Author: Chris Kodo

  • Parliament ‘votes to nationalise Kenya Airways’

    Kenya’s parliament has voted to nationalise Kenya Airways, reports Reuters news agency.

    The country’s main airline is already 48.9% government-owned and 7.8% held by Air France-KLM and is making a loss at the moment, Reuters adds.

    Kenya Airways Chairman Michael Joseph told Reuters the vote was “great news”.

    “Nationalisation is what is necessary to compete on a level playing field. It is not what we want, but what we need,” he is quoted as saying to Reuters.

    Air France-KLM could not immediately be reached for comment.

    Source: bbc.com

  • ‘Speaking against the government gets you killed’ – Rwanda activist

    Rwandan opposition activist Diana Rwigara has spoken to the BBC’s Newsday programme about why she wrote an open letter to her president about the death of a prison guard.

    Ms Rwigara published the letter to President Paul Kagame last week about the murder of Paul Mwiseneza.

    In the letter, she said he was killed shortly after talking to her about unrest at a prison in the capital, Kigali.

    She told Newsday that this was yet another example that the government did not tolerate a dissenting voice.

    “We live in a country where daring to voice your opinion, daring to criticise the government will get you killed,” she said.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Boris Johnson wins race to be Tory leader and Prime Minister

    Boris Johnson has been elected new Conservative leader in a ballot of party members and will become the next UK prime minister.

    He beat Jeremy Hunt comfortably, winning 92,153 votes to his rival’s 46,656.

    The former London mayor takes over from Theresa May on Wednesday.

    In his victory speech, Mr Johnson promised he would “deliver Brexit, unite the country and defeat Jeremy Corbyn”.

    Speaking at the Queen Elizabeth II centre in London, he said: “We are going to energise the country.

    “We are going to get Brexit done on 31 October and take advantage of all the opportunities it will bring with a new spirit of can do.

    “We are once again going to believe in ourselves, and like some slumbering giant we are going to rise and ping off the guy ropes of self doubt and negativity.”

    Mr Johnson thanked his predecessor, saying it had been “a privilege to serve in her cabinet”. He was Mrs May’s foreign secretary until resigning over Brexit.

    The outgoing PM – who is standing down after a revolt by Conservative MPs over her Brexit policy – congratulated her successor, promising him her “full support from the backbenches”.

    Foreign Secretary Mr Hunt said he was “very disappointed”, but Mr Johnson would do “a great job”. He said he had “total, unshakeable confidence in our country” and that was a valuable quality at such a challenging time.

    Mr Hunt added: “It was always going to be uphill for us because I was someone who voted Remain and I think lots of party members felt that this was a moment when you just had to have someone who voted for Brexit in the referendum.

    “In retrospect, that was a hurdle we were never able to overcome.”

    Donald Trump told an event in Washington “a really good man is going to be the prime minister of the UK now,” and Mr Johnson would “get it done”, referring to Brexit.

    The president added: “They call him Britain Trump. That’s a good thing.”

    Almost 160,000 Conservative members were eligible to vote in the contest and turnout was 87.4%.

    Mr Johnson’s share of the vote – 66.4% – was slightly lower than that garnered by David Cameron in the 2005 Tory leadership election (67.6%).

    The former London mayor and ex-foreign secretary spoke to staff at Conservative Party HQ after his victory was announced.

    He was then given a rousing reception by Tory MPs at a meeting in Parliament, where he urged them to “unite, unite, unite and win”.

    The BBC’s Nick Eardley, who was outside the room, said such gatherings had been gloomy and downbeat for many months, but this one was full of laughter.

    One MP told our correspondent: “The BoJo show is up and running.” Another said: “The cloud has been lifted.”

    Resignations

    Mr Johnson will begin announcing his new cabinet on Wednesday, but it has already been confirmed that Mark Spencer, MP for Sherwood in Nottinghamshire, will become chief whip – the person responsible for enforcing party discipline in the Commons.

    A number of senior figures have already said they will not serve under Mr Johnson, though, citing their opposition to his stance on Brexit.

    He has pledged the UK will leave the EU on 31 October “do or die”, accepting that a no-deal exit will happen if a new agreement cannot be reached by then.

    Education Minister Anne Milton tweeted her resignation just half an hour before the leadership result was due to be revealed, insisting the UK “must leave the EU in a responsible manner”.

    And International Development Secretary Rory Stewart confirmed he would be returning to the backbenches, where he would be spending more time “serving Cumbria” and “walking”.

    David Gauke, another vocal opponent of a no-deal Brexit, announced he was resigning as justice secretary.

    They join the likes of Chancellor Philip Hammond, Foreign Office minister Sir Alan Duncan and Culture Minister Margot James who have all said they disagree too strongly with Mr Johnson’s Brexit strategy to work closely with him.

    Boris Johnson will become our next prime minister.

    A sentence that might thrill you. A sentence that might horrify you. A sentence that 12 months ago even his most die-hard fans would have found hard to believe.

    But it’s not a sentence, unusually maybe for politics, that won’t bother you either way.

    Because whatever you think of Boris Johnson, he is a politician that is hard to ignore.

    With a personality, and perhaps an ego, of a scale that few of his colleagues can match. This is the man who even as a child wanted to be “world king”.

    Now, he is the Tory king, and the Brexiteers are the court.

    Read Laura’s blog here

    The EU Commission’s Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, said he was looking forward to working with Mr Johnson “to facilitate the ratification of the withdrawal agreement and achieve an orderly Brexit”.

    The new Tory leader has previously said the agreement Mrs May reached with the EU was “dead”, having been rejected three times by MPs.

    Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament’s chief Brexit co-ordinator, said the parliament would hold an extraordinary meeting on Wednesday in response to Mr Johnson’s election.

    Jeremy Corbyn reacted to the result by tweeting that Mr Johnson had “won the support of fewer than 100,000 unrepresentative Conservative Party members”.

    “The people of our country should decide who becomes the prime minister in a general election,” he added.

    Speaking to the BBC later, Mr Corbyn said Labour planned to table a motion of no confidence in Mr Johnson. Asked when that would be, he replied: “It will be an interesting surprise for you all.”

    What happens now? Wednesday 12:00 BST onwards: Theresa May takes part in her last Prime Minister’s Questions. After lunch she will make a short farewell speech outside No. 10 before travelling to see the Queen to tender her resignation.

    Boris Johnson will then arrive for an audience at Buckingham Palace where he will be invited to form a government.

    After that he will make a speech in Downing Street before entering the building for the first time as prime minister.

    Later, he will begin announcing his most senior cabinet appointments, such as chancellor, home secretary and foreign secretary, and will make and take his first calls from other world leaders.

    Thursday: Mr Johnson is expected to make a statement to Parliament about his Brexit strategy and take questions from MPs. Parliament will break up for its summer recess later.

    The new PM will also continue announcing his new cabinet.

    Newly-elected Lib Dem leader Jo Swinson said Mr Johnson had “shown time and time again that he isn’t fit to be the prime minister of our country”.

    First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon congratulated Mr Johnson, but said she had “profound concerns” about him becoming prime minister.

    The new leader also received congratulations from Arlene Foster, the leader of Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, whose support has kept the Conservatives in government since the 2017 general election.

    She said the pact – known as a confidence and supply agreement – continued and would be reviewed over the coming weeks “to explore the policy priorities of both parties”.

    Leader of the Scottish Conservatives Ruth Davidson, who backed Mr Hunt in the campaign, also sent her congratulations, adding that the new PM had “an enormous task ahead of him”.

    In the often divisive Brexit world of “them and us” it’s easy to forget that, beyond Brexit, EU leaders still see the UK as a close partner and ally. Today’s messages of congratulation to Boris Johnson from across Europe were a timely reminder.

    Whatever happens with Brexit, France, Germany, Poland et al still very much hope to work closely with the UK on international issues like Russia sanctions, Iran, and human rights protection.

    But EU leaders’ welcoming tone does not signal a willingness to accept whatever Prime Minister Johnson might demand in terms of changes to the Brexit deal.

    He’s right when he says a no-deal Brexit is bad for Brussels, but he overestimates EU wiggle room. Amendments will only be forthcoming if EU leaders deem them workable and are convinced the new prime minister commands a majority in Parliament to get an agreement through once and for all.

    Source: bbc.com

  • NDC declares operation ‘No Pick-up, No Mercy’ in Savannah Region

    The National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the Savannah Region has declared operation “No Pick-up, No Mercy” as a protest to demand the immediate return of the alleged stolen Toyota Hilux Pick-up belonging to the Savannah Regional Coordinating Council.

    The NDC said it would team up with residents of the Region to undertake a series of protests to demand the return of the vehicle.

    Mr Malik Basintale, Communications Officer of the NDC in the Savannah Region, announced this at a press conference at Damongo on Monday.

    A Toyota Hilux Pick-up, which was one of the eight vehicles President Nana Akufo-Addo presented to the Savannah Regional Coordinating Council early this year, went missing since the beginning of this month.

    The vehicle was used to send the Savannah Regional Minister, Mr Adam Salifu Braimah to the Tamale Airport, and upon his instructions, the vehicle was parked at his friend’s house in Tamale.

    However, the Minister’s friend said armed robbers attacked him and took the vehicle away.

    The matter was reported to the Police in Tamale on July 07, and on July 16, the Police arrested the driver of the vehicle and the Minister’s friend to assist in investigations into the alleged robbery attack leading to the loss of the vehicle.

    Mr Basintale said the NDC in the coming days would hold a series of events to protest about the incident and ensure that the vehicle was returned to the Region.

    He said the protest would not only help safeguard the future of the Region against misconduct, theft and abuse of office, but also maintain the integrity and credibility of the Region to help attract potential investors.

    He blamed the Regional Minister for negligence and disobedience of laws, questioning his decision to park the vehicle at his friend’s house.

    He commended the Police for their efforts with regards to the matter urging them to continue their investigations into the matter.

    Source: Ghananewsagency.org

  • I was in a meeting when intern called – Cecilia Dapaah explains

    The Minister of Sanitation and Water Resources, Madam Cecilia Abena Dapaah declined being interviewed by an intern because she was in a meeting, the ministry has explained.

    Reacting to a viral story about the Minister being rude to an intern reporter from Accra-based radio station Adom FM who called her for a telephone interview, the PR Unit of the Ministry said the News Editor of Adom FM should have prompted her earlier for the interview.

    The statement also apologised to the reporter and the media house for any inconvenience caused.

    Read the full statement below



    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • Savannah RCC announces GHc10,000 reward for informant on stolen vehicle

    The Savannah Regional Coordinating Council has announced a GHc10,000 reward for any person or group whose information will lead to the arrest and retrieval of its white Toyota Hilux which got missing on July 4, 2019.

    The vehicle with registration No. ER 3516-19 was allegedly snatched by a pair of armed men in Tamale.

    The police in the Northern Region have since launched investigations into the case and want the general public to assist with information.

    A statement signed by the Public Relations Officer of the Northern Regional Police Command, DSP Mohammed Tanko Yussif urged the public to intensify their assistance to the police to retrieve the pickup.

    The statement from the police emphasised that a person or group of persons whose information will lead to the arrest and retrieval of the said vehicle will receive the cash reward.

    “Any person with information on the suspects or the vehicle should contact the police on the following numbers for necessary action: 0245976618 or 0242055550.”

    Two persons were picked up by the police last week to assist with investigations.

    Source: citinewsroom.com

  • US expands powers to deport migrants without going to court

    The US government is introducing a new fast-track deportation process that will bypass immigration courts.

    Under the new rules, migrants who cannot prove they have been in the US continuously for more than two years can be immediately deported.

