chelsea.

    The violence turned tragic when a fan was shocked in the eye by the police as they attempted to disperse the crowd.

    A statement released on Sunday night read:

    Read:Stadium shooting: Injured fan stable, responding to treatment Kotoko

    ”The Ghana Football Association has learnt with extreme disappointment the unfortunate incidents at the Baba Yara Stadium in Kumasi during the Ghana Premier League match between Asante Kotoko and Berekum Chelsea on Sunday.

    “We are saddened by reports of injuries to football fans and the hospitalization of a fan, following an alleged gun shooting incident.

    “Our profound sympathy goes to the injured, and we pray for speedy recovery.

    Read:Results of the Ghana Premier League matches after day three

    “The Ghana Football Association takes a dim view of violence at all league centres across the country and totally condemns what may have precipitated the unfortunate development at the Baba Yara Stadium.

    “While we conduct our own inquest from our designated matchday officials to find out the exact cause of the unfortunate incidents, we call on the Police Service to also conduct thorough investigation, especially on the alleged shooting incident.

    “The GFA wishes to assure the general public that it has zero-tolerance for violence, and in accordance with our regulations, will deal ruthlessly with any official or club that is found to have breached our GFA Regulations and GFA Disciplinary Code.

    “Once again, we wish the injured speedy recovery.”

    This video contains graphic content

    Source: ghanafa.org

  • Partey misses penalty as Atletico Madrid lose to Real Madrid in Spanish Super Cup final

    Ghana midfielder Thomas Partey missed a penalty as Atletico Madrid lost the Spanish Super Cup to rivals Real Madrid in Saudi Arabia.

    The highly contested game had ended in a goalless draw after 120 minutes of football, before it had to be settled on penalties.

    Read:Real beat Atletico on penalties in Spanish Super Cup final

    Real Madrid captain Sergio Ramos scored the decisive spot-kick as Los Blancos beat the Rojiblancos 4-1 on penalties.

    Ramos sent Jan Oblak the wrong way to secure the trophy after a goalless 120 minutes in Saudi Arabia.

    Read:Thomas Partey confirms new contract talks with Atletico Madrid

    Saul Niguez and Thomas Partey missed their penalties for Atletico.

    Real Madrid had ended the game with 10 men after Federico Valverde was sent off in extra time for fouling Alvaro Morata when he was clean through.

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • Real beat Atletico on penalties in Spanish Super Cup final

    Thibaut Courtois was the hero for Real Madrid as they won the Spanish Super Cup final with a 4-1 penalty shootout victory over rivals Atletico Madrid.

    Courtois kept out Thomas Partey’s spot-kick out after making a number of vital saves following Federico Valverde’s red card in extra-time, as it ended 0-0 after 120 minutes.

    Saul also missed for Atletico, allowing Sergio Ramos to convert the winning spot-kick in the first year of the revised format of the competition, which was played in Saudi Arabia.

    It was an 11th Super Cup for Real, who dominated the 90 minutes but ended up relying on Courtois to send the game to penalties with two big stops.

    The La Liga match between the two sides ended goalless in September, so there was no surprise that this was a cagey affair in Jeddah.

    Read:Champions League: Man City face Real Madrid, Liverpool draw Atletico

    Real settled the quickest, but Diego Simeone’s men, who beat Barcelona in the semi-finals, created the first big chance as Joao Felix intercepted Ramos’ pass on the edge of the area, but his snapshot went wide of the far post.

    Zinedine Zidane’s men began to dominate possession, but this was a Simeone defence they were up against and chances were hard to create.

    Their best of the opening 45 minutes came when left-back Ferland Mendy went on an adventurous run but his shot was easy for Jan Oblak to save.

    They immediately carried more threat after the break as Luka Jovic was in menacing form, going close after getting free of two defenders.

    Jovic was enjoying himself and provided a superb chance for Valverde midway through the second half, but the defender somehow headed on to his own knee inside the six-yard box.

    Atletico had been camped in their half but had a chance to go ahead with 11 minutes left when Kieran Trippier teed up Alvaro Morata but his former Chelsea team-mate Courtois got down well to keep out a low shot.

    Read:Why Salah rejected Real Madrid new offer

    With extra-time looming Real had a chance to claim glory as the ball fell to Rodrygo but he shot straight at Oblak.

    Valverde saw red in the additional period for hacking down Morata when he was through on goal and then Courtois had to produce two big saves to keep his side in it.

    He kept out Trippier’s low cross and then did well to stop Angel Correa’s effort and those saves proved vital.

    After Saul missed Atletico’s opening penalty by hitting the post, the Belgian stopper then made a save off Partey’s effort to put Real in command.

    Ramos finished the job as Zidane collected more silverware.

    Source: skysports.com

  • VIDEO: I don’t want to be President of Nigeria – Aliko Dangote

    Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote says he does not want to be the President of Nigeria.

    In an interview with The David Rubenstein Show, Dangote said he is doing a great job as a businessman and does not want to be involved in politics.

    The business magnate believes his country can also be developed through leadership in business.

    “I think I am doing a great job where I am right now, so I dont think I need to be in a political space.

    “Some of us, we need to lead in in terms of the trajectory of developing Africa through the business, not through political leadership”.

    I did not inherit my wealth

    Touching on the source of his vast wealth, Dangote said although he was born into a wealthy family, he did not inherit his riches.

    He said his late great grandfather was the wealthiest West African in the 1940s and his father was very rich.

    “…One thing that, I am very, very proud of is that I did not inherit any money from my father, I built everything from scratch till where I am”.

    Dangote revealed that his father died when he was aged eight years.

    He said he gave everything he inherited from his father to charity.

    Best investment destinations in Africa

    Dangote also listed his four ideal destinations for foreigners to invest in Africa.

    He named Nigeria, Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire and Kenya as the most ideal investment destinations on the continent.

    Watch the video below;

  • African LGBT+ refugees plead U.N. for safe shelter after Kenya camp attacks

    Dozens of African LGBT+ refugees in northwestern Kenya’s sprawling Kakuma refugee camp pleaded on Thursday with the United Nations to relocate them to a safer place, saying they had suffered violent attacks.

    More than 40 LGBT+ refugees from countries including Uganda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo said they were targeted in two homophobic attacks by other refugees in the last three weeks.

    Fifteen people were injured in the Dec. 21 and Jan. 7 incidences and some taken to hospital with wounds to the head and internal bleeding, they said.

    The Thomson Reuters Foundation was given photographs of people with bleeding wounds on their head and scars on their limbs, but could not immediately verify the pictures.

    Read:No gene causes LGBTQI, they are medical conditions needing treatment Group

    The U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) said there had been some incidents of vandalism in the camp, but there was no evidence that LGBT+ refugees were specifically targeted.

    “They came in large numbers – much more than us. They beat us with sticks and rods, kicked and punched us and told us to leave. They destroyed our shelters,” said Andrew, a 23-year-old gay man from Uganda who did not want to give his real name.

    “We cannot go back to the shelters inside the camp. The other refugees know who we are and will kill us. We ask the U.N. to give us shelter and protection somewhere else – but they are ignoring us.”

    The refugees have been staying outside the UNHCR reception centre in Kakuma since the first attack on Dec. 21, he said by phone from the camp in Kenya’s remote Turkana county.

    Read:RE: UN sacked Professor Adei for objecting to LGBTQ Foh-Amoaning

    The UNHCR’s regional spokesperson Dana Hughes said they were closely monitoring the situation, adding that decisions to relocate refugees were made on an individual basis and required authorization from the Kenyan authorities.

    “Incidents of shelter vandalism were reported to law enforcement authorities in December, however these attacks were found to be attributed to common petty criminality and were not targeted at any particular individuals,” said Hughes.

    The allegation that LGBT+ refugees were attacked on Jan. 7 had not been substantiated, she said.

    “Security reports from law enforcement indicated that there was no attack/assault at the venue.”

    It is not the first time LGBT+ refugees have faced physical violence in Kakuma, a vast camp that is home to more than 180,000 refugees.

    Read:Russia LGBT activists detained during St Petersburg rally

    In December 2018, the UNHCR relocated about 200 LGBT+ refugees from the camp to Nairobi as an emergency measure after a spate of violent attacks against them.

    But Kenya requires most refugees to stay in designated camps and 75 of them were returned to Kakuma in June.

    African countries have some of the most prohibitive laws against homosexuality in the world, with punishments ranging from imprisonment to death.

    Although gay sex is punishable with up to 14 years in jail in Kenya, the law is rarely enforced. The east African nation is seen as more tolerant than neighbouring Uganda and Tanzania, though discrimination against the LGBT+ community is prevalent.