    Until now, expedited deportations could only be applied to those detained near the border who had been in the US for less than two weeks.

    Rights groups say hundreds of thousands of people could be affected.

    The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) says it will challenge the policy in court.

    The new rule is expected to be implemented with immediate effect after it is published on Tuesday.

    US immigration policy has come under increasing scrutiny in recent months – in particular, the conditions at the country’s detention centres on the southern border with Mexico.

    Kevin McAleenan, acting secretary of Homeland Security, said the change was “a necessary response to the ongoing immigration crisis” and would help to relieve the burden on courts and detention centres.

    US Border Patrol says it has made 688,375 apprehensions on the south-west border since October 2018, more than double that of the previous fiscal year.

    Several analysts predict US President Donald Trump will make hardline immigration control a key element of his re-election campaign in 2020.

    What’s changing?

    Previously, only people detained within 100 miles (160km) of the border who had been in the US for less than two weeks could be deported quickly.

    Migrants who were found elsewhere, or who had been in the country for more than two weeks, would need to be processed through the courts and would be entitled to legal representation.

    But the new rules state that people can be deported regardless of where in the country they are when they are detained, and without allowing them access to a lawyer.

    The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said the new rules would allow it to pursue large numbers of illegal migrants more efficiently.

    Who is affected?

    There are about 10.5 million undocumented immigrants in the US, according to the Pew Research Center.

    The average undocumented adult immigrant has lived in the country for 15 years, it says.

    The DHS has said it could make exceptions for those with serious medical conditions or “substantial connections” to US.

    It also says migrants who are eligible for asylum will still be entitled to speak to an asylum officer, who will access their claims.

    Muzaffar Chishti, a lawyer from the Migration Policy Institute, says many migrants will struggle to be able to prove how long they have lived in the country when they are put on the spot.

    He told CBS News: “When you’re apprehended on the street or at a factory, it’s obviously not easy to establish with evidence that you’ve been here for more than two years because you’re not carrying all your documents with you.”

    Who is objecting?

    Within hours of the policy being announced on Monday, the ACLU said that it was planning to launch a legal challenge.

    “We are suing to quickly stop Trump’s efforts to massively expand the expedited removal of immigrants,” the rights group tweeted.

    “Immigrants that have lived here for years will have less due process rights than people get in traffic court. The plan is unlawful. Period.”

    Vanita Gupta, president of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, told reporters: “The Trump administration is moving forward into converting ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] into a ‘show me your papers’ army.”

    Legal expert Jackie Stevens, a political science professor at Northwestern University, told Reuters that about 1% of the people detained by ICE and 0.5% of those deported were actually US citizens.

    “Expedited removal orders are going to make this much worse,” she said.

    Step into the shoes of a migrant

    Maria is fictional. But everything that happens to her here is based on the real experiences of migrants who have travelled to America, experiences that have been documented by rights groups, journalists and lawyers.

    See for yourself the decisions and dangers a migrant like Maria may face.

    Source: bbc.com

  • South Korea fires warning shots at Russian military aircraft

    South Korea says its jets fired warning shots at a Russian surveillance plane that entered its airspace on Tuesday.

    Officials said the plane twice violated the airspace over the Dokdo/Takeshima islands, which are occupied by Seoul but also claimed by Japan.

    South Korea’s Ministry of Defence said it scrambled fighter jets in response and fired 360 machine-gun rounds.

    Russia has denied violating the country’s airspace.

    Moscow said two of its bombers carried out a planned drill over “neutral waters” and denied any warning shots were fired by South Korean jets.

    This is the first incident of its kind between Russia and South Korea.

    What does South Korea say happened?

    South Korea’s military said that in total three Russian and two Chinese military aircraft that entered the Korea Air Defense Identification Zone (KADIZ) on Tuesday morning.

    It said this group was made up of two Russian Tu-95 bombers, one Russian A-50 surveillance plane and two Chinese H-6 bombers.

    Russian and Chinese bombers and reconnaissance planes have occasionally entered the zone in recent years.

    Overseas aircraft must identify themselves before entering the KADIZ.

    South Korea said one of the Russian planes – the A-50 – flew beyond the KADIZ and entered the country’s territorial airspace at around 09:00 local time (00:00 GMT).

    South Korean F-15 and F-16 planes were deployed to intercept it.

    The military said it fired 10 flares and 80 machine-gun rounds during the alleged first violation.

    It said the Russian plane then left before circling back round again, when it was met by 10 more South Korean flares and 280 machine-gun rounds.

    In its statement, Russia only mentioned two bomber planes. It did not specifically acknowledge the accusation that it had also sent an A-50 that had strayed.

    Known as Dokdo (Solitary islands) in Korea, Takeshima (Bamboo islands) in Japan.

    Claimed by Japan and South Korea, but occupied by South Korea since 1954
    Just 230,000 sq m in size.

    What has the response been?

    The head of South Korea’s National Security Office, Chung Eui-yong, has lodged a strong objection with the Security Council of Russia, and asked the council to take appropriate action.

    “We take a very grave view of this situation and, if it is repeated, we will take even stronger action,” the South Korean president’s office quoted Mr Chung as saying.

    The Japanese government has lodged a complaint against South Korea and Russia.

    Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said: “In light of Japan’s stance regarding sovereignty over Takeshima, the South Korean military aircraft’s having carried out warning shots is totally unacceptable and extremely regrettable.”

    There has been no comment from China.

    So was this a mistake? Did this Russian plane accidentally stray into South Korean territory?

    Officials in South Korea said it was an A-50 aircraft, a type of warning and control plane that is capable of carrying out surveillance and tracking targets on the ground and in the air.

    It encroached on South Korean territorial airspace not just once – but twice.

    It is also worth noting that the Russian aircraft appeared to have been taking part in exercises with the Chinese. In recent years, Seoul has become increasingly concerned about China’s incursion in its airspace, including the use of spy planes, and has raised the issue with Beijing.

    Last year, China’s People’s Liberation Army took part in Russia’s large-scale VOSTOK military exercises for the first time. It was a chance to show off their alliance and combined strength. They have done that again now, over the Korean peninsula – perhaps either testing or prodding a US ally, just as Donald Trump’s National Security Advisor John Bolton arrives in Seoul.

    Flying over Dokdo is controversial. The island is occupied by South Korea but also claimed by Japan, which calls it Takeshima. The two sides are also currently locked in an escalating and bitter trade dispute.

    This incident may demonstrate just how isolated South Korea could be in the region – but also that Seoul will take action to defend its territory when provoked.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Ghana FA to get US$ 200,000 grant from CAF annually

    The Ghana Football Association will now receive an increased US$ 200,000 annually from the Confederation of African Football.

    The 100% increment for national associations was announced at the 32ndGeneral Assembly of CAF held at Marriott Hotel in Cairo on Thursday.

    “Another measure which deserves your attention is the differential increase in indemnities of allowances paid to match officials and taken into account by CAF.

    “These decisions all come into a new wave of reforms and are meant to give a new dynamic to the general activities of our Confederation,” CAF President Ahmad Ahmad stated in his address.

    The grant for each CAF member association is to improve its current infrastructures and develop its football at the national and local levels.

    Source: Footballmadeinghana.com

  • Sports Minister to face Parliament today

    Ghana’s Sports Minister Isaac Asiamah will today, June 23, 2019, appear before parliament to brief them on AFCON 2019 budget as well as answer questions relating to Black Stars’ calamitous exit at the tournament.

    The four-time winners hope of winning their fifth trophy were gatecrashed on Monday following the 4-5 penalties lose to Tunisia in the Round of 16 after playing out a 1-1 draw in 120 minutes.

    It is the first time the team exited the tournament without reaching the semifinal stage since they were eliminated at the group stage in the 2006 tournament also staged in Egypt.

    In the lead up to AFCON 2019, the Sports Minister refused to disclose the budget leading to speculations in the country.

    He will now make the information available to parliament today as well as other matters which include the airlifting of supporters.

    “The minister is coming to give a statement on AFCON tournament, after which he which be questioned,” Ras Mubarak, a Member of Parliament told Atinka FM.

    Source: citinewsroom.com

  • New UK prime minister: Johnson and Hunt await Conservative leadership vote

    Either Boris Johnson or Jeremy Hunt will become the new Conservative leader on Tuesday as the result of the contest to succeed Theresa May is announced.

    The outcome of the ballot of about 160,000 Tory members will be revealed at just before midday.

    The victor will officially become prime minister on Wednesday.

    Mr Johnson, a former mayor of London, is seen as the clear favourite although a number of senior figures have said they will not serve under him.

    Mrs May, who is standing down after a revolt by Conservative MPs over her Brexit policy, is chairing her last cabinet meeting.

    She will officially tender her resignation to the Queen on Wednesday afternoon after taking part in her final Prime Minister’s Questions.

    Her successor will take office shortly afterwards, following an audience at Buckingham Palace.

    The embedded expectation in Westminster is that the name will be Boris Johnson – unless the Tory party has been collectively deceiving itself in the past few weeks.

    If it proves so, the triumph will be extraordinary. Not because of a journey Mr Johnson has been on in the last few weeks – the controversial former foreign secretary and London mayor started out as the frontrunner.

    But because again and again, over many years, his own political accidents and behaviour would have ruled other politicians out.

    Mr Johnson’s supporters would say he has found himself in some serious scrapes.

    His detractors would say he has blundered his way through a high-profile career causing offence and putting his own interests ahead of the country’s.

    It wasn’t so long ago that the same received wisdom in Westminster that said he could never make it, said that he had blown too many chances – his long held public ambition would never be achieved.

    But it is likely his status as Brexit’s cheerleader-in-chief will see him into the job he has craved.

    Conservative members have been voting by post for the past two-and-a-half weeks. It is the first time they will have selected a serving prime minister.

    Since he made the final two candidates last month, Mr Johnson – who led the Leave campaign in the 2016 Brexit referendum – has been regarded as the clear frontrunner.

    Conservative MP Sir Michael Fallon told the BBC’s Radio 4 Today programme Mr Johnson would “improve” the Brexit deal with the EU in a way that would satisfy Parliament.

    “One of the great attractions of Boris taking over our party is that he is optimistic and ambitious,” he said.

    The month-long leadership campaign has been dominated by arguments over Brexit.

    Mr Hunt, the foreign secretary, has said he is better placed to secure a negotiated exit and would be prepared to ask for more time beyond the Halloween deadline to finalise it.

    Mr Johnson has said he is determined to take the UK out of the EU on 31 October, if necessary without a deal. He has said all ministers must “reconcile” themselves to this.

    Chancellor Philip Hammond, Justice Secretary David Gauke and International Development Secretary Rory Stewart have said they cannot support this and will resign if Mr Johnson is elected.

    Mr Gauke said he had held a “very friendly” meeting with Mr Johnson on Monday, in which he told him that he could not serve under him because they have “very different views on the consequences of a no-deal Brexit”.

    But speaking on the Today programme on Tuesday, Mr Gauke said he wanted Mr Johnson to succeed – should he become PM – and he would not vote against the Conservative party in any confidence motion.

    There are likely to be wholesale changes in cabinet if Mr Johnson wins. Such a reshuffle will only begin if and when Mr Johnson enters Downing Street on Wednesday.

    Sir Alan Duncan, who quit his Foreign Office role on Monday, had called for MPs to have a vote before this on whether they actually back Mr Johnson forming a government.

    He said this would show whether Mr Johnson, who like his predecessor will depend on the votes of the Democratic Unionists to form a majority, has “the numbers to govern”.

    However, his request was turned down by Commons Speaker John Bercow.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Woman, 33, poisons husbands soup with weedicides

    The police in Hamlin in the Upper West Region are on a man-haunt for a 30-year-old woman for allegedly poisoning the husband to death.

    The suspect, Mariam Yakubu, reportedly prepared a meal for the husband and allegedly poisoned it with weedicides.

    Disclosing the circumstances which led to the action of the suspect, Abubakar Nuhu, told Nyankonton Mu Nsem that the suspect who has been married to the husband, Issahaku Mohammed, 33, for 10 years, poisoned him over money-related issues.

    According to Abubakar Nuhu, the woman a petty trader was operating an account with the husband as a signatory and it made it difficult for her to withdraw money from the account.

    He disclosed that anytime the suspect goes to the bank to withdraw money, she was asked to go the husband for him to sign before she could withdraw.

    However, the husband took advantage of the situation and prevented the wife from withdrawing money from her account.

    The situation he said became murkier leading to a long separation between the two.

    But the wife is said to have called the husband claiming she had forgiven him and wanted them back as a married couple.

    The husband accepted and as a sign of their reunion, the wife prepared a soup for the husband but unknowingly to him, the wife had poisoned the soup.

    Source: rainbowradioonline.com

  • Western Regional House of chiefs condemn kidnap of Dixcove chief

    The Western Regional House of Chiefs has condemned what they describe as “the abysmal violence” in the abduction of the Paramount Chief of Lower Dixcove, Nana Kwesi Agyeman IX on Sunday, 21 July 2019.

    The Chiefs in a statement said they are “intensely outraged by the utter violation of traditional values, persons, property, and space” in Dixcove.

    Nana Kwesi Agyeman IX is said to have been abducted by aides of the rival Upper Dixcove chief in relation to a dispute over boundaries.

    The captors are said to have forcibly entered Nana Agyeman’s palace by breaking the main gate and holding him hostage.

    The abductors were also said to have damaged some items at the palace and disrupted electricity supply to the community by destroying the transformer.

    This is said to have resulted in a total blackout in the area, enabling them to transport the chief to the palace of the Upper Dixcove chief.

    Reacting to this event in a statement, the Regional House of Chiefs in its statement signed by Awulae Amihere Kpanyinli III, acting President and Omanhene of Eastern Nzema Traditional Area said “this crass barbarity and wanton destruction of property does not only tarnish the image of the hallowed institution bequeathed to us through the ages but contributes to the idea of social lawlessness, conflict, disorder, and insecurity abhorred by this sacred institution.”

    The chiefs said the violence between upper and lower Dixcove contradicts all the doctrines and expectations of the role of the chieftaincy institution.

    “Unchecked, this willful and very disturbing defilement of the person of an Omanhen displays a complete disregard for the norms, conventions and taboos that sew the cultural fabric of social nudity and is possibly a pointer to the direction we may be heading as a society. Inherently we all become victims of social disarrangement and trauma.”

    The statement said no one should be above the law and no persons have a right to take the law into their hands, thus, it is astonishing that the customary procedures and modes of redress have been sidestepped.

    “Nothing merits violence especially at this period of heightened insecurity with regard to the Sekondi -Takoradi Kidnapping,” the statement said.

    The chiefs have, therefore, appealed to the citizens of Dixcove to be calm and not to engage in activities that will worsen the tension and lead to an escalation of violence.

    “We appeal to the Western Police command to work assiduously to seek out the culprits who planned and executed such dastardly act. Further, a delicate feud has been ongoing between Lower Dixcove and Upper Dixcove and we also appeal to the government to assist the Western Regional House of Chiefs to set up a committee to find and resolve the root cause of the Dixcove tension and violence,” the statement noted.

    Source: classfmonline.com

  • Asante-Apeatu was sacked Arhin

    The Jubilee House has said the immediate past Inspector General of Police David Asante-Apeatu was fired from the post.

    A statement from the presidency announcing his removal said “The President thanked him for his many years of service to the country, and wished him well in his retirement”.

    It comes after some Ghanaians continue to wonder why the president didn’t allow the police chief to serve the remaining one month left on his contract at the job.

    President Akufo-Addo has asked the Deputy Inspector General of Police, Mr. James Oppong-Boanuh, to act as IGP until a substantive IGP is appointed in accordance with the Constitution.

    Speaking to Starr News, Communications director at the Presidency Eugene Arhin said the president is nonetheless impressed with the performance of Mr. Asante-Apeatu.

    When asked if the police chief was fired, he said “Yes, he is been asked to proceed on leave until his retirement”.

    Source: starrfm.com.gh

  • You cannot teach at SHS with Distance degree – GES

    The Ghana Education Service has directed that all senior high school teachers holding a degree earned through distance education or sandwich programmes be re-posted to basic schools.

    A letter to one of the headmasters, sighted by 3news.com, insisted that the directive should be considered “serious”.

    Read: Education Ministry clarifies position on reposting SHS teachers with distance degrees

    District Directors of Education have subsequently written to heads of schools who have also communicated same to their teaching staff in that regard.

    “Following Directives from the Director General, all teachers who obtained their degree through Distance, Sandwich and Foundation Programmes and are teaching in the Senior High Schools are to be withdrawn and re-posted to the Basic Schools,” the letter said.

    Read: Quality of education in Ghana poor Professor Adei

    According to the letter, “This is in compliance with the policy which prevents Sandwich and Distance teachers from teaching in Senior High Schools.”

    Heads of schools have therefore been directed to submit a list of affected teachers to the district directorate for “the next action.”

    “Do well to cooperate with these serious directives,” the headmasters were told.

     

    Source: 3 News 

  • Rashida only made Malafaka popular, she doesn’t own it – Kinaata

    “Big up to Rashida is enough to thank Rashida” money cant pay for that hype I gave her in the song, generations will still come and hear Rashida’s name in the song”.

    This was a response from Kofi Kinata to host of “Hangout with KBA” on Wizgh TV, Kweku Bee Abrante on whether he paid or compensated Rashida for the use of her popular term “Malafaka” which Kofi Kinata used in his song.

    Read:Language barrier restricts my rap Kofi Kinaata

    Kofi Kinata continued that, Rashida doesn’t own the term Malafaka, but only made it popular so he could have still used the term without acknowledging her but he rather decided to big her up in the song as a way of thanking her.

    Giving the motive for the song, Malafaka he said the term is to do away with any negative mentality one associates to you.

    Read:I see Castro in my dreams Kofi Kinaata

    Source: www.ghananewsalert.com

  • Informal enterprises urged to scale up operations

    Mr Steven Ocloo, a pharmacists and entrepreneur, has called on businesses in the informal sector to intensify efforts to scale-up their operations, maximise profitability and create more employment.

    He said in order for small scale businesses to grow and expand operations and product lines, there is the need to examine the organisation, the owner and the staff within the enterprise as well as the infrastructure.

    Read: SSNIT asked to redouble efforts to capture workers in informal sector

    Mr Ocloo was speaking at the closing of a two-day Small Business Venture Bootcamp organised by the Institute of Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development (IESBD) in partnership with the Century Incubator Ghana and the Lady Angel Network.

    He said for small businesses in the informal sector to scale-up operations, there is the need to create efficient systems and strictly adhere to both owner and thorough staff guidance and motivation.

    Mr Ocloo said it was imperative on the side of businesses that desire to scale up to consider ploughing back profit and also differentiating between business capital from personal revenue as well as loans.

    He said as private sector is seen as the engine of growth, a little effort to scale up could lead to enormous benefits to the entire population adding that “if we can have 500 informal sector businesses empowered to employ five people each and treat them well, the country will not suffer”.

    Mr Ocloo said there is the need for businesses in the country to begin thinking of increasing exports than importing and that it could only be achieved through improvement from the operations of informal sector businesses.

    He urged small businesses to form partnerships that has the potential to increase the
    productivity through specialisation than one business attempting to do everything with low productivity.

    Mr Ocloo urged the participants to ensure that their handiworks were well branded to attract more international customers.

    Madam Gifty Volimkarime, the Country Manager for Youth Challenge International, urged small businesses who want scale to ensure that there was consistency with quality to always meet the interest of customers.

    She said there is the need to also be consistent with supply ensuring that their products were available whenever it was demanded adding that “it is good to scale up but before you make the decision to scale, you have re-examine the space, the equipment before you move”.

    Mr Confidence Agblobi, the Director of Marketing at the GH Media School, said what has been killing many small scale business partnership was superiority complex, where the issue who leads the enterprise had led to the collapse of many potentials.

    He said for businesses to become profitable, resources must be pooled together and the team members should be willing to swallow individual pride.

    Mr Agblobi urged small business owners to train people who can make their products available to the market to ensure continuity even in the absence of the owner.

    Participants were taken topics such as business growth strategy, packaging and standardisation, market development and competition, business management strategy and leadership.

    Source: ghananewsagency.org

  • One million-dollar per constituency project will develop deprived communities – Veep

    Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia says the one-million-dollar per constituency flagship policy would develop deprived communities in the country to engender inclusive development.

    Addressing heads of African Mission and Caribbean Diplomatic Community in Havana, Cuba, at a breakfast meeting on Friday, Dr Bawumia highlighted some successes chalked by the Akufo-Addo’s Government.

    Read: Construction of markets under $1 million per constituency ongoing

    He said the bottom-up approach adopted by government has ensured inclusive and non-elitist development across the country so that no one is left behind.

    “For us as government, we are very much concerned about the poor and rural communities. Many a time, development goals pursued by governments have been elitist. They focused on building the huge hospitals, theatres, museums, among others, in the cities to the neglect of the basic needs of the rural folks.

    “This is not inclusive enough. If we want to impact lives as governments then we must prioritise the needs of the rural communities who have remained excluded from many past programmes of governments.

    “That is why we have designed and implemented the one million-dollar per constituency policy to cater for the basic needs of the poor like toilets, drainages, dams for all-year round farming, community water projects, footbridges, community town centres, reshaping roads, renovation of schools, provision of desks to schools, and many others, ”Vice President Bawumia explained.

    The one million-dollar per constituency is a policy being implemented by government under the Infrastructure for Poverty Eradication Programme (IPEP).

    Under the IPEP, each of the 275 constituencies is allocated the equivalence of US$1 million annually to be invested in infrastructure development initiatives of their choice, managed and implemented by the three development authorities-Northern Development Authority, Middle Belt Development Authority and the Coastal Development Authority.

    The programme is placed under the Office of the President and supervised by the Minister responsible for Special Development Initiatives.

    The infrastructure projects to be implemented will support and complement other government infrastructure projects.

    There has been budgetary allocation for every constituency in the country since 2017.However, due to the preparations made towards the establishment of the three development authorities, the One million-dollar per constituency has been temporarily administered through the minister for Special Development Initiatives.

    The three development authorities have since been established by an Act of Parliament, and is fully operational.

    Therefore, government has issued commencement letters to cover the full amount of cedi equivalence of one million-dollar to all the three Development Authorities to commence implementation of constituency specific infrastructure needs.

    Mr Ken Ofori-Atta, the Minister Finance, this month, issued the letters of commencement to the three Development Authorities to commence full implementation of the $1 million per constituency pledge under the IPEP.

    The commencement certificate makes available GHC 1,664 million (equivalent $320 millions) for the 275 constituencies across the country.

    This covers $275 million dollars for the 275 constituencies and $45 million for outstanding commitments.

    Source: ghananewsagency.org

  • Ghana, Ivory Coast to meet cocoa buyers again in September

    Citi Business News has gathered that officials from Ghana and Ivory Coast will meet cocoa processors and Chocolatiers on the international market in September to agree on the price of Cocoa beans.