    Gay rights groups say the camps are not safe for LGBT+ refugees and are calling on Kenya to allow them to live in urban areas.

    Read:US cautions gays on Tanzania travel

    “These persons were relocated out of this camp due to such violence last year, only to be forced to return to this dangerous and volatile situation,” said a statement from Refugee Coalition of East Africa.

    “Claims that these attacks do not specifically target LGBTQI refugees are unfounded and patently untrue.”

    Source: news.trust.org

  • Arteta apologises for ‘nasty’ Auba tackle

    Mikel Arteta apologised for Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang’s red card tackle on Max Meyer, calling it “nasty” but insisted it was an out of character challenge.

    Arsenal were reduced to 10 men in the second half of their 1-1 draw with Crystal Palace when VAR intervened to send off Aubameyang for a dangerous tackle after referee Paul Tierney had originally booked the player.

    Max Meyer’s foot gave way under him, twisting his ankle at a horrific angle from the force of the Arsenal’s striker tackle and the Palace man was immediately substituted with manager Roy Hodgson believing he’s suffered ankle ligament damage.

    Arteta had no complaints with the decision to upgrade the punishment from a yellow to a red card.

    Read:Arsenal pegged back by Palace after Aubameyang red card

    He said: “I’ve just seen it and it looked nasty to be fair – knowing Auba there is no intention to make that tackle – hopefully the player hasn’t been injured. Sorry for that.”

    Arsenal looked in full control of the match in the first half after Aubameyang’s opener but allowed Palace to equalise courtesy of a deflected Jordan Ayew strike.

    “I think the first 35 minutes were exactly what I want our Arsenal team to play like,” Arteta said.

    “We were at it, we were very dominant, we controlled the game, we were in the right positions and we were so good in transition.

    “After that we had a spell when we started to give free-kicks away, it’s more stop-start, but I was really pleased with the first half. The first 10 minutes of the second half, credit to them because they pushed, put balls in the box and threw men up front. We had more difficulties.

    Read:Arsenal appoint ex-midfielder Mikel Arteta as head coach

    “We conceded a goal where we switched off completely and it’s unacceptable, I am upset with that, but after that we reacted very well after conceding goal and after Auba’s red card, we were the team that I expected because everyone was at it again.”

    Lucas Torreira was substituted at half-time in the draw having been seen struggling with a muscle problem for various parts of the first half.

    Arteta said: “It’s a muscle injury. We’ll have to assess it with the doctors tomorrow. We will know more the day after.”

    Crystal Palace manager Hodgson concurred with Arteta that Aubameyang’s challenge was worthy of a red card but thought it was an accidental bad challenge.

    “He’s not happy,” Hodgson said when asked about how Meyer felt about the challenge.

    Read:Tariq Lamptey makes Chelsea debut in Arsenal win, Lampard praises

    “I knew it was a bad challenge but I’d like to emphasise Aubameyang hasn’t deliberately tried injuring the player. It’s the type of challenges forwards can make when chasing back. There’s no doubt it’s a red card and a bad challenge. I’m just surprised we had to wait so long for the decision.

    “The position of ankle isn’t pleasant – I’ll be very surprised if there’s no ligament damage. He was very upbeat in the sense he’ll be OK and he’ll get over it but we must wait until Monday when the doctors report back.”

    Source: skysports.com

  • ‘Records don’t feel special’ – Klopp focused on trophies as Liverpool beat Spurs

    Liverpool setting records in the best-ever start to a season by a club in Europe’s top-five leagues “doesn’t feel special somehow”, says Reds boss Jurgen Klopp.

    Roberto Firmino’s first-half goal ensured the European champions opened up a 16-point lead over Leicester City at the top of the table with a game in hand.

    But while Liverpool’s peerless start of 20 wins from 21 games has put them on course for a first top-flight title for 30 years, Klopp played down its significance.

    Read:Klopp forces journalist to Google what position Mourinho played

    “We know about it and it is special but I can’t feel it,” said the German boss.

    “When someone gives you a trophy it is done but until then you need to fight. It is only the start. We need to continue because our contenders are so strong.

    “Pep (Guardiola, Manchester City boss) will not give up. I will do the same. So far, so really good.”

    Klopp’s men have now amassed 104 points across their last 38 Premier League matches, scoring in all 21 of their matches this term.

    Read:Jurgen Klopp signs new Liverpool deal until 2024

    That record was maintained in London by Brazil forward Firmino, who turned Spurs’ young debutant Japhet Tanganga and beat Paulo Gazzaniga with a sweet left-foot strike to give the visitors a deserved lead.

    However Liverpool were then grateful for poor finishing from Jose Mourinho’s side – who were without the injured Harry Kane – in order to record another victory on their seemingly relentless march to a first title in three decades.

    Son Heung-Min and substitute Giovani lo Celso missed excellent second-half chances to give Spurs some reward for a performance that improved as the game went on.

    Read:Klopp: French players are too expensive

    But Liverpool, their position at the top strengthened further by Leicester City’s shock home loss to Southampton, held on to increase the sense of formality about the destination of this season’s Premier League trophy.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Arsenal pegged back by Palace after Aubameyang red card

    Arsenal captain Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang opened the scoring at Crystal Palace on Saturday but was later sent off as the hosts fought back to draw 1-1 at Selhurst Park.

    New Gunners boss Mikel Arteta was on course for a third straight win when his skipper made the breakthrough in the first half, but a deflected effort by Jordan Ayew cancelled it out early in the second period.

    When Aubameyang received a red card with 23 minutes left, the experienced Roy Hodgson would have fancied his chances of gaining three points against the youngest manager in the league and but had to settle for a share of the spoils.

    Read:Arsenal sack Unai Emery after 18 months in charge

    Arsenal’s difficulties this season were highlighted by the fact this was the first time Palace were facing the Gunners after Christmas in a top-flight match with the Eagles higher in the table.

    Hodgson was boosted by the return of Wilfried Zaha after he missed the defeat to Derby with a knock but new loan signing Cenk Tosun was only named on the bench.

    Captain Aubameyang was recalled by Arteta after sitting out the FA Cup win over Leeds and opened the scoring at Selhurst Park in the 12th minute.

    Mesut Ozil’s licence to roam had already caused the hosts problems and he moved inside to combine with Alexandre Lacazette, who played in his fellow forward to curl into the bottom corner for his 16th goal of the season.

    Read:Aubameyang named new Arsenal captain

    It was a breathtaking Arsenal move, which started with a brave through ball between the lines by David Luiz, and Palace struggled to gain possession during the opening 30 minutes.

    Zaha cut a frustrated figure and this was highlighted when he shoved Nicolas Pepe into Lucas Torreira, with the visiting pair needing treatment.

    – Palace settle –

    The Eagles slowly settled into the London derby and Cheikhou Kouyate had their first effort of note shortly before half-time, which Bernd Leno unconvincingly parried.

    Arteta introduced Matteo Guendouzi at half-time, with Torreira not returning but Palace continued to win free kicks in dangerous positions after the break.

    Eventually they made one count, when Jairo Riedewald found Max Meyer in space down the right. His cross was poor, but Kouyate was first to it and set up Ayew, who saw his strike take a big deflection off Luiz and loop over Leno in the 54th minute.

    Read:Aubameyang ready to quit Arsenal as he pulls out of contract talks

    Arsenal’s problems deepened when Aubameyang caught Meyer high on the ankle with a poor challenge by the touchline.

    Referee Paul Tierney showed a yellow card but VAR had a look and after a two-and-a-half minute delay, the caution was upgraded to a sending off.

    Aubameyang was distraught as he left the pitch in the 67th minute and Meyer had to follow him down the tunnel after failing to recover from the tackle.

    That allowed Hodgson to introduce Tosun for his debut, while Arteta withdrew Ozil for Brazilian forward Gabriel Martinelli.

    James Tomkins almost produced a winner 12 minutes from time, but his header was cleared off the line by Sokratis Papastathopoulos and Arsenal then almost stole it.

    Vicente Guaita came to the rescue though, when he superbly tipped Pepe’s shot on to the post and saved Lacazette’s follow-up in the 83rd minute as it finished all square.

    Source: France24

  • Kwadwo Asamoah misses Inter Milan’s 1-1 stalemate with Atalanta despite

    Ghanaian Kwadwo Asamoah failed to make Inter Milan’s squad for the 1-1 stalemate against Atalanta in the Serie A on Saturday night.

    Earlier, this week it was that Asamoah had recovered from a knee injury and expected to be in the team for the clash.

    Read:Find a strategy to accommodate Kwadwo Asamoah in the Black Stars Joe Addo

    However, Antonio Conte decided against including the versatile player in his list as his side dropped points at home.