    The meeting which will take place on September 11, 2019, in Abidjan, Ivory Coast is to ensure players on the international market agree to the new floor price set by the two countries.

    Read: Cocoa Roads: Government to commence project with over GHC3billion

    The two countries after a series of meetings agreed to sell a tonne of cocoa for $2,600.

    Head of Public Affairs at Cocobod, Fiifi Boafo who disclosed the meeting to Citi Business News said it is to ensure an extensive consultation with all stakeholders.

    “The issue has to do with the ability of the industry. Ghana and Ivory Coast have agreed to meet all the international partners to have a meeting on the 11th of September to discuss pricing and other trading mechanisms. We have no doubt that the new trading mechanism will be accepted by all,” he explained.

    Read: Government to incur additional GHC1.5bn debt in subsidising cocoa price Ministry

    According to media reports, Ghana struggled to found buyers for its cocoa last week as a US$400 surcharge it had placed on the commodity became effective.

    The surcharge was to provide additional income to cocoa farmers whose livelihood continue to depreciate despite being responsible for the key ingredient in the billion-dollar chocolate industry.

    Source: citibusinessnews.com

  • Asante Kotoko beat Burkinabe side Rahimo 2-1 in friendly

    Asante Kotoko rallied from behind to beat Burkinabe side Rahimo FC 2-1 in a friendly match played on Sunday in Kumasi.

    Read: Asante Kotoko appoint journalist Kennedy Boakye Ansah as new Public Relations Officer

    Kelvin Andoh scored the winner for the Porcupine Warriors in injury-time, following Martin Antwi’s 74th-minute leveller to Rahimo FC’s first-half goal.

    The match forms part of Kotoko’s preparations for the 2019/20 CAF Champions League.

    Kotoko has been drawn against Kano Pillars of Nigeria in the preliminary qualifying round.

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • Asante Kotoko appoint journalist Kennedy Boakye Ansah as new Public Relations Officer

    Ghanaian giants Asante Kotoko have appointed Kennedy Boakye Ansah as the club’s new Public Relations Officer.

    Boakye Ansah, who works with the state-owned Ghana Television, replaces Lawyer Samuel Sarfo Duku who is now the Head of Administration and Legal Affairs.

    Read: CAF CL: Asante Kotoko to face Kano Pillars in preliminary round

    A club statement read: ”Management has with immediate effect re-assigned Samuel Sarfo Duku to be the Head of Administration and Legal Affairs of the club.

    ”He is to co-ordinate the affairs of all the departments in the club and report to the Chief Executive Officer (CEO), George Amoako.

    “Consequently, Management has appointed [journalist] Kennedy Boakye Ansah as the Public Relation Officer of the club. His appointment also takes immediate effect.”

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • Thomas Partey retains Ghana Footballer of the Year award

    Black Stars midfielder Thomas Partey has been named the Footballer of the Year for the second successive year at the Ghana Football Awards on Sunday evening.

    The well-attended event was staged at the Marriott Hotel in Accra.

    Read: Felix Annan named goalkeeper of the year at Ghana football awards

    The 25-year-old beat off stiff competition from Black Queens forward Abdulai Mukarama and Kotoko goalkeeper Felix Annan to retain the prestigious award.

    He was also named the Foreign-based Footballer of the Year which recognised the exploits of Ghanaian footballers plying their trade abroad.

    Partey deservedly picked up the two prizes after excelling with Atletico Madrid and the Black Stars, registering some sensational goals with his trademark long-rangers in the period under review.

    Source: footballmadeinghana.com

  • Avengers: Endgame overtakes Avatar as top box office movie

    Avatar’s 10-year reign as the world’s highest-grossing film has ended.

    On Sunday, Marvel’s Avengers: Endgame crossed $2.7902bn (£2.23bn) at the box office, pushing it over the $2.7897bn earned by James Cameron’s sci-fi epic.

    Read: Taylor Swift tops Forbes list of highest-earning celebs

    Marvel chief Kevin Feige hailed the achievement at Comic-Con in San Diego this weekend, although it was still officially $500,000 short at the time.

    In the UK, however, the film can only claim fifth place on the all-time box office chart.

    Star Wars; The Force Awakens is still the country’s top-earning movie, after taking £123.2m at the box office in 2015.

    It is followed by two Bond movies, Skyfall and Spectre, and Avatar, which is £3m ahead of Endgame’s current tally of £91m.

    The Force Awakens is also the box office champion in North America, meaning Endgame’s record-breaking haul was down to a strong international showing.

    The film, which starred Robert Downey Jr as Iron Man, Scarlett Johansson as Black Widow and Chris Hemsworth as Thor, collected $629m in China, $105m in South Korea and $85m in Brazil.

    Disney boss Alan Horn said fans had taken the film to “historic heights”.

    Avengers: Endgame has not just been a success at the box office – it has also drawn widespread critical acclaim.

    Reviews when it was released spawned descriptions such as “glorious”, “irresistible”, “intensely satisfying” and “masterful”.

    Its score on reviews aggregator Rotten Tomatoes is over 90%.

    Disney bought Marvel Studios in 2009 and recently completed its acquisition of Fox, which owned the rights to Avatar.

    That means the “House of Mouse” is now home to seven of the top 10 highest-grossing films of all time – including all four Avengers films.

    Marvel announced its next 10 superhero movies, with seven due in 2021 alone, at Comic Con in San Diego this weekend.

    What are the numbers?

    Avengers: Endgame has set numerous box office records already – including the biggest global opening of all time at $1.22bn when it was released in April, breaking the record of 2018’s Avengers: Infinity War.

    An Avengers: Endgame re-release with added footage at the end of June, and the recent release of Spider-Man: Far from Home, helped give Endgame a box-office boost.

    It finally surpassed the $2.9bn mark on Sunday – but box-office figures are not adjusted for inflation and Avatar would still be ahead if they were.

    Even then, though, James Cameron’s ecological allegory wouldn’t be the top dog. Film historians estimate that Gone With the Wind still has a case for being the most successful film of all time.

    According to the Guinness Book of Records, its inflation-adjusted box office takings would be $3.44 billion (£2.7bn).

    What’s it all about?

    Endgame is the 22nd offering in the Marvel Studios superhero franchise and the fourth in the blockbuster Avengers series.

    Film experts say fans embracing the Avengers characters has helped create a worldwide phenomenon.

    The Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) franchise began with Iron Man in 2008.

    Most of the storylines in the Marvel movies since then have had objects called Infinity Stones playing a significant role.

    Pats on the back from the bosses

    Kevin Feige slipped out congratulations at Comic Con as he announced a bumper crop of 10 new superhero movies.

    He admitted it would be “a matter of days” before Endgame became “the biggest film in history” and that “if you adjust for inflation, [James Cameron] still holds the title”.

    But he added to a large ovation: “But for right now today in Hall H, thanks to you, Avengers: Endgame is the biggest film of all time.”

    Alan Horn said in a statement: “Huge congratulations to the Marvel Studios and Walt Disney Studios teams, and thank you to the fans around the world who lifted Avengers: Endgame to these historic heights.”

    Actor Chris Hemsworth – aka Thor – said on Instagram: “Thank you to all the fans around the world that lifted Avengers Endgame to historic heights making it the top grossing film of all time!”

    Avatar 2 has a current release date of December 2021.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Ghana Football Awards: Mukarama Abdulai wins Women’s Football & Future Star awards

    Former Black Maidens captain Mukarama Abdulai was named Women’s Footballer of the Year and Future Star gongs at the Ghana Football Awards on Sunday in Accra.

    The 17-year-old was by far the most successful women’s footballer in the country for her stellar achievements.

    Read:Thomas Partey named best Ghanaian footballer at Ghana Football Awards

    She was awarded the 2018 FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup Golden Shoe after scoring seven goals at the tournament.

    The Northern Ladies player has also adjudged the third-best player at the tournament.

    Read:Ghana Football Awards 2019: Full list of winners

    The 2019 Ghana Football Awards was held at the Accra Marriot City Hotel.

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • Iran tanker seizure: May to chair Cobra meeting on crisis

    Theresa May is expected to receive updates from ministers and officials and discuss maintaining the security of shipping in the area.

    It comes amid reports ministers are considering freezing Iranian assets.

    Read: Iran says tanker crew safe, warns UK against rising tensions

    Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt is expected to update MPs later on further measures the government will take.

    On Sunday, ministers denied domestic politics meant the government had taken its “eye off the ball”.

    Defence minister Tobias Ellwood said it was “impossible” to escort each individual vessel and suggested more money should be invested in the Navy if Britain wanted to continue to play a role on the international stage.

    What happened?
    On Friday, the Stena Impero was seized by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard in the key shipping route of the Strait of Hormuz after Tehran said it was “violating international maritime rules”.

    Video released by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard-affiliated Fars news agency appeared to show the moment the tanker was raided.

    A recording emerged of radio exchanges between HMS Montrose and Iranian armed forces vessels moments before the tanker was seized.

    Iranian vessel can be heard telling the British frigate it wants to inspect the Stena Impero for security reasons. HMS Montrose was too far away to stop the seizure.

    Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency said the tanker was captured after it collided with a fishing boat and failed to respond to calls from the smaller craft.

    Mr Hunt said it was illegally seized in Omani waters and forced to sail into Bandar Abbas port in Iran.

    The seizure of the Stena Impero comes two weeks after Royal Marines helped seize Iranian tanker Grace 1 off Gibraltar, because of evidence it was carrying oil to Syria in breach of EU sanctions.

    Mr Hunt said the Grace 1 was detained legally, but Iran said it was “piracy” and threatened to seize a British oil tanker in retaliation.

    What have UK politicians said?
    Speaking to the BBC, Chancellor Philip Hammond said the UK would pursue “every possible diplomatic route” to resolve the situation.

    He said sanctions against Iran were already in place and it was unclear what more could be done.

    But Iain Duncan Smith told the BBC there were questions to be raised about the British government’s actions.

    He said the detention of the Grace 1 tanker carrying Iranian oil two weeks earlier ought to have served as a warning British vessels in the Gulf needed protection.

    The former Cabinet minister said he understood the US had offered the UK “assets” to support its shipping and they were not taken up.

    “This is a major failure and the government has to answer that charge very quickly indeed,” he said.

    Mr Hunt earlier said Iran viewed it as a “tit-for-tat situation” but “nothing could be further from the truth”.

    Labour shadow justice minister Richard Burgon said the UK should avoid becoming Donald Trump’s “sidekicks” and warned a US-backed conflict with Iran could be worse than the Iraq War.

    What happened to the tanker and its crew?
    The Stena Impero is still being held in the port of Bandar Abbas, in southern Iran.

    The tanker’s Swedish owner, Stena Bulk, has made a formal request to visit the 23 crew members, who are Indian, Russian, Latvian and Filipino.

    They have all been taken off the ship for “questioning”, Iran’s Press TV reported.

    A relative of one Indian crew member, who did not want to be identified, told the BBC on Sunday the family was concerned and had not received any messages from him since the vessel was detained.

    But they said the family was being kept well informed by the Swedish company and felt reassured about diplomatic efforts to free the ship after meeting company officials on Sunday.

    Although the crew and owners are not British, the Stella Impero carries the UK flag.

    “Historically speaking it means that the UK owes protection to the vessel,” explained Richard Meade, from maritime publication Lloyds List.

    What has Iran said?
    Iran’s foreign minister Javad Zarif tweeted on Saturday that the UK “must cease being an accessory to #EconomicTerrorism of the US”.

    He said Iran guarantees the security of the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, and insisted its action was to “uphold international maritime rules”.

    Iran’s ambassador to London has warned the UK against escalating tensions, tweeting: “This is quite dangerous and unwise at a sensitive time in the region.”

    What’s the background to tensions in the Gulf?
    Relations have been deteriorating between Iran and the UK and US.

    In April, the US tightened sanctions it had re-imposed on Iran after withdrawing from a 2015 nuclear deal.

    The US blamed Iran for attacks on tankers since May, which Tehran denies. On Friday, the US claimed to have destroyed an Iranian drone in the Gulf.

    The UK government has remained committed to the deal, which curbs Iran’s nuclear activities in return for the lifting of sanctions.

    However, the UK’s help in seizing the Iranian tanker Grace 1 infuriated Iran.

    Last week, the UK said Iranian boats also attempted to impede a British oil tanker in the region before being warned off by HMS Montrose. Iran denied any attempted seizure.

    International reaction
    The White House said Friday’s incident was the second time in more than a week the UK had been “the target of escalatory violence” by Iran.

    US Central Command said it was developing a multinational maritime effort in response to the situation.

    The Pentagon said US troops are being deployed to Saudi Arabia to defend American interests in the region.

    On Sunday, the Foreign Office confirmed Mr Hunt spoke with his French and German counterparts, who have both condemned Iran’s actions.

    France’s Jean-Yves Le Drian and Germany’s Heiko Maas agreed that safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz is a top priority for European nations, while avoiding any possible escalation.

    Diplomatic solution ‘will be complicated’
    A diplomatic solution to this crisis is going to be complicated, not least because Britain’s relationships with its traditional partners – the US and the Europeans – are under strain.

    Diplomatic pressure – action at the UN or tough economic sanctions – requires the building of a coalition.

    Think back to the collective action taken against Moscow in the wake of the murder of a British woman by Russian agents in Salisbury.

    The US and Britain’s Nato and European allies all expelled Russian diplomats in an impressive show of solidarity.

    But will the same solidarity be shown towards Tehran?

    France and Germany have given London rhetorical support. President Trump is standing beside his British ally.

    But the US and the EU are fundamentally at loggerheads over the fate of the nuclear deal with Iran and what many European capitals see as a thinly disguised US policy that seeks regime change in Tehran.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Israel demolishes Palestinian homes on Jerusalem outskirts

    Israel began demolishing a number of Palestinian homes it considers illegal south of Jerusalem early on Monday, an AFP journalist said, in a move that has drawn international concern.

    Dozens of Israeli police and military sealed off at least four buildings in the Sur Baher area close to the Israeli security barrier cutting off the occupied West Bank early Monday, the journalist said.

    An earthmover later started demolishing a partially-built two storey building.

    Reporters were prevented from reaching the area while residents and activists were dragged out of the homes.

    One man yelled “I want to die here”, after being forced out.

    The buildings are close to Israel’s separation barrier which cuts off the occupied West Bank and the Jewish state says they were built too close to the wall.

    Palestinians accuse Israel of using security as a pretext to force them out of the area as part of long-term efforts to expand settlements and roads linking them.

    They also point out that most of the buildings are located in areas meant to be under Palestinian Authority civilian control under the agreements between the Palestinian and Israeli governments.

    Ismail Abadiyeh, who lives in one of the buildings under threat with his family, said they would be left homeless.

    “We will be on the street,” he told AFP.

    The Israeli army and police did not immediately comment.

    On June 18, residents received a 30-day notice from Israeli authorities informing them of their intent to demolish the homes, many of which are still under construction.

    According to UN humanitarian affairs agency OCHA, the ruling affects 10 buildings already built or under construction, including around 70 apartments.

    The demolitions would see 17 people displaced and another 350 affected, according to the United Nations.

    European Union diplomats recently toured the area and the United Nations has called on Israel to abandon the demolition plan.

    Residents fear another 100 buildings in the area in a similar situation could be at risk in the near future.

    It is extremely difficult for Palestinians to receive construction permits from Israeli authorities in areas under their control, and Palestinians and rights activists say a housing shortage has resulted.

    Israel occupied the West Bank and east Jerusalem in the 1967 Six-Day War. It later annexed east Jerusalem in a move never recognised by the international community.

    Israel began construction of the barrier during the bloody second Palestinian intifada, or uprising, in the early 2000s and says it is necessary to protect against attacks.

    Palestinians see it as an “apartheid wall”.

    Source: France24

  • Firefighters battle massive wildfires in Portugal

    About 1,800 firefighters were struggling to contain wildfires in central Portugal that have already injured 20 people, including eight firefighters, authorities said Sunday.

    The fires broke out Saturday across three fronts in the district of Castelo Branco, 200 kilometres (about 125 miles) northeast of Lisbon, the capital, Portugal’s Civil Protection Agency said.

    Read: Wildfires tear through Chile

    Firefighters were being supported by 19 firefighting aircraft and hundreds of vehicles.

    It’s the first major bout of wildfires in Portugal this year. Interior Minister Eduardo Cabrita gave the injury toll Sunday and said authorities were investigating the cause of the blazes.

    State broadcaster RTP televised images of flames consuming wooded areas of the rural region that has seen recurrent wildfires in Portugal’s hot, dry summer months. RTP showed firefighters hosing down a line of advancing flames as they rapidly approached houses in the village of Sarnadas while desperate residents looked on and water-dumping aircraft swooped overhead.

    While most of the injured were from smoke inhalation, one person was evacuated to a hospital to be treated for burns, according to health authorities.

    At least one road was closed and several residents were told to leave their homes. The Portuguese Army deployed a mobile kitchen to help feed those affected by the fire and was using its tracked vehicles to help clear roads for firefighting crews.

    In recent years, the country has witnessed some of its deadliest fires on record, with 106 people killed in 2017. That year’s death toll prompted the Portuguese government to back stronger firefighting prevention measures, leading to no wildfire deaths in 2018.

    Source: France24

  • Taiwan foreign minister calls for ‘genuine’ elections in Hong Kong

    Taiwan’s foreign minister on Monday called for “genuine” democratic elections to be held in Hong Kong after the city was rocked by fresh political violence, comments that will likely infuriate Beijing.

    Hong Kong has been plunged into its worst crisis in recent history by weeks of marches and sporadic violent confrontations between police and pockets of hardcore protesters.

    Read: Hong Kong protests: Armed mob violence leaves city in shock

    The initial protests were lit by a now-suspended bill that would have allowed extraditions to mainland China.

    But they have since evolved into a wider movement calling for democratic reforms, universal suffrage and a halt to sliding freedoms in the semi-autonomous territory.

    Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters on Sunday night, the seventh weekend in a row that the city has witnessed political violence.

    Separately masked men wielding sticks beat up anti-government protesters at a subway station, putting dozens in hospital.

    In a tweet on Monday Taiwan’s foreign minister Joseph Wu said it was time for the city’s leaders to grant universal suffrage, a core demand of protesters.

    “It’s sad to see the rule of law eroding and the divide between the people and the government widening in HongKong,” Wu said as he accompanied President Tsai Ing-wen in a stopover in Denver on their way back from a visit to diplomatic allies in the Caribbean.

    “The way forward is genuine democratic elections, not violence in the streets & MTR stations. The freedom and human rights of the people must be protected!” he added.

    Taiwan is gearing up for a presidential election where a dominant issue will be relations with the mainland — which sees the self-ruled island as its own territory and has vowed to seize it.

    Ties with Beijing have deteriorated since Tsai came to power in 2016 because her party refuses to recognise the idea that Taiwan is part of “one China”.

    Tsai has described the 2020 presidential election as a “fight for freedom and democracy”, setting herself up as someone who can defend Taiwan from an increasingly assertive Beijing.

    She is facing off against Han Kuo-yu from the opposition KMT party which favours warmer ties with the Chinese mainland.

    Last week Tsai’s government said it would provide assistance to Hong Kongers seeking sanctuary after local media reported dozens of activists involved in an unprecedented storming of the city’s parliament had fled to the island.

    China’s communist party views Taiwan as its own territory and has vowed to seize it, by force if necessary.

    Beijing has previously indicated that the “one country, two systems” model under which Hong Kong is allowed to keep key liberties could be applied to Taiwan.

    But years of sliding freedoms in Hong Kong has done little to endear Taiwan’s inhabitants to the idea of Beijing’s rule

    Source: France24

  • Iran says tanker crew safe, warns UK against rising tensions

    Iran has warned the United Kingdom against escalating tensions between the two countries in the wake of its seizure of a British-flagged oil tanker – an act the UK government has called “hostile”.

    Britain has rejected Tehran’s explanation that it seized the Stena Impero on Friday because it had been involved in an accident, and told its ships to avoid the Strait of Hormuz, a major oil passageway.

    Read: Death toll rises to 3 in attack on Turkish diplomat in IraqTaiwan’s foreign minister on Monday called for “genuine” democratic elections to be held in Hong Kong after the city was rocked by fresh political violence, comments that will likely infuriate Beijing.

    Hong Kong has been plunged into its worst crisis in recent history by weeks of marches and sporadic violent confrontations between police and pockets of hardcore protesters.

    The initial protests were lit by a now-suspended bill that would have allowed extraditions to mainland China.

    But they have since evolved into a wider movement calling for democratic reforms, universal suffrage and a halt to sliding freedoms in the semi-autonomous territory.

    Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters on Sunday night, the seventh weekend in a row that the city has witnessed political violence.

    Separately masked men wielding sticks beat up anti-government protesters at a subway station, putting dozens in hospital.

    In a tweet on Monday Taiwan’s foreign minister Joseph Wu said it was time for the city’s leaders to grant universal suffrage, a core demand of protesters.

    “It’s sad to see the rule of law eroding and the divide between the people and the government widening in HongKong,” Wu said as he accompanied President Tsai Ing-wen in a stopover in Denver on their way back from a visit to diplomatic allies in the Caribbean.

    “The way forward is genuine democratic elections, not violence in the streets & MTR stations. The freedom and human rights of the people must be protected!” he added.

    Taiwan is gearing up for a presidential election where a dominant issue will be relations with the mainland — which sees the self-ruled island as its own territory and has vowed to seize it.

    Ties with Beijing have deteriorated since Tsai came to power in 2016 because her party refuses to recognise the idea that Taiwan is part of “one China”.

    Tsai has described the 2020 presidential election as a “fight for freedom and democracy”, setting herself up as someone who can defend Taiwan from an increasingly assertive Beijing.

    She is facing off against Han Kuo-yu from the opposition KMT party which favours warmer ties with the Chinese mainland.

    Last week Tsai’s government said it would provide assistance to Hong Kongers seeking sanctuary after local media reported dozens of activists involved in an unprecedented storming of the city’s parliament had fled to the island.

    China’s communist party views Taiwan as its own territory and has vowed to seize it, by force if necessary.

    Beijing has previously indicated that the “one country, two systems” model under which Hong Kong is allowed to keep key liberties could be applied to Taiwan.

    But years of sliding freedoms in Hong Kong has done little to endear Taiwan’s inhabitants to the idea of Beijing’s rule.

    The “UK government should contain those domestic political forces who want to escalate existing tension between Iran and the UK well beyond the issue of ships. This is quite dangerous and unwise at a sensitive time in the region,” Hamid Baeidinejad, Iran’s envoy to Britain, wrote on Twitter.

    “Iran, however, is firm and ready for different scenarios,” he said.

    His comments came a day after Jeremy Hunt, the UK foreign secretary, said Tehran’s actions showed “worrying signs Iran may be choosing a dangerous path of illegal and destabilising behaviour”.