    Lautaro Martinez scored in the fourth minute but Atalanta profited from slack defending to find the equaliser in the second half.

    The draw leaves Inter on top with a point above Juventus, who play AS Roma on Sunday night.

    Read:Inter Milan ace Kwadwo Asamoah recovers from injury ahead of Atalanta clash

    Asamoah has been an integral member of the Nerazurri’s since arriving from rivals Juventus two seasons ago.

    However, this season the ex-Udinese midfielder has only featured in 8 Serie A games because of injuries.

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • Migrant crisis: Eight children die as boat sinks off Turkey

    Eight children were among the 11 migrants who drowned when their boat sank off Turkey’s western coast, state media report.

    Eight other people were rescued from the waters off Cesme, a tourist resort on the Aegean coast opposite the Greek island of Chios.

    Their nationalities are not yet known.

    Turkey has been a key transit point for migrants trying to reach Europe, mainly via Greece. Many are fleeing violence and persecution in their countries.

    Read:Dozens of migrants feared dead after boat capsizes off Tunisia

    Many rely on people smugglers and face dangerous land and sea routes which often result in deaths. In 2016, Turkey reached a financial deal with the European Union to stem the flow of migrants and refugees to Europe.

    The Turkish Coast Guard said it responded to “screaming sounds” from the sea at around 20:30 local time (17:30 GMT) on Saturday.

    Cesme is just 15km (nine miles) from Chios, where thousands of migrants are living in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions.

    The number of people crossing from Turkey has risen sharply recently. Most of them are coming from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Syria.

    Read:Several drown after three boats capsize in Philippines

    Turkish authorities held some 60,000 people trying to cross the Mediterranean last year, while almost 9,000 suspected human traffickers were arrested, according to state-run Anadolu news agency.

    Turkey is home to some four million refugees, the largest refugee population in the world, and over 3.6 million of them are from Syria.

    Hours earlier, another migrant boat sank in the Ionian Sea near the south-western Greek island of Paxi, leaving at least 12 dead. Greek officials said 21 people had been rescued and that they were still trying to determine how many people were on the vessel.

    The nationalities and age of the migrants have not been confirmed.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Roadside bomb kills two US troops in Afghanistan

    Two American soldiers were killed in southern Afghanistan on Saturday when a Taliban roadside bomb ripped through an army vehicle, officials said.

    Two other soldiers were wounded in the attack in Kandahar province, according to NATO’s Resolute Support mission in the country.

    A mission spokesman said the names of those killed were being withheld pending notification of next of kin.

    Read:Taliban truck bomb kills police, wounds children in Afghanistan

    The troops were on patrol near Kandahar airport in Dand district, provincial police spokesman Jamal Nasir Barkzai told AFP.

    The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, with spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid saying on Twitter that the blast destroyed the vehicle and killed all on board.

    Violence in Afghanistan usually recedes as winter sets in. But this year the Taliban have pushed forward with their operations despite heavy snowfall in the mountains — and despite their negotiations with the US for a deal that would see American troops leave the country.

    Read:Death toll in Afghanistan wedding blast rises to 80

    According to details made public so far, the Pentagon would withdraw about 5,000 of its 13,000 or so troops from five bases across Afghanistan, provided the Taliban sticks to its security pledges.

    The insurgents have said they will renounce Al-Qaeda, fight the Islamic State group and stop jihadists using Afghanistan as a safe haven.

    Last year was the deadliest for US forces in Afghanistan since combat operations officially finished at the end of 2014, highlighting the challenging security situation that persists.

    Read:US meth lab strikes in Afghanistan killed at least 30 civilians UN

    More than 2,400 US troops have been killed in combat there since the US-led invasion in October 2001.

    Source: France24

  • Iran plane crash: Protesters condemn ‘lies’ on downed jet

    Hundreds of protesters have taken to the streets in Iran’s capital, Tehran, to vent anger at officials, calling them liars for having denied shooting down a Ukrainian passenger plane.

    Protests took place outside at least two universities, with tear gas reportedly fired.

    US President Donald Trump tweeted support for the “inspiring” protests.

    Iran on Saturday admitted downing the jet “unintentionally”, three days after the crash that killed 176 people.

    Ukraine International Airlines flight PS752, en route to Kyiv, was shot down on Wednesday near Imam Khomeini Airport in Tehran shortly after take-off, and only hours after Iran had fired missiles at two airbases housing US forces in Iraq.

    Read:Ukrainian passenger plane crashes in Iran

    Those attacks were Iran’s response to the US killing of senior Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani in a drone strike in Baghdad on 3 January.

    Dozens of Iranians and Canadians, as well as nationals from Ukraine, the UK, Afghanistan and Germany died on the plane.

    What happened at the protests?

    Students gathered outside at least two universities, Sharif and Amir Kabir, reports said, initially to pay respect to the victims. Protests turned angry in the evening.

    The semi-official Fars news agency carried a rare report of the unrest, saying up to 1,000 people had chanted slogans against leaders and tore up pictures of Soleimani.

    The students called for those responsible for the downing the plane, and those they said had covered up the action, to be prosecuted.

    Chants included “commander-in-chief resign”, referring to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and “death to liars”.

    Fars said police had “dispersed” the protesters, who were blocking roads. Social media footage appeared to show tear gas being fired.

    Social media users also vented anger at the government’s actions.

    Read:Iran denies missile downed plane, calls for data

    One wrote on Twitter: “I will never forgive the authorities in my country, the people who were on the scene and lying.”

    The protests were, however, far smaller than the mass demonstrations across Iran in support of Soleimani after he was killed.

    What has been the reaction?

    President Trump tweeted in both English and Farsi, saying: “To the brave and suffering Iranian people: I have stood with you since the beginning of my presidency and my government will continue to stand with you.

    “We are following your protests closely. Your courage is inspiring.”

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted video of the protests in Iran, saying: “The voice of the Iranian people is clear. They are fed up with the regime’s lies, corruption, ineptitude, and brutality of the IRGC [Revolutionary Guards] under Khamenei’s kleptocracy. We stand with the Iranian people who deserve a better future.”

    Read:Iran invites Boeing, US investigators to help probe plane crash likely downed by missile


    Source: bbc.com

  • Iran admits it ‘unintentionally’ shot down Ukrainian passenger plane

    Iran said on Saturday its armed forces “unintentionally” shot down a Ukrainian passenger jet that crashed after taking off from Tehran, killing all 176 people aboard.

    President Hassan Rouhani said a military investigation had found “missiles fired due to human error” brought down the Boeing 737 on Wednesday, calling it an “unforgivable mistake”.

    The about-turn came after officials in Iran had categorically denied Western claims that the Ukraine International Airlines (UIA) airliner had been struck by a missile in a catastrophic error.

    The plane, which had been bound for Kiev, slammed into a field shortly after taking off from Tehran’s Imam Khomeini International Airport before dawn on Wednesday.

    It came only hours after Iran’s armed forces launched a wave of missiles at bases hosting American forces in Iraq in response to the killing of Qasem Soleimani, one of Iran’s top generals, in a US drone strike.

    Read:Ukrainian passenger plane crashes in Iran

    Iran had come under mounting pressure to allow a “credible” investigation after video footage emerged appearing to show the plane being hit by a fast-moving object before a flash appears.

    The Ukrainian and Canadian leaders called for accountability after Iran’s admission.

    The armed forces were first to acknowledge the error, saying the Boeing 737 had been mistaken for a “hostile plane” at a time when enemy threats were at the highest level.

    “The Islamic Republic of Iran deeply regrets this disastrous mistake,” Rouhani said on Twitter.

    “Armed Forces’ internal investigation has concluded that regrettably missiles fired due to human error caused the horrific crash of the Ukrainian plane & death of 176 innocent people.”

    Iran ‘saddened’

    In a statement posted on the government’s website, Rouhani said Iran’s armed forces had been on alert for possible attacks by the Americans after the “martyrdom” of Soleimani.

    “Iran is very much saddened by this catastrophic mistake and I, on behalf of the Islamic Republic of Iran, express my deep condolences to the families of victims of this painful catastrophe,” he said.

    Read:Iran denies missile downed plane, calls for data

    Rouhani added he had ordered “all relevant bodies to take all necessary actions (to ensure) compensation” to the families of those killed.

    “This painful incident is not an issue that can be overcome easily.”

    He said “the perpetrators of this unforgivable mistake will be prosecuted”.

    “It is necessary to take necessary steps and measures to remove the weak points of the country’s defence systems so that such a catastrophe is never repeated again.”

    The majority of passengers on UIA Flight PS752 were dual national Iranian-Canadians but also included Ukrainians, Afghans, Britons and Swedes.