    Hunt – who is also seeking to become the next leader of Britain’s Conservative party, and by default the country’s prime minister – called the seizure it a “tit-for-tat” situation, as it came hours after a court in Gibraltar said it would extend by 30 days the detention of the Grace 1 Iranian tanker seized by British authorities in the Mediterranean two weeks ago on allegations of breaching UN sanctions against Syria.

    Iran, which says the seized tanker risked maritime safety and has opened an investigation, remained defiant. Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said Iran’s actions were taken to “uphold” international maritime rules.

    “The Revolutionary Guards responded to Britain’s hijacking of the Iranian tanker,” parliament speaker Ali Larijani told a parliament session aired live on state radio.

    Al Jazeera’s Dorsa Jaabari, reporting from Tehran said the general feeling in the Iranian capital “is that the Iranians have carried out what they believe is their due diligence when it comes to securing the waters of the Strait of Hormuz.”

    A picture taken on July 21, 2019, shows Iranian Revolutionary Guards patrolling around the British-flagged tanker Stena Impero as it’s anchored off the Iranian port city of Bandar Abbas. – Iran warned

    Crew in good health
    The vessel was impounded with its 23 crew members on board at the port of Bandar Abbas after the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) seized it in the Strait of Hormuz on Friday.

    The IRGC on Saturday released video footage showing a ship with the Stena Impero’s markings being surrounded by speedboats before commandos descended down a rope from a helicopter onto the vessel.

    Iran detained the oil tanker on allegations of failing to respond to distress calls and turning off its transponder after hitting a fishing boat.

    Its crew is made up of 18 Indians, including the captain, three Russians, a Latvian and a Filipino.

    India, Latvia and the Philippines said they had approached Iran to seek the release of their nationals.

    Allah-Morad Afifipoor, director-general of the Hormozgan province port and maritime authority, told Iran’s Press TV on Sunday that the entire crew of the Stena Impero oil tanker was in good health.

    “We are ready to meet their needs. But we have to carry out investigations with regards the vessel,” he said.

    “The investigation depends on the cooperation by the crew members on the vessel, and also our access to the evidence required for us to look into the matter.”

    Stena Bulk, the Sweden-based operator of the Stena Impero, says the tanker was in “full compliance with all navigation and international regulations”.

    ‘Tit-for-tat’
    The seizure has heightened tension between Iran and Britain, which is party to Iran’s 2015 multinational nuclear deal. The Daily Telegraph newspaper reported on Saturday that London was planning to target Iran with sanctions in the aftermath of the tanker seizure.

    In a letter to the United Nations Security Council, Britain said the tanker was approached by Iranian forces in Omani territorial waters where it was exercising its lawful right of passage, and that the action “constitutes illegal interference.”

    In a statement on Sunday, the Omani foreign ministry did not comment on the ship’s position but called on Iran and Britain to use diplomacy to resolve the situation.

    Oman, which maintains warm ties with Iran, said it was in contact with all parties to secure safe passage for ships through the vital Strait of Hormuz and urged Tehran to release the vessel.

    Germany and France have also called on Iran to release the Stena Impero as the European Union voiced concern.

    US-Iran friction
    Tensions in the Gulf have soared in recent weeks, with US President Donald Trump calling off air raids against Iran at the last minute in June after Iranian forces downed a US drone, and blaming Iran for a series of tanker attacks.

    The latest incidents also came as Trump and US officials insisted on Thursday, despite denials from Tehran, that the US military had downed an Iranian drone that was threatening a US naval vessel in the Strait of Hormuz.

    Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia, Tehran’s archrival, said it would, once again, host US troops on its soil to boost regional security.

    Iran and the US have been at loggerheads since May 2018 when Trump unilaterally withdrew the US from the nuclear deal and reimposed crippling sanctions on it.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • India set to re-attempt Moon mission launch

    India is set to re-attempt the launch of its second lunar mission a week after it halted the scheduled blast-off due to a technical snag.

    Chandrayaan-2 will be launched at 14:43 local time (09:13 GMT) on Monday, space agency Isro said.

    Read: Santa 95 cuts sod for Science laboratory to improve STEM education

    It added the spacecraft was ready “to take a billion dreams to the Moon – now stronger than ever before”.

    The space agency hopes the $150m (£120m) mission will be the first to land on the Moon’s south pole.

    The countdown on 15 July was stopped 56 minutes before launch after a “technical snag was observed in [the] launch vehicle system”, according to Isro. Indian media have reported that a leak from a helium gas bottle in the cryogenic engine of the rocket was to blame.

    Isro thanked people for supporting the mission despite the delay.

    What is this mission all about?
    India’s first lunar mission in 2008 – Chandrayaan-1 – did not land on the lunar surface, but it carried out the first and most detailed search for water on the Moon using radars.

    Chandrayaan-2 (Moon vehicle 2) will try to land near the little-explored south pole of the Moon.

    The mission will focus on the lunar surface, searching for water and minerals and measuring moonquakes, among other things.

    India is using its most powerful rocket, the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle Mark III (GSLV Mk-III), in this mission. It weighs 640 tonnes (almost 1.5 times the weight of a fully-loaded 747 jumbo jet) and at 44 metres (144ft) is as high as a 14-storey building.

    The spacecraft weighs 2.379kg (5.244lb) and has three distinct parts: an orbiter, a lander and a rover.

    The orbiter, which has a mission life of a year, will take images of the lunar surface, and “sniff” the tenuous atmosphere.

    The lander (named Vikram, after the founder of Isro) weighs about half as much, and carries within its belly a 27kg Moon rover with instruments to analyse the lunar soil. In its 14-day life, the rover (called Pragyan – wisdom in Sanskrit) can travel up to a half a kilometre from the lander and will send data and images back to Earth for analysis.

    “India can hope to get the first selfies from the lunar surface once the rover gets on its job,” Dr K Sivan, the Isro chief, said before the first launch attempt.

    How long is the journey to the Moon?
    The launch is only the beginning of a 384,000km (239,000-mile) journey – Isro is hoping the lander will touch down on the Moon on 6 or 7 September.

    The space agency has chosen a circuitous route to take advantage of the Earth’s gravity, which will help slingshot the satellite towards the Moon. India does not have a rocket powerful enough to hurl Chandrayaan-2 on a direct path.

    “There will be 15 terrifying minutes for scientists once the lander is released and is hurled towards the south pole of the Moon,” Dr Sivan said.

    He explained that those who had been controlling the spacecraft until then would have no role to play in those crucial moments. The actual landing, he added, was an autonomous operation dependent on all systems performing as they should. Otherwise, the lander could crash into the lunar surface.

    Earlier this year, Israel’s first Moon mission crash-landed while attempting to touch down.

    Who is on the team?
    Nearly 1,000 engineers and scientists have worked on this mission. But for the first time, Isro has chosen women to lead an interplanetary expedition.

    Two women are steering India’s journey to the Moon. While programme director Muthaya Vanitha has nurtured Chandrayaan-2 over the years, it will be navigated by Ritu Karidhal.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Kenyans share graduate employment woes

    Kenyans have been sharing tales of the difficulties of finding a job after a TV news report highlighted the story of a top graduate who was homeless for a year after failing to find employment.

    Citizen TV spoke to Kelvin Ochieng, a first-class honours student in actuarial science, who is now living in a slum area of the capital, Nairobi, after someone took pity on him.

    Read: World Bank launches youth business competition to tackle unemployment in Kenya

    He said he thought that actuarial science would get him a decent job. Mr Ochieng, who grew up in poor circumstances, outlined the companies he applied to for a job, but no-one employed him.

    He said he wanted to bring his grandmother “out of poverty”. Mr Ochieng now gets money as a parking guard in Nairobi city centre.

    #FirstClassBetrayal is trending on Twitter in Kenya with other graduates also asking for jobs:

    Source: bbc.com

  • Kwasi Appiah: To sack or not to sack

    Very typical of us, we have been back from another disappointing outing at an international football competition, and the talk, as usual, has not been about finding what went wrong. We have been talking, throwing spurious allegations without any careful attempt to fix the problem.

    Read: Kwesi Appiah to stay on as Black Stars Coach

    You can be sure that, we will back after another competition to go through this unholy circus. It is not that, we do not know what the problem with our football has been, and why for instance, the Black Stars continue to be disappointing despite the huge expenditure on them.

    The issue is that, we have always chosen the easy way out, playing the blame game cheaply without accepting that, our football has lacked a fundamental ingredient, which it dreadfully needs to be transformed into something good and attractive. The missing ingredient is leadership.

    Read: Kwesi Appiah deserves another chance, says Mohammed Polo

    Leadership has been absent at the Youth and Sports Ministry to the Football Association to the Black Stars management committee, down to the technical team and the players. If there was and had been serious leadership at the GFA, for example, the whole discussion on sacking or maintaining Coach Kwasi Appiah will not arise.

    We would have known what we want and by now, a decisive stance would have been taken. The example that, some countries fired their coaches immediately after their unsatisfactory performance and exit at AFCON 2019 is not alone deficient, but also short-sighted. That talk does not fully appreciate the vital point that, football in those countries has had its head intact.

    Our football has been headless and even worse in the last one year. Coaches are hired to be fired. Dismissing Kwasi Appiah will be no new thing. I will not be averse to such a decision in principle. I however see the clamour for his dismissal as a waste of time. If we have any energy, we should be using that, to tell the Normalisation Committee to stick to their mandate, see to the election of a substantive football administration, which will come and breathe life into our game.

    Ghana football needs a new set of hands ideas and plans better leadership to reshape its future, and bring it out of the disorder that has characterised it. I would prefer a substantive GFA, taking bold decisions on the Black Stars and the entire technical team plus the generality of our football, than to have the stop-gap Normalisation Committee, toy with the passion of the nation.

    There are real issues confronting Ghana football. Kwasi Appiah staying or leaving is not one. The Normalisation Committee leading the path to Congress, seeing to the election of a new Executive Committee, who must come, with short to medium term strategies and later, plans in the long term, to radically change our football, are the issues that should be of serious interest.

    Post-AFCON discussions should not deviate from the real state of Ghana football. It should look at the bigger issues. Our conversations must be around the important matters of offering Ghana football a new and better leadership lest, we do a huge disservice to Ghana. Sacking Kwasi Appiah, whether or not it is right, will not redefine Ghana football now or in future.

    Only a new leadership with better plans can do that. We must insist on that.

    Source: jeromeotchere.com

  • CAF CL: Asante Kotoko to face Kano Pillars in preliminary round

    Asante Kotoko have been drawn against Kano Pillars of Nigeria in the preliminary round of the 2020 CAF Champions League which gets underway next month.

    The first leg of the tie will take place in Kano on the weekend of August 9-11 with the return leg at the Baba Yara Sports Stadium on the weekend of 23-25 August.

    Read: Coach Akonnor unhappy with cancellation of CAF Confed Cup preliminary game

    Kotoko qualified to represent the country after winning the Normalisation Committee’s special competition Tier I.

    Their opponents, Kano, on the other hand, finished as in the Nigeria Premier League last season.

    Kotoko will be hoping to reach the group stage of a Caf inter-club competition for the second straight time after making it in the Caf Confederation Cup last season.

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com

  • Americans cool down in sweltering heatwave

    The US is currently experiencing a serious heatwave, with dangerously high temperatures of almost 38C (100F).

    Cities on the country’s east coast are particularly hard-hit, with New York, Philadelphia and Washington all experiencing unbearable heat.

    Unusually, they are even hotter than Phoenix, Arizona, and Miami in Florida.

    Read:Dangerous heatwave starts hitting US and Canada

    People in affected areas have been urged to stay hydrated, stay indoors as much as possible, and to try and take care of vulnerable people, including those who are ill, very young, or elderly.