    Demands for justice

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky demanded Saturday that Iran punish those responsible for the downing of the plane and pay compensation.

    “We expect Iran… to bring the guilty to the courts,” the Ukrainian leader wrote on Facebook.

    Read:Iran invites Boeing, US investigators to help probe plane crash likely downed by missile

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said closure and accountability were needed in the wake of the incident.

    Trudeau also demanded “transparency, and justice for the families and loved ones of the victims”.

    “This is a national tragedy, and all Canadians are mourning together,” his office said in a statement.

    The disaster came as tensions soared in the region after the Soleimani killing, and fears grew of an all-out war between Iran and its arch-enemy the United States.

    Washington said the Soleimani strike was carried out to prevent “imminent”, large-scale attacks on American embassies.

    Tehran had vowed “severe revenge” for the killing of Soleimani before launching missiles at the bases in Iraq.

    ‘US adventurism’

    “Human error at time of crisis caused by US adventurism led to disaster,” Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif tweeted.

    “Our profound regrets, apologies and condolences to our people, to the families of all victims, and to other affected nations.”

    Iran has invited the United States, Ukraine, Canada and others to join the crash investigation.

    Read:US rolls out new Iran sanctions after airstrikes

    It is Iran’s worst civil aviation disaster since 1988 when the US military said it shot down an Iran Air plane over the Gulf by mistake, killing all 290 people on board.

    Video footage of the UIA 737, which The New York Times said it had verified, emerged and appeared to show the moment the airliner was hit.

    A fast-moving object is seen rising at an angle into the sky before a bright flash appears, which dims and then continues moving forward. Several seconds later, an explosion is heard and the sky lights up.

    Many airlines from around the world cancelled flights to and from Iran in the wake of the crash, or rerouted flights away from Iranian airspace.

    Nations around the world have called for restraint and de-escalation, and fears of a full-blown conflict have subsided after US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that Iran appeared to be standing down after targeting the US bases in Iraq.

    Source: France24

  • AC Milan keen on signing Alfred Duncan

    Italian Serie A side AC Milan have upped the ante in the pursuit of Ghanaian midfielder Alfred Duncan from Sassuolo.

    The 26-year-old midfielder is in demand with Fiorentina chasing after his signature all winter but have so far failed to agree a fee with his club.

    Read:Alfred Duncan scores in 8 goals thriller

    But it now appears Fiorentina are not alone now as sleeping giants Milan have joined the suitors for the all action midfielder.

    Duncan can leave Sassuolo, the midfielder, back from a slight injury, had been selected by De Zerbi for Genoa-Sassuolo, only to then suffer a small muscle problem.

    Read:Alfred Duncan at risk of league opener with injury

    The midfielder has a contract due to expire in 2022, Sassuolo usually does not give in January but in this case it could make an exception.

    The news of the last few hours is that Milan has also moved with great curiosity for Duncan after the concrete attempts of last summer. Possible situation, Fiorentina is at the wheel. But Milan has entered the race for a player they trailed all summer .

    Source: ghanaguardian.com

  • Swarms of locusts threaten food security in Kenya – Govt

    Large swarms of desert locusts are spreading through Kenya, after wreaking havoc in Somalia and Ethiopia, posing a significant threat to food security, the agriculture minister said Friday.

    The locusts — part of the grasshopper family — have led to what the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has termed the “worst situation in 25 years” in the Horn of Africa.

    Swarms formed in eastern Ethiopia and northern Somalia and have moved through the region, possibly still threatening South Sudan and Uganda.

    Kenyan Agriculture Minister Mwangi Kiunjuri told a press conference that the swarms had crossed the border from Somalia on December 28, and had now spread to northern Mandera and Marsabit, eastern Wajir and Garissa, as well as central Isiolo and Samburu.

    Read:Changing tides as men lead war against female circumcision in Kenya

    “We recognise that the pest invasion and potential to spread rapidly to other counties pose (an) unprecedented threat to food security and livelihoods in the country,” said Kiunjuri.

    Desperate measures have seen police deployed to shoot in the air and spray teargas at the critters, while residents clap their hands, whistle and bang bottles and cans together to try chase away the thick clouds of locusts, according to images obtained by AFP.

    However Kiunjuri said the government had obtained pesticides and two aircraft to spray affected areas, and hopes to soon have a third.

    The FAO estimated that there was low risk of breeding in Kenya, however said a “potentially threatening situation” was developing on both sides of the Red Sea, with growing populations on the coasts of Egypt, Sudan, Eritrea, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.

    Read:Somalis fight locust invasion by eating them

    The United Nations agricultural organisation in December said some 70,000 hectares (173,000 acres) of land had been infested in Ethiopia and Somalia.

    “Insecurity and a lack of national capacity have so far not allowed control operations in Somalia,” the FAO said in a statement this week.

    Desert locusts — whose destructive infestations cause major crop damage and hunger — are a species of grasshopper that live largely solitary lives until a combination of conditions promote breeding and lead them to form massive swarms.

    According to the FAO, swarms can travel up to 130km (80 miles) per day — a kilometre-wide (half-mile-wide) swarm can contain up to 80 million locusts.

    Source: France24

  • Boy kills teacher, self in Mexico school shooting

    An 11-year-old boy shot and killed his teacher Friday at a school in northern Mexico and wounded six other people, then killed himself, authorities said.

    The wounded — five pupils and a physical education teacher — were taken to a local hospital, where they were in stable condition, said Governor Miguel Angel Riquelme of the state of Coahuila, which borders the United States.

    Panicked parents rushed to the private elementary school, the Colegio Cervantes, as officials evacuated the trim brick building and police and soldiers put it on lockdown.

    Riquelme said the student had asked for permission to go to the bathroom shortly after the school day began. When he did not return after about 15 minutes, his teacher, a 50-year-old woman, went to see if anything was wrong.

    Read:Nigerian woman kills husband by squeezing his scrotum

    He emerged from the bathroom with two guns and opened fire, killing his teacher and wounding the group of six, who were passing through the hallway, before shooting himself, Riquelme said.

    “We deeply regret this incident… which is shocking for us all,” the governor told a news conference.

    “I want to reiterate that this sort of thing is not the norm in our schools.”

    Mexico is more used to seeing school shootings in the neighboring United States than up close.

    However, the incident was not without precedent. In 2014, a 15-year-old shot and killed a schoolmate in central Mexico State, and in 2017 a 15-year-old shot and wounded four classmates at a high school in the northern city of Monterrey.

    Read:Man kills father over cooked yam

    Video game? Columbine?

    Riquelme said the boy had not shown behavioral problems, but had told classmates that “today was the today,” and talked to them about the first-person shooter video game “Natural Selection.”

    In the bathroom, he changed into a T-shirt with “Natural Selection” written on it before carrying out the shooting, said state prosecutor Gerardo Marquez.

    “Natural Selection” was also written on a T-shirt worn by one of the shooters at Columbine High School in 1999, when two students killed 13 schoolmates and then themselves.

    The video game, whose first edition was released in 2002, has no direct link with the Columbine shooting.

    Read:Church usher kills wife; stabs her 92 times

    As for a possible link with Columbine, he said: “We have to follow every possible line of investigation, and that is one of them.”

    The student, who was in his final year of elementary school, lived with his grandparents and made good grades, officials said.

    Source: France24

  • US rolls out new Iran sanctions after airstrikes

    In a joint statement to the press on Friday, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin announced a new raft of economic sanctions against several senior Iranian officials and major companies.

    The financial penalties came as a response to Iranian airstrikes against US bases in Iraq, which were in turn in retaliation for the assassination of Iran’s General Qassem Soleimani.

    Soleimani had been the commander of the Quds Force, a special unit of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards. He was also known to be in charge of attacks on US targets within Iraq.

    Read:At UN, US justifies killing Iranian commander as self-defence

    “We don’t know exactly which day it would’ve been executed but it was very clear, Qassem Soleimani himself was plotting a broad, large-scale attack against American interests and those attacks were imminent,” Pompeo said.

    New sanctions will target individuals and firms who own, operate, or assist “sectors of the Iranian economy including construction, manufacturing, textiles and mining,” Mnuchin said.

    The plan is also to target the “inner heart of Iranian security apparatus” with the sanctions.

    Read:Iran denies missile downed plane, calls for data

    ‘It is likely that plane was shot down by an Iranian missile’

    While the Iranian airstrikes did not kill any US personnel, Pompeo said he believed it possible that the crash of a Ukrainian Airlines flight outside of Tehran on Wednesday that killed 176 civilians could have been caused by an Iranian missile launch.

    “We do believe it’s likely that plane was shot down by an Iranian missile. We are going to let the investigation play out before we make a final determination,” he said.

    Government officials in the US, UK, and Canada have said there is evidence that the crash was caused by a surface-to-air missile, though with the caveat that the passenger jet was not necessarily downed on purpose.

    Read:Iran invites Boeing, US investigators to help probe plane crash likely downed by missile

    During the press conference, Mnuchin said sanction waivers would be given to anyone wanting to “help facilitate the investigation” into the crash.

    Source: dw.com

  • VIDEO: Watch Legon Cities FC pre-match conference against Dreams FC

    Legon Cities FC is poised for their first win of the season ahead of their trip to Dreams FC on Sunday.

    Ahead of matchday 3 of the season, coach of the club Goran Barjaktarevic and captain Fatau Dauda have stated how important it is to start winning games.

    Read:GPL: Legon Cities announce special packages for fans ahead of Dreams FC showdown

    Fatau Dauda, who has enormous experience in the local scene was worried about how they drop points from winning positions and hope that changes in subsequent games.

    Watch video of the prematch conference below:


    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • How StarTimes won the Ghana Premier League rights

    Chinese pay-television provider StarTimes has shed light on the details of the bid which won it the rights of the Ghana Premier League and the MTN FA Cup.

    Speaking at a press briefing on Friday, Mrs Akorfa Banson, the Head of Marketing of StarTimes said in addition to the five-year deal worth $5.25million, it will invest an additional $1,000,000 on production and $500,000 on promotion.

    Read:StarTimes acquire rights for Euro 2020, Euro qualifiers

    She said StarTimes has invested heavily in the latest sports broadcast solutions and software which will bring the image of the Ghana Premier League to international standards.

    She stated that 38 live games will be produced for the remaining first half of the season in a bid to give all the clubs equal TV exposure.

    Read:GBC blasts GFA for awarding GHPL broadcast rights to StarTimes

    The coverage will start with the live telecast match between Accra Hearts of Oak and Ebusua Dwarfs.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • West Ham want to sign Fellaini

    West Ham are interested in signing Marouane Fellaini, as manager David Moyes looks to team up with the midfielder at a third different club.

    The 87-capped Belgium international was allowed to leave Manchester United after five-and-a-half years in January, to join Chinese club Shandong Luneng.

    Read:West Ham United: Missing out on Europe would be a failure, says Declan Rice

    Fellaini has two years left on his contract in China, however, the Chinese FA are introducing a salary cap which means the 32-year-old would have to take a 75 per cent pay cut if he stayed beyond the end of his current deal.

    West Ham boss Moyes has previously coached Fellaini twice, taking him from Everton to Manchester United on Deadline Day 2013 for £27.5m.

    Fellaini has made 260 Premier League appearances during spells at Everton and United, scoring 27 goals.

    Read:Pellegrini given two games to save his job at West Ham

    West Ham have also agreed a deal in principle to sign Benfica midfielder Gedson Fernandes on an 18-month loan without an option to buy.

    Another possible option in midfield for the Hammers is 21-year-old Genk midfielder Sander Berge.

    Berge played against Liverpool twice in the Champions League this season, and has also attracted interest from Inter Milan and Napoli.

    Source: skysports.com

  • Inter Milan ace Kwadwo Asamoah recovers from injury ahead of Atalanta clash

    Midfielder Kwadwo Asamoah has recovered from injury and is set to make a return in Inter Milan’s serie A clash against Atalanta on Saturday.

    The Ghanaian international has been out since picking an injury in his side’s 2-1 win against Brescia in October.

    Read:Kwadwo Asamoah, Marcelo Brozovic goof about at Inter training

    The 31-year old returned to full training on Wednesday and could make manager Antonio Conte’s squad for the game against Atalanta.

    Asamoah has been an integral member of the Nerazurri’s since arriving from rivals Juventus two seasons ago.

    Read:Kwadwo Asamoah excels as Inter continue winning run at Sampdoria

    However, this season the ex-Udinese midfielder has only featured in 8 serie A games because of injuries.

    He was a member of the Ghana team at the 2019 Nations Cup last summer in Egypt.

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • How things went down in the Situation Room during attack on US military base

    America’s top diplomat on Iran was only a few minutes into a speech on Tuesday afternoon when he was handed an urgent note.

    Brian Hook, the special representative for Iran, was in Los Angeles to talk about US policy toward Iran. But by the time he stepped to the podium, he was already more than an hour late, having spent much of the day on a secure line speaking to US officials in Washington including his boss, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

    And now, he had to leave.

    “The peoples of Iraq and Lebanon and Iran, they want their country back,” Hook said. “And they are tired of Iran being unable to stay within its own borders. Thank you.”

    With that, Hook walked briskly off stage. America’s defense apparatus was spinning into action.

    Read:Donald Trump confirms Islamic State leader killed by US military

    Minutes earlier, US intelligence satellites had picked up signs of a heat signature from Iran, suggesting the country had just launched short range ballistic missiles. The US knew an impending attack was likely, thanks to a tip from the Iraqi government, which had been told by the Iranians an attack was coming and which bases to avoid.

    Still, using information from the satellites and US aircraft in the region — which had intercepted Iranian communications — US intelligence analysts quickly determined that two bases in Iraq were the targets, al-Asad and Erbil. Within minutes, US troops stationed there were warned. They’d already been on high alert and sought safety in bunkers, according to a source familiar.

    Troops took short-term cover the day before out of a concern of a possible attack. Now, the threat was imminent, and the troops were told of incoming missiles.

    At 7:30 p.m. ET, the official announcement went out: Iran had launched more than a dozen ballistic missiles against US military and coalition forces in Iraq.

    Just five days after killing Iran’s top military leader, Qassem Soleimani, in a drone strike in Baghdad, this was the moment that the Trump administration had been preparing for — a direct retaliatory attack from Iran.

    News of the missile strike came as the administration had spent days stuck in a chaotic series of self-inflicted wounds. First, Trump had threatened to target Iranian cultural sites. Then there was the shocking letter announcing the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq that the Pentagon had to walk back as “a mistake.”

    It all raised questions about the administration’s handling of the situation, and even had some Republican allies of the President privately expressing concern about whether the administration was truly prepared to deal with the events it had unleashed with the Soleimani strike.

    The moment wasn’t lost on Trump’s top aides, who convened in the basement Situation Room knowing that the ensuing hours could redeem a chaotic several days — or cement the impression of a rudderless ship.

    Read:US to enlist military allies in Gulf and Yemen waters

    On Tuesday evening, aides watched as the situation went from the potential for dramatic conflict to one that seemed to offer Trump a new opportunity to deescalate. Bolstered by incoming messages from Iran sent through back-channels, Trump’s aides realized the damage would be limited.

    “Iran appears to be standing down, which is a good thing for all parties concerned and a very good thing for the world,” Trump said on Wednesday morning.

    The following account of the events that unfolded over the past are based on interviews with dozens of Trump administration officials, foreign diplomats, as well as staffers and top lawmakers on the Hill.

    Scramble to inform
    Within an hour of the strikes, leaders on Capitol Hill were being briefed. In the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi was discussing the situation in Iran with a group of top Democrats when she was handed a note with news of a rocket attack on a US military base in Iraq. Among those present was Rep. Dan Kildee, who told CNN that Pelosi paused the discussion to alert members of the situation. “Pray,” Pelosi told members, according to Rep. Debbie Dingel.
    Not long after, Pelosi got on the phone with Vice President Mike Pence, who briefed her on the Iranian attacks. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer also received a call from Pence around the same time and was briefed on the attack.

    Meanwhile, GOP leaders were getting briefed directly by the President.

    At the Pentagon, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and senior defense officials as soon as he got word of the attack. Less than an hour after news broke of the Iranian strike, Esper’s office reached out to Iraqi Prime Minister Adil Abdul al-Mahdi, who just days earlier had criticized the US drone strike on Soleimani as a “flagrant violation of the conditions for the presence of the American forces in Iraq.”

    At first Esper’s team couldn’t get through. It was around 3 a.m. in Baghdad and the number the Pentagon had for Mahdi’s office wasn’t working, said a source familiar with the outreach. They contacted the ambassador in Washington at home, who managed to connect the two parties.

    After making a few calls to senior congressional officials, Esper and Army Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, headed to the White House.

    Read:US military confirms terror attack on US base in Kenya

    In the Situation Room
    Just before 7:30 p.m. ET, Esper, Milley and Pompeo all pulled up to the White House within a few minutes of each other. Pompeo arrived first. As he waited for the others, Pompeo turned the light on in the back seat of his Cadillac sedan and was reading from two cellphones. Once the other two cars arrived, Pompeo, Esper and Milley all entered the West Wing together.