    With residents trying to cool down in whatever way they can, public pools and fountains have been extremely busy.

    The Astoria Pool in Queens, New York City, was heaving with people on Saturday.

    New York Mayor Bill de Blasio declared a heat emergency in the city, and the New York City Triathlon, which was scheduled for Sunday, has been cancelled for the first time since in its 18-year history.

    Read:European heatwave: Spain battles major Catalonia wildfire

    About 4,000 people were supposed to take part, with many travelling long distances for the race. Organisers said participants would receive full refunds of entry fees up to $399 (£319).

    A two-day music, comedy and food festival, OZY Fest, was also meant to be held in Central Park this weekend, but was cancelled.

    Fountains in Boston, Massachusetts, were also filled with adults and children trying to cool off.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Apollo 11: World celebrates 50th anniversary of first Moon landing

    Thousands of people have been celebrating the 50th anniversary of the first Moon landing.

    On 20 July 1969, the Eagle module from Apollo 11 landed at Tranquility Base.

    Hours later, at 21:56 CT (03:56 GMT), Neil Armstrong made history by becoming the first person to walk on the Moon.

    Originally inspired by the US’s Cold War rivalry with the Soviet Union, the mission is now remembered as an iconic moment for stargazers all over the world.
    ‘We’re breathing again’

    Nasa marked the anniversary by streaming footage of the launch online, giving a new generation a chance to see the historic moment that was watched by half a billion people 50 years ago.

    Read:India prepares for moon landing

    At the moment the spacecraft landed, Apollo 11 commander Armstrong said: “Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed.”

    Charlie Duke, the capsule communicator, responded from mission control in Houston: “Roger, Tranquility. We copy you on the ground. You got a bunch of guys about to turn blue. We’re breathing again.”

    Hours later, as he first stepped onto the Moon’s surface, he uttered the historic phrase: “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

    Armstrong was joined on the mission by his crewmates Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins. All three were born in 1930. Aldrin and Collins are still alive, but Armstrong died in 2012 at the age of 82.

    Aldrin, the second person to walk on the Moon, tweeted on Saturday: “Today, America put the big question to rest: We got there first. We landed on the Moon with 250 million Americans watching our backs.

    “The truth is: that mission belongs to all of them, and to future generations of Americans who dream to reach the Moon once more.”

    Michael Collins, the third crew member, told Fox News that it’s “not very often” he thinks about the mission.

    “I lead a quiet life,” he said. “I’ll be walking along down my street at night, when it’s starting to get dark, and I sense something over my right shoulder – and I look up and see that little silver sliver up there and think, ‘Oh, that’s the Moon! I’ve been there!’”

    Read:India delays moon launch an hour before liftoff

    How the world has celebrated

    Cities globally have held events to celebrate the landmark anniversary – including at a Nasa visitor centre in Houston, near the site of the Apollo 11 launch.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Albert Adomahs solitary strike gives Nottingham Forest 1-0 win over Crystal Palace

    Ghanaian International Albert Adomah scored for Nottingham Forest on Friday as they beat English Premier League side Crystal Palace 1-0 in a pre-season friendly match.

    The English Championship side started off the match in high spirit and pushed their opponent despite failing to find the back of the net in the early minutes.

    After dominating for most parts of the first half, Forest finally found the breakthrough on the 32nd minute following some fine piece of football.

    Read:Albert Adomah delighted with preseason victory over Atromitos

    Attacker Joe Lolley chipped a fine pass over the top of the Palace defense for Lewis Grabban, who got a toe to the ball to flick it towards goal. Goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey rushed off his line and managed to pull off a good save.

    Unfortunately, he could not hold on to the ball and allowed Albert Adomah to pounce and slot the ball into the back of the net to give his side the lead.

    Read:Albert Adomah wants to use Championship experience to help Nottingham Forrest

    That goal proved to be the deciding factor of the match as Forest run away as 1-0 winners.

    Later in the second half, the former Black Stars player was replaced by compatriot Arvin Appiah.

    Adomah recently joined Nottingham Forest on a two-year-deal after helping Aston Villa to gain promotion into the top-flight league.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Norwich City rekindle interest to sign Bayern Munich attacker Kwasi Okyere Wriedt

    Footballghana.com can exclusively report that English Premier League side Norwich City has rekindled their interest in signing Ghanaian International Kwasi Okyere Wriedt from German champions Bayern Munich.

    The Canaries expressed interest in the services of the player during the January transfer window but failed to poach him away from Germany.

    Read:Eddie Nketiah hits brace as Arsenal beat Fiorentina on US pre-season tour

    Though the interest is said to have died out, Norwich City is has reportedly revived their interest to sign the winger and has already inquired about the availability of the player from Bayern Munich.

    Meanwhile, checks have revealed that management of the German giant considers Kwasi Okyere Wriedt as an asset for the future and might only consider sending the player out on loan rather than selling him.

    Read:David Accam scores sublime winner for Columbus Crew against Montreal Impact

    The Ghanaian has been the leading marksman for the Bavarians youth set-up since joining from third-tier side VfL Osnabruck three seasons ago.

    He has made 36 appearances for the side in the Regionalliga league and has scored a total of 26 goals.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Eddie Nketiah hits brace as Arsenal beat Fiorentina on US pre-season tour

    English-born Ghanaian forward Eddie Nketiah continued his impressive form during pre-season as he scored twice in Arsenal’s 3-0 win over Fiorentina in the International Champions Cup in Charlotte, North Carolina.

    Read:Eddie Nketiah included in Arsenal squad for preseason tour in USA

    Boss Unai Emery opted for a youthful side spearheaded by the 20-year-old Englishman, who scored the winner against Bayern Munich this week.

    The youngster opened the scoring in the 15th minute, before substitutes Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Alexandre Lacazette combined to set up an unmissable chance for him to make it two in the 65th minute.

    Read:Arsenal loanee Jordi Osei-Tutu breaks down in tears after being racially abused

    Nketiah has now scored three goals in Arsenal’s tour having netted the winner against Bayern Munich.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Ukraine’s Zelensky aims to bolster power in parliamentary polls

    Polls have opened in Ukraine, with voters electing a new parliament.

    Volodymyr Zelensky became president in a landslide victory in April but says he has so far been unable to appoint the ministers he wants.

    The ex-TV star hopes this election, which he called quickly after being sworn in, will consolidate his power and give a greater mandate for reform.

    Mr Zelensky’s Servant of the People party – named after the TV show he starred in – is expected to do well.

    Polls suggest the second-most popular party is the pro-Russian Opposition Platform – For Life, and that it’s set to pick up votes in the east.

    Read:Ukraine bans its Eurovision entrant over Russia row

    However, Mr Zelensky has ruled out working with it should he need to form a coalition.

    Instead he would rather partner with Holos (The Voice) – another new party led by rock star Svyatoslav Vakarchuk, the lead singer of the popular band Okean Elzy.

    The president needs to share power with the Verkhovna Rada, Ukraine’s parliament, which will form a government and nominate a prime minister.

    The BBC’s Ukraine correspondent, Jonah Fisher, says a strong showing for Mr Zelensky’s party will give him the power to do pretty much as he wishes, if not he could have a long and frustrating five years in office.

    The comedian president
    Mr Zelensky was known for his comic role on TV as a teacher who wins the heart of the nation and becomes president after his expletive-laden rant about politics goes viral.

    Read:Miss Ukraine stripped of her crown after organisers discover she has a child

    In reality, his route to the leadership was a bit more conventional than in his show – but only a bit.

    After shunning official rallies and speeches, demanding his opponent take a drug test and openly admitting he didn’t have any strong political views, he scored a landslide victory in April and unseated the former political heavyweight, Petro Poroshenko.

    Now Mr Zelensky hopes to make waves again this weekend by sweeping aside the old guard and bringing in fresh blood.

    One of the candidates for Servant of the People, for example, is Zhan Beleniuk, an Olympic wrestler who wants to become Ukraine’s first mixed-race MP.

    Mr Poroshenko, meanwhile, is still hoping for victory this weekend.

    However, his party – rebranded European Solidarity to remove his name – is currently polling at about 8%, just over the 5% threshold needed to enter parliament.

    Source: BBC.com

  • Techiman Eleven Wonders now Techiman Benfica sporting Club

    Seedorf Socerlink Academy and Agency and Ghana Premier league side Techiman Eleven Wonders have officially launched the new name for the club after signing a partnership agreement.

    The two parties agreed the new name for the club is now Techiman Benfica Sporting Club.

    The event took place on Saturday evening at Encon Hotel in Techiman.

    Read:Techiman XI Wonders sack vociferous Takyi Arhin Reports

    Present at the launch was Fernando Mendes who represented Benfica Sports Club , Seedorf Asante also represented Seedorf Soccer link and Nana Ameyaw Manu President of Techiman Eleven wonders.

    The Regional Minister for Bono East Hon Amoako Hene and MCE for Techiman South Hon John Kofi Doyina and all the management of members of both parties were present.

    There will be a floating on Sunday morning across the principal streets of Techiman to inform the masses about the new name of the club.

    Read:David Accam scores sublime winner for Columbus Crew against Montreal Impact

    A football match between Techiman Eleven wonders team and Seedorf soccer Academy will follow in the afternoon 3pm at Mount Carmel Girls SHS Park in Techiman.

    The partnership agreement was signed on 17th of June 2019 at the PALMA Hotel in Spintex-Accra with representatives of both parties present.

    This partnership will seek to develop youth football in the region and also expose the young talents to the international world of soccer.

    Source: footballmadeinghana.com

  • Gareth Bale: Real Madrid forward ‘very close’ to exit – Zinedine Zidane

    Real Madrid forward Gareth Bale is “very close to leaving” the Spanish club, says boss Zinedine Zidane.

    The Wales international, 30, was left out of Real’s 3-1 pre-season defeat by Bayern Munich in Houston, USA.

    Speaking after the game, Zidane said: “We hope he leaves soon. It would be best for everyone. We are working on his transfer to a new team.

    “I have nothing personal against him, but there comes a time where things are done because they must be done.”

    Bale, who has three years left on his Real contract, has won the Champions League four times since his £85m move to Madrid from Tottenham in 2013 – a world record deal at the time.

    Read:Zidane is the right man for the Real Madrid job Mourinho

    He has been linked with Premier League sides Manchester United and Spurs, German champions Bayern and also a move to the Chinese Super League.

    Injury problems have limited the Welshman to 79 La Liga appearances in the past four seasons. He played 42 matches for Los Blancos last term, half of those as a substitute.

    Bale was booed by home supporters at times last season, though his agent said in March the player was “very happy” and wanted to “play all his career” at the Bernabeu club.

    “I have to make decisions. We have to change,” Zidane added. “The exit is the coach’s decision, and also of the player, who knows the situation.

    “The situation will change, I do not know if in 24 or 48 hours, but it will – and it’s a good thing for everyone.”

    Read:Real Madrid reappoint Zidane to replace Santiago Solari

    Bale ended last season on the bench as Real endured their poorest domestic campaign in 20 years, with 12 defeats, 68 points and a third-place finish 19 points behind champions Barcelona. They were also knocked out of the Champions League by Ajax in the last 16.

    Zidane returned to the Bernabeu in March to become the club’s third coach of the season.

    At the time, Bale’s agent Jonathan Barnett told BBC Sport that the Frenchman’s appointment was “bad news” because he did not want to work with Bale and the two men disagreed on playing style.

    As well as four Champions Leagues, Bale has won one La Liga title, a Copa del Rey and three Uefa Super Cups and Club World Cups during his time at Real.