    Soon, a group of senior administration officials were gathered in the Situation Room. Along with Pence, Pompeo, Esper and Milley, the group included national security adviser Robert O’Brien, acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire and acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney. White House counsel Pat Cippolone and press secretary Stephanie Grisham were there, while CIA Director Gina Haspel joined by teleconference.

    The first objective was to determine whether any Americans had died in the strike. A senator who spoke with Trump told CNN the President appeared ready to attack Iranian facilities had there been even one American casualty.
    Though it took well into the night to confirm, the early evidence suggested there had not been any American deaths.

    That lack of casualties fed a sense of restraint in the room, according to sources. While some consideration was given to striking back at Iran that night, according to one White House official, the decision was made to hold off until more information came in regarding Iran’s intentions and the conditions on the ground.

    One of the initial reactions in the room was one of surprise that the Iranians fired so few missiles out of their arsenal of thousands, this source said. That, along with the expectation that Iran was always going to strike back, created a sense of calm. Though there was an obvious level of tension given the high stakes, part of the reason the group was more relaxed was the initial view among many administration officials that Iranians were more bent on sending a message than in killing Americans.

    One source pointed to how accurate Iranians have been in the past with its ballistic missiles, such as the attack a Saudi oil refinery, suggesting the attack could have been lethal.

    Within hours of the strike, the President had made clear he wanted to make a public address and began dictating an outline of what it should look like, according to a person familiar. As Trump and his advisers continued to meet in the Situation Room, aides began making urgent plans for an address to the nation, including prepping the Oval Office. The framework of a speech started coming together with aide Stephen Miller at the helm and senior advisers weighing in.

    Over the past few days, top White House officials expressed regret that Trump hadn’t addressed the nation sooner after the strike that killed Soleimani, and worried he’d missed a chance to shape the narrative in his favor. Right after the strike, White House aide and Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner was among those pushing Trump to give a speech, but the decision was made to hold off.

    On the Hill, Republican leaders were getting constant updates from the White House, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Senate Armed Services Chairman Sen. James Inhofe. The overall message to the White House from Republicans, according to a number of sources, was one of restraint, and that this was a moment for de-escalation.

    In the end, White House officials said Trump would not emerge on Tuesday night to make an address. The news was met with a collective sigh of relief on the Hill, according to several GOP aides who spoke to CNN.

    Read:Islamic State group chief Baghdadi buried at sea by US military

    Around 9 p.m. ET, Trump began making calls to several GOP lawmakers, including Inhofe, who told reporters Wednesday the President was in a “very, very positive” mood and said he was willing to negotiate with Iran. Inhofe agreed, telling the President this was an opportunity to not just de-escalate but start negotiations.

    At 9:45 p.m. ET, Trump tweeted, “All is well! Missiles launched from Iran at two military bases located in Iraq. Assessment of casualties & damages taking place now. So far, so good! We have the most powerful and well equipped military anywhere in the world, by far! I will be making a statement tomorrow morning.”

    But the night was far from over.

    Iran Back Channels
    Starting late Tuesday night and into Wednesday morning, Iran initiated contact with the administration through at least three back channels, including Switzerland and other countries, according to a senior administration official. The message from Iran was clear: This would be their only response. They would now wait to see what the US would do.
    As part of its response back, the US conveyed that it was fully aware that Iran controls its proxies in the region, including Hezbollah. The source told CNN that Iran tried to “squeak out of it,” saying they are not responsible for those proxies, but the US made clear it didn’t buy that argument.

    By around 1 a.m. ET, the battleground assessment came in, confirming no US casualties. Working through the night without sleep in secure rooms at the White House, national security teams put response options together, including plans to sanction Iran.

    By early Wednesday morning, teams met again with the President, who was given an update on the latest assessment. That’s when Trump made the final decision that the US response would be sanctions, signaling to advisers that the threat of escalation was off the table.

    “They’ve stepped back — now we’ve taken a bit of a step back,” said a senior administration official.

    Trump then began making his own edits on the draft of the speech, as did a handful of other national security advisers including Esper, Pompeo and Milley. As the White House prepared for an 11 a.m. ET address to the nation, advisers kept weighing in on the draft of the President’s remarks, delaying Trump’s address by nearly half an hour.

    As junior staffers and reporters crowded into the red-carpet lined White House foyer, the President’s top national security officials — many wearing their military uniforms — lined up on either side of the podium.

    The wooden doors opened behind them and Trump — silhouetted by late-morning sun — emerged.

    Source: cnn.com

  • British Airways owner’s boss Willie Walsh to step down

    Willie Walsh, chief executive of International Airlines Group (IAG), the owner of British Airways, has announced he is to step down.

    He is set to retire as chief executive and from the board of IAG on 30 June.

    Mr Walsh said it had been a privilege to have worked on the creation of IAG after British Airways (BA) and Iberia were merged.

    Antonio Vázquez, IAG’s chairman, described Mr Walsh as one of the “main drivers” of the project.

    Mr Walsh became the British Airways boss in 2005 and is ending a 15-year career with the IAG group, which also controls Aer Lingus and Vueling.

    He will step down from the role in March before retiring in June this year.

    Read:British Airways presents BA 2119; flight of the future

    Mr Walsh said: “It has been a privilege to have been instrumental in the creation and development of IAG. I have had the pleasure of working with many exceptional people over the past 15 years at British Airways and at IAG.”

    Willie Walsh is a long-standing figure in the aviation industry. He joined Aer Lingus in the late 1970s as a cadet pilot.

    He gradually worked his way up through the ranks to work in flight operations and was appointed as chief executive of Aer Lingus in 2001.

    Luis Gallego, head of the group’s Spanish division, Iberia, since 2014, will succeed Mr Walsh.

    He said: “It is a huge honour to lead this great company. It is an exciting time at IAG and I am confident that we can build on the strong foundations created by Willie.”

    Major disruption

    Mr Gallego will take over as head of the holding company of British Airways after the airline saw major disruption last year.

    For the first time in its 100-year history, BA pilots went on strike in a long-running pay dispute.

    Read:British Airways named Airline of the Year at Global Airlines Awards

    In November, dozens of British Airways flights were also delayed or cancelled because of a “technical issue”. The airline also faced a £183m fine in July for a customer data breach.

    Challenges to consider

    Mr Walsh was boss at British Airways and then IAG for 15 years, more than triple the normal lifespan of a FTSE-100 chief executive. Arguably, though, he achieved more than all of his predecessors put together since the airline was privatised in 1987.

    Previous leaders at BA had tried to do deals with rivals to reduce the company’s reliance on a single market – the UK – and a single airport – Heathrow. They had tried to reduce the power of unions at the company, to tackle its potentially ruinous pension deficit and to restore it to steady profitability.

    Mr Walsh managed to do all four. But his critics will counter that in doing so, he hurt the airline’s status and turned British Airways from the “world’s favourite”, as its marketing claimed, to a run-of-the mill carrier.

    He arrived at BA from Aer Lingus in 2005, an unfancied choice to replace the cerebral Australian Rod Eddington.

    Read:Nearly all British Airways flights canceled as pilots go on strike

    Mr Eddington had been hired, in the words of one board member at the time, “to put a smile on people’s faces”.

    Mr Walsh never showed any sign of being interested in popularity contests and had a distinctly down-to-earth approach to management. BA had tried to do deals with Air France, KLM of the Netherlands and various other potential partners – to no avail.

    Mr Walsh quickly tied up a deal with Iberia and followed on with Aer Lingus, turning BA into the largest player in a multi-airline group, IAG.

    Generous terms and conditions for flight crew were gradually whittled down, and he was able to put enough money into BA’s two big pension schemes that big chunks of the remaining liabilities could be hived off to insurance companies.

    In the process, though, BA has gradually slipped down consumer rankings. Last month, Which? put it alongside Ryanair as one of the UK’s least-favourite airlines, while it has suffered from embarrassing IT glitches.

    Mr Walsh’s successor, the current boss of Iberia, Luis Gallego, will have to consider how to address this challenge when he takes over at the end of June.

    Read:Meet the Ghanaian who saved an old man on board British Airways from dying

    Long-running feud

    Mr Gallego is unlikely to continue one of the aviation industry’s best-known feuds.

    Both Willie Walsh and Sir Richard Branson claimed to have won a previous bet over the survival of Virgin Atlantic.

    Mr Walsh suggested that Branson’s brand could disappear after Delta Airlines purchased a 49% stake.

    In a blog post, Sir Richard said the stakes were high – “a knee in the groin” if the company folded within five years.

    Other spats have taken place between Virgin Atlantic and BA.

    Virgin launched a campaign against BA’s proposed merger with American Airlines in the 1990s, with some planes painted “No Way BA/AA”.

    Sir Richard Branson also won damages and an apology from BA at the High Court in 1993 after BA allegedly gave negative stories about the Virgin founder to the media.

    Source: bbc.com

  • GPL: Legon Cities announce special packages for fans ahead of Dreams FC showdown

    Legon Cities have announced special packages for fans of the club ahead of their matchday 3 encounter against Dreams FC in the 2019/20 Ghana Premier League.

    The 2016 champions (formerly Wa All Stars) will be playing as a guest to Dreams FC at the Threate of Dreams at Dewu.

    In the club’s bid to encourage its fans to troop to the match center in their numbers to intimidate their opponents, they have released a list of packages on Thursday afternoon.

    Read:We have zero tolerance towards poor officiating and match fixing GPL committee

    According to the club under its new investors, fans who will like to watch them play this weekend are expected to pay only 25ghc which includes transportation, match ticket and products from their sponsors and a club souvenir.

    Another interesting offer is that the fans will be served with a local delicacy upon their arrival at the meeting point in Madina.

    The details below:

    Read:Dan Kwaku Yeboah hands over new GPL website to GFA

    “For ONLY 25GHC, you our cherished fan would enjoy a matchday experience of our game against Dreams FC at DawuThe package includes transport, match ticket, products from our sponsors and a club souvenir.Meeting point is Madina Zongo Junction at 11am prompt.A local dish treat awaits you as well…”

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • 2019/20 Ghana Premier League: Match Day three officials confirmed

    Ghana Football Association have announced the officials of match day three of the on-going 2019/20 Ghana Premier League season.

    Highly-rated referee Charles Bulu will take charge of Asante Kotoko’s game against Berekum Chelsea at the Baba Yara Stadium in the top liner coming up this weekend.

    Read:Watch the launch of Ghana Premier League 2019/2020 season

    Below is the full list of match day officials for game week three

    Match: LIBERTY PROFESSIONALS VS MEDEAMA (Saturday)

    Venue: Carl Reindorf Stadium, Dansoman

    Referee: Alphonso Atiapa

    Asst 1: Papala Patrick

    Asst 2: Emmanuel Dei

    4th Official: Bismark Appiah

    Match Commissioner: Joseph Yeboah Acheampong

    Match: HEARTS OF OAK VS EBUSUA DWARFS (Sunday)

    Venue: Accra Sports Stadium

    Referee: Abdul L. Qudir

    Asst 1: Emmanuel Dolagbanu

    Asst 2: Paul Dosu

    4th Official: Akudzi Martins

    Match Commissioner: A.S. Seidu

    Read:Some interesting fixtures in the 2019/2020 Ghana Premier League

    Match: ADUANA STARS VS KING FAISAL (Sunday)

    Venue: Dormaa

    Referee: Adaari Abdulai Latif

    Asst 1: Halilu Alhassan

    Asst 2: Ali Timuah Baah

    4th Ref: Eric Sefa Antwi

    Match Commissioner: Mark Koudua

    Match: ASANTE KOTOKO VS BEREKUM CHELSEA (Sunday)

    Venue: Babayara Stadium, Kumasi

    Referee: Charles Bulu

    Asst 1: Kwesi Brobbey

    Asst 2: Roland Addy

    4th Ref: Julian Nunoo

    Match Commissioner: S. Oduro Nyarko

    Read:Watch the launch of Ghana Premier League 2019/2020 season

    Match: ASHGOLD VS ELEVEN WONDERS (Sunday)

    Venue: Len Clay Stadium, Obuasi

    Referee: Kenny Padi

    Asst 1: Isaac Odoom

    Asst 2: Jasper Adenyo

    4th Official: Selorm Kpormegbe

    Match Commissioner: Kwabena A. Sarpong

    Match: BECHEM UNITED VS GREAT OLYMPICS (Sunday)

    Venue: Bechem

    Referee: Thomas Alibo

    Asst 1: Dakura S. Augustine

    Asst 2: Dawson Peter

    4th Official: Musah Mubarik

    Match Commissioner: G.T.S.K Inkum

    Match: DREAMS FC VS LEGON CITIES

    Venue: Dawu

    Referee: Daniel Laryea

    Asst 1: Courage Kuedufia

    Read:StarTimes gets Ghana Premier League TV rights again

    Asst 2: Balangulla Stephen

    4th Official: Maxwell Hanson

    Match Commissioner: William Gidiglo

    Match: KARELA VS INTER ALLIES (Sunday)

    Venue: Tarkwa

    Referee: Rustum G. Senorgbe

    Asst 1: Kofi Nyarko Bakai

    Asst 2: Shine Ayitey

    4th Ref: Philip Atta Forson

    Match Commissioner: Moses A. Mensah

    Match: ELMINA SHARKS VS WAFA (Sunday)

    Venue: Nduom Stadium, Elmina

    Referee: Benjamin Sefah

    Asst 1: Isaac Asante

    Asst 2: Alex Osam

    4th Ref: Emmanuel Eshun

    Match Commissioner: Agyiri Barnor

    Source: footballghana.com

  • 2020 will be a great year – Kassim Nuhu

    Ghanaian defender Kassim Nuhu is anticipating a great year as the Bundesliga resumes in 2020.

    The Fortuna Düsseldorf defender has had a very good campaign since joining the side on loan from TSG Hoffenheim at the beginning of the season.

    Read:Kassim Nuhu feels no pressure despite heightened expectations

    He has featured in as many games for Fortuna Düsseldorf and also has made a lot of appearance for the National team.

    The player who was on holiday resumed training with with club on Wednesday as they prepare for the resumption of the league later this month.

    Read:Kassim Nuhu sees Fortuna Dusseldorf manager as a father figure

    Kassim took his official Twitter account to charged himself as he look forward to begin the year on high note.

  • StarTimes gets Ghana Premier League TV rights again

    Pay TV provider StarTimes has re-acquired broadcasting rights of the Ghana Premier League, a month after losing the franchise.

    The TV outfit are set to continue their position as official partners for the next five years, the Ghana Football Association (GFA) has announced.

    It is their second time of winning the bid, the first coming in 2016.

    “StarTimes named as Television Rights Holder of the Ghana Premier League and the FA Cup,” a GFA statement on its official website read.

    Read:StarTimes sports season starts on August 9

    “The Ghana Football Association is delighted to announce to its stakeholders that StarTimes Ghana is the new Television Rights Holders of the Ghana Premier League and the FA Cup.

    “StarTimes emerged winners of the competitive bidding process after the GFA accepted their offer, which was the best among other bids.

    “StarTimes will sign a five-year agreement with the GFA worth $5.25m US Dollars to be the exclusive Television Rights owner of the Ghana Premier League and the FA Cup with immediate effect.”

    In 2016, the GFA, then under the leadership of Kwesi Nyantakyi, signed a contract worth about $20 million (€18m) with StarTimes to cover all competitions for 10 years.

    Read:StarTimes acquire rights for Euro 2020, Euro qualifiers

    The deal was, however, abrogated by a new GFA administration last December, with the football’s governing body opening a new bidding window for all interested media outfits.

    “Meanwhile, the GFA has decided to make highlights of the Ghana Premier League and the FA Cup available to other television stations in a non-exclusive category,” the GFA statement continued.

    “As part of the agreement, part of the monetary consideration will be used to produce matches and highlights of the Division One League, the Women’s Premier League and Women’s FA Cup to give the competitions the needed visibility.

    “The GFA, will, in due course, announce names of television stations who have been granted non-exclusive rights for the highlights shows.

    Read:StarTimes to broadcast 2019 International Champions Cup

    “The Ghana Football Association welcomes StarTimes as its partner and is looking forward to having a fruitful and mutually beneficial relationship.”

    The 2019-20 Ghana Premier League, which is about to enter its third matchday, started on December 28 without an official TV partner.

    Matches will be available on TV from matchday three.

    Source: Goal.com

  • Mario Balotelli: Lazio fined 20,000 euros for racist abuse of Brescia striker

    Lazio have been fined 20,000 euros (£16,958) for their fans’ racist abuse of Brescia striker Mario Balotelli.

    Sunday’s Serie A match was temporarily halted and a stadium announcement made during the game urging away fans not to sing discriminatory songs to Balotelli.

    Balotelli, 29, later said the fans should be ashamed of themselves.

    Read:Balotelli suffers racist abuse, threatens walk-off

    The Serie A judge has asked for further details to be given to the Italian Football Federation prosecutor to decide if more sanctions are necessary.

    Balotelli had opened the scoring in the game, which Lazio went on to win 2-1, before fans twice chanted racial abuse in the first half.

    Read:Balotelli is black and needs to lighten up Brescia president

    Afterwards, Lazio said in a statement: “As always, Lazio dissociates in the most taxing way from the discriminatory behaviour carried out by a very small minority of fans during the match against Brescia.

    “The club once again reiterates its condemnation of such unjustified misconduct and confirms its intent to prosecute those who in fact betray their sporting passion, causing serious damage to the image of the club.”

    Balotelli threatened to walk off the pitch in November when he was subjected to racist abuse in a match against Hellas Verona.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Pregnant teacher loses unborn child in a crash 30 minutes after her baby shower

    Mashayla Harper was nearly killed on her way home from her baby shower after what police say was a hit-and-run. Her unborn child didn’t survive.

    A service for her unborn daughter was held Wednesday, but she was unable to attend because she has been in the hospital since Saturday’s crash.

    Harper was 36 weeks pregnant, according to CNN affiliate WDAM.

    Read:Pregnant mother dies at childbirth because her pastor said C-section is a sin

    “That was very emotional. We were looking forward to [the baby] being here. She was going to be a spoiled baby,” Harper’s father, Maurice Pruitt Sr., told CNN Wednesday.

    Thirty minutes after her baby shower in Jones County, Mississippi, Pruitt says he received a hysterical phone call from Mashayla’s mother, Chandra Harper. She had been driving about six or seven cars behind her 24-year-old daughter when traffic suddenly stopped. She asked someone what happened up ahead and a driver told her a pregnant woman had just got into a car accident.

    Pruitt says Chandra instantly knew it was her daughter. She found Mashayla on the ground in front of her car. Pruitt says they are unsure how she got there, but the driver’s door was missing due to the accident.

    Read:Pregnant woman killed by dogs in France during hunt in the area

    The driver of the vehicle that hit the fourth-grade math teacher fled the scene, but was apprehended late Saturday night, Pruitt told CNN.

    James Gilbert, 35, was arrested and charged with leaving the scene of an accident with injuries, according to WDAM. It is unclear if he has legal representation.

    CNN has reached out to the Jones County Sheriff’s Office but has not heard back.

    She’s a ‘strong woman’

    Harper was taken to South Central Regional Medical Center, according to WDAM.

    Read:Two nuns become pregnant after mission work in Africa

    Her father tells CNN that doctors informed the immediate family that her unborn child had died 45 minutes later.

    Doctors told the family Harper had suffered severe trauma, including abdominal, knee and leg injuries. Pruitt said doctors didn’t think she was going to survive the surgeries and that she was revived at least once, calling Harper a “strong woman.”

    Following surgery Saturday night, she was put on life support and was finally taken off Monday afternoon. Pruitt says while she is in and out of sleep, Mashyala kept asking her mother about the baby. He says Chandra was unsure how to tell her daughter about the baby’s passing lest her blood pressure would rise. Eventually, the family told her Monday evening.

    He says his daughter is recovering pretty quickly. “She went from being on life support on Saturday to being in her own [hospital] room today.”

    “The better [Mashayla] gets the better everybody will get. I got her to smile last night,” Pruitt said.

    Source: cnn.com

  • At UN, US justifies killing Iranian commander as self-defence

    The United States told the United Nations on Wednesday that the killing of Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani was self-defense and vowed to take additional action “as necessary” in the Middle East to protect U.S. personnel and interests.

    In a letter to the U.N. Security Council, U.S. Ambassador Kelly Craft said the United States also stands “ready to engage without preconditions in serious negotiations with Iran, with the goal of preventing further endangerment of international peace and security or escalation by the Iranian regime.”

    Read:Key Iran General Soleimani killed by US in Iraq

    The killing of Soleimani in Baghdad on Friday was justified under Article 51 of the U.N. Charter, wrote Craft in the letter seen by Reuters, adding “the United States is prepared to take additional actions in the region as necessary to continue to protect U.S. personnel and interests.”

    Under Article 51, countries are required to “immediately report” to the 15-member Security Council any measures taken in exercising the right of self-defense. The United States used Article 51 to justify taking action in Syria against Islamic State militants in 2014.

    Read:US government website hacked by Iranian group

    Source: France24

  • Iraq set for conflict, even if US and Iran de-escalate

    Arch-foes Tehran and Washington may be temporarily calling it even after Iranian missiles targeted US forces in Iraq, but analysts predict violent instability will keep blighting Baghdad.

    “Iraq will remain a zone of conflict,” said Randa Slim of the Washington based Middle East Institute.

    Early Wednesday, Iran launched 22 ballistic missiles at bases in Iraq hosting American and other foreign troops, in a calibrated response to the killing of a top Iranian general in a US air strike last week.

    Read:Key Iran General Soleimani killed by US in Iraq

    Iran warned Iraq about the raids shortly before they happened and in their immediate aftermath, foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Tehran had concluded its “proportionate” retaliation.

    US President Donald Trump, too, said Iran “appears to be standing down” and even suggested Tehran and Washington could work towards a nuclear deal while cooperating against jihadists.

    That hinted at a common desire to contain the fallout, but analysts say it would not be enough to spare Iraq.

    “Both sides are so mobilised in Iraq, which has become such symbolic terrain for hitting out at the other,” said Erica Gaston of the New America Foundation.

    Indeed, US troops and even the embassy in Baghdad had been hit by more than a dozen rocket attacks in recent months, which have killed one Iraqi soldier and an American contractor.

    The attacks went unclaimed but the US blamed hardline elements of the Hashed al-Shaabi, an Iraqi military network incorporated into the state but linked to Tehran.

    The strike that killed Iranian general Qasem Soleimani outside Baghdad international airport on Friday also killed his top Iraqi aid and Hashed deputy chief Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis.

    Read:World War 3: Iran fires missiles at US targets in Iraq: All the latest updates

    ‘Who is the mediator?’

    Just because the US and Iran have struck each other directly does not mean the Hashed would now sit on the sidelines, said Gaston.

    “The Hashed is closer to the tip of the spear,” she said.

    “There isn’t perfect command-and-control in the Hashed, which includes a lot of angry militiamen willing to take revenge on the US,” she added.

    Bolstered by Iran’s attack, the Hashed said Wednesday it would take its own steps avenge Muhandis’s death.

    “That is a promise,” vowed leading member Qais al-Khazali.

    Hours later, two rockets slammed into the Iraqi capital’s Green Zone, the high-security enclave where the US embassy, other foreign missions and some foreign troops are based.

    Hashed factions decided in recent days to unite under a “resistance” coalition to oust US troops from Iraq.

    The spectre of bloodshed was especially worrisome as there is no evident mediator between the parties, said Slim.

    In Lebanon, Iran’s ally Hezbollah has repeatedly clashed with its sworn enemy Israel but the United Nations’ peacekeeping force in the south has usually intervened before the conflict could spin out of control.

    But “who is the mutually liked mediator?” on Iraqi soil, Slim asked.

    Read:Iran attack: Oil prices rise after Iraq missile attacks

    Baghdad has long warned that tensions between Tehran and Washington, which began deteriorating significantly in 2018, would bring devastating conflict to the entire region.

    Iraq’s government had tried to strike a balance between the two countries, both of which have close political and military ties to various elements of Iraq’s elite.

    Balance now ‘impossible’

    But the stunning developments of the last week — from the killing of Soleimani to Wednesday’s pre-dawn strikes — also hugely exacerbated Iraq’s political crisis.

    “It has made a balance impossible and pushed Baghdad squarely into Iran’s camp,” said Toby Dodge, a professor at the London School of Economics.

    Figures like Iraq’s President Barham Saleh, who was seen as one of the most senior officials with close ties to Washington, would likely see their influence dwindle.

    “If last night was the theatre of retaliation, what today brings is political consolidation and domination of the pro-Iran factions,” Toby said.

    Read:Ukrainian passenger plane crashes in Iran

    The Hashed’s political arm, the Fatah bloc, has already seized on anti-US sentiment over the last week to push for a total ouster of foreign troops from Iraqi territory.

    Some 5,200 American troops and hundreds more British, French, Canadian and other forces are based in Iraq to help local forces defeat jihadist sleeper cells.

    On Wednesday, Iraqis’ reactions to Iran’s strikes were much tamer than the anger expressed at the US last week.

    “Baghdad condemns the US publicly, but not Iran,” said Ramzy Mardini, a researcher and Iraq expert.

    While appearing to be pro-Washington in the current climate carries a political cost, some political figures may be busy behind the scenes trying to salvage Iraq’s relationship with the US and restore some stability, however fragile.

    But, Mardini warned, “if the crisis escalates, Baghdad’s space for manoeuvering will shrink. They’ll be forced to pick a side — and it won’t be the US.”

    Source: France24