    He has scored more than 100 goals for the Spanish side but has reportedly been nicknamed “The Golfer” by his team-mates, and goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois also said Bale did not attend a team meal because he did not want to miss his bed time.

    Source: BBC.com

  • Manny Pacquiao beats Keith Thurman on points to take WBA Super welterweight title

    Manny Pacquiao said he had “fun” as he became the oldest welterweight champion in history by beating WBA Super champion Keith Thurman in a split decision in Las Vegas.

    Thurman – previously undefeated – had promised to send the 40-year-old Filipino into retirement, but was knocked down in the first round before a thrilling fight went the distance.

    “I knew it was too close,” said American Thurman. “He got the knockdown so he had momentum in round one. This was a beautiful night of boxing.”

    The 30-year-old had been looking for his 30th straight win.

    Read:Mayhem at Bukom Boxing Arena again as ring referee fires gun

    Two judges scored it 115-112 to Pacquiao, while the other gave it 114-113 to Thurman.

    Pacquiao – a world champion at eight weights – was fighting for the 71st time in a stellar career that has seen seven defeats, but with four of those losses coming in his past 11 fights before the meeting with Thurman.

    Afterwards, Pacquiao said he felt “blessed” and he will return to the Philippines to resume his work as a senator before deciding his next move.

    “I think I will fight next year,” he added.

    Thurman had a height, reach, weight and age advantage over Pacquiao, but was chasing the fight from the beginning and started to bleed from his nose in the fifth round.

    He recovered in the middle of the contest, but Pacquiao stormed back to take the last few rounds.

    Read:Kickboxing: Nmai appointed WBC Muay Thai rep in Ghana

    The Filipino could now face Britain’s Amir Khan, though last week he denied claims that an agreement for a bout in Saudi Arabia was an already in place for November.

    Khan claims the fight will take place in Riyadh on 8 November.

    “I wish I had a little bit more output to go toe to toe,” Thurman told US broadcasters. “I felt like he was getting a little bit tired, but he did have experience in the ring. My conditioning, my output, was just behind Manny Pacquiao. It was a great night of boxing. I’d love a rematch.

    “I want to thank the fans. I want to thank everybody for coming out. Manny Pacquiao is a great, truly great champion.”

    Source: BBC.com

  • Injured Richard Senanu sends farewell message to Kotoko Captain Amos Frimpong

    Midfielder Richard Senanu sends his farewell message to Asante Kotoko captain Amos Frimpong as he prepares to leave the club after 8 years at Baba Yara Sports Stadium.

    The versatile defender was released by the Porcupines few days ago to complete his move to Guinean giants Kaloum Stars.

    Read:Kotoko midfielder Richard Senanu finally granted visa to undergo surgery

    Crocked Senanu, who is in Germany for treatment took to Twitter in a bid to send a touching farewell message to his old friend.

    The 27-year-old joined Kotoko on July 1, 2011, and has won a number of trophies with the club, including the novelty competition (NC Special Cup).

    Read:Kotoko boosted by return of midfielder Richard Senanu ahead of Zesco trip

    Source: Ghanacrusader.com

  • Don’t let substance abuse end your career – sportsmen told

    Madam Bernice Naa Adjeley Mensah, an Officer at the National Youth Authority (NYA), has advised young people in sports to stay away from substance abuse, because that could end their career prematurely.

    She said using illegal substances to enhance performance offered no benefit and would only land them in trouble with law enforcing agencies, bringing their careers to an abrupt end.

    Madam Mensah gave the advice at a day’s workshop organized by the management of the Ho Night Street Soccer organizers for the youth.

    Read:Ghana football was on its knees in 2018 Kwabena Yeboah

    She urged them to be agents of change in society and help change the negative perception of the area, known for drug abuse and social vices.

    Mr. Cephas Setorwu, Acting Volta Regional Director, National Sports Authority (NSA), urged the youth to be disciplined in their chosen fields of endeavour.

    He asked them to desist from alcoholism and adopt healthy lifestyles if they were to “climb and stay on the ladder of success” in sports.

    Mr. Kenneth Kponnor, Regional Director, National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) asked the youth to take advantage of registering for the Ghana card as it could either give or deny them access to some sporting clubs in the country and beyond.

    Read:2019 Africa Cup of Nations: Colourful pictures as Algeria celebrate second AFCON title

    He said soon Ghanaian sportsmen without Ghana card would not be recruited by any sporting clubs.

    Mr. Prince Dogbatse, Public Relations Officer, Volta Regional Police Command, bemoaned the state of indiscipline among the youth in the Anlorkordzi community during match days.

    He said the police command was making available adequate police personnel during match days and cautioned against acts of indiscipline.

    Mr. Dogbatse said there would be no compromises should anyone be caught dealing in drugs in the area.

    Source: ghananewsagency.org

  • Ghana forward Bernard Terkpetey in high spirits ahead of new Bundesliga season

    Ahead of the new Bundesliga season, Fortuna Düsseldorf new boy Bernard Terkpetey is highly optimistic of a great seaon with the club.

    Terkpetey, 21, joined the Flingeraner from Schalke 04 a few weeks ago and has since been training with the side.

    After enjoying a series of consistent pre-season activities with his new side, Terkpetey is highly optimistic his stay with Fortuna Düsseldorf will be great.

    Read:Ghanaian winger Joseph Mensah joins Turkish side Istanbulspor

    Watch video below:

     

    Read:Ghana forward Emmanuel Boateng to work with Rafael Benitez at Dalian Yifang

    Source: footballmadeinghana.com

  • Algeria win Africa Cup of Nations

    Algeria won the Africa Cup of Nations for the second time as a freak early goal secured a 1-0 win against Senegal in the final in Cairo.

    Baghdad Bounedjah’s shot took a huge deflection off Salif Sane and looped over goalkeeper Alfred Gomes.

    Senegal, who have never won the competition, were awarded a penalty for handball in the second half but it was overturned after a VAR review.

    Algeria closed out the rest of the game to win their first title since 1990.

    Senegal’s players collapsed on the pitch in tears at the final whistle.

    Read:2019 Africa Cup of Nations: We have a chance to write our names in history- Algeria midfielder Adlene Guerdiora

    Liverpool forward Sadio Mane, who said before the game he would swap his Champions League winners medal for Africa Cup of Nations success, looked disconsolate as Algeria players celebrated around him.

    “Without the players I am nothing,” said Algeria boss Djamel Belmadi. “They are the main ones. I suppose the staff played its part in guiding the players but they applied the instructions incredibly well.”

    Senegal, making only their second appearance in the final since 2002, dominated for large periods but struggled to make the most of their possession.

    M’Baye Niang was at the centre of two of their best chances as he flashed a fierce drive over the bar just before the break, and rounded keeper Rais M’bolhi early in the second half only to shoot wide from a tight angle.

    M’Bolhi also did well to palm over a stinging effort from Youssouf Sabaly.

    The decisive moment for Senegal was the reversal of the decision to award a penalty on the hour mark.

    Ismaila Sarr’s cross was blasted straight at Adlene Guedioura’s arm, referee Neant Alioum pointed to the spot, but, just as the Senegal players started celebrating the decision, he quickly indicated that a VAR review was under way.

    After watching the replays on the pitch-side monitor, which clearly showed Guedioura’s arm being by his side, Alioum reversed the decision.

    Although the decision was correct, the result was harsh on Senegal, with Algeria managing only one shot on goal.

    Premier League stars fail to shine

    The game was billed by many as a battle between Liverpool’s Mane and Manchester City’s Riyad Mahrez, but both were on the periphery of this encounter.

    Mahrez’s lack of contribution was largely down to Algeria’s defensive approach after taking the lead, but Mane will perhaps be disappointed with his input.

    He was clearly the player Algeria fans feared most – every touch of the ball was met with boos – but he showed only glimpses of his pace and danger on the ball, possibly showing the signs of fatigue following a long season for club and country.

    Read:2019 Africa Cup of Nations: Cameroonian referee Alioum Alioum to handle Algeria-Senegal final

    It is 363 days since Mane began pre-season with Liverpool – and he will only have a couple of weeks rest before the new campaign gets under way on 9 August.

    Algeria were very lucky to get their first goal from a deflected shot by Bounedjah. But they made the most of their luck.

    Their defence has been formidable all tournament and as much as Senegal tried to create chances, it was just so difficult for them.

    The Teranga Lions raised their level after half-time and had a great chance that was missed by Niang, one of two players Algeria were giving very close attention – the other, of course, being Mane.

    One goal was enough for Algeria to win a well deserved tournament even though they weren’t their best in the final. Senegal were so close this time but they needed luck and more clinical finishing – and they found neither.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Guinea: I wrote exams 30 minutes after giving birth – 18-year-old

    An 18-year-old student who was rushed to hospital from an exam hall tells the BBC she went back to complete her tests just 30 minutes after giving birth.
    “I decided for myself that I wanted to complete my baccalaureate,” Fatoumata Kourouma says.

    She had turned up to the exam hall, in the Guinean town of Mamou, on Tuesday morning but staff sent her to hospital.

    “I’d started having stomach pains on Monday night but didn’t know I was going to give birth,” she told AFP.

    Read:Papua New Guinea: Women and children killed in tribal massacre

    “I worked up the courage to do the exam the next day, without saying anything to my husband or the school,” she added.

    “I was worried they might ask me to stay at home or visit the doctor.”

    It was only once she had arrived at the hospital that she realised she was about to give birth. And when her baby boy was born after a quick labour, she handed him over to her parents so she could go back and finish her baccalaureate exams in Physics and French.

    “The session had already begun but the invigilators allowed me to go back in,” Mrs Kourouma tells the BBC, adding that she felt well at the time and was not in pain.

    Read:Somalia cuts diplomatic ties with Guinea over Somaliland

    She says she and her son are both in good health. A relative of hers told AFP news agency that her husband, a corporal in the police, was thrilled and telling everyone who would listen about “this terrific woman”.

    One in three women in Guinea give birth by the time they are 18, says the UN children’s agency, Unicef.

    It is also one of the 18 African countries that have no laws or policies designed to keep pregnant girls or adolescent mothers in schools, according to a recent report by Human Rights Watch.

    Life is even harder for girls in countries like Tanzania and Sierra Leone where they are expelled from school as a matter of government policy.

    But there are laws protecting pregnant girls’ right to stay in school, or return to education, in Nigeria, Benin and DR Congo, among others.

    Source: BBC.com

  • A$AP Rocky to remain in detention after Swedish court grants prosecutor’s request

    American rapper A$AP Rocky will remain in prison for another week to allow prosecutors to finish their investigation into an assault that took place in June, a Swedish court has ruled.

    The 30-year-old — whose real name is Rakim Mayers — has been detained since July 3, following a confrontation in the Swedish capital where he faces accusations of serious assault, CNN Swedish affiliate Expressen reported. Stockholm District Court decided the rapper should remain in custody “because of the flight risk,” prosecutor Daniel Suneson said in a statement.

    As a result, the prosecution has until July 25 to “complete the investigation,” into a brawl that broke out on June 30, which A$AP Rocky is suspected of being involved in.

    Read:Hang White People: Rapper Nick Conrad fined over YouTube song

    On Instagram A$AP Rocky posted two videos that show him, and his companions, asking two men to stop following them. “We don’t know these guys and we didn’t want trouble,” he wrote as the caption on one of the videos. “They followed us for four blocks.”

    In another video posted by the rapper, which was three minutes long, A$AP Rocky says one of the men hit a member of his security “in the face with headphones.”

    Referring to himself, A$AP Rocky added that authorities tried to arrest him and that he is “innocent.” But in a video posted by TMZ, the website points to A$AP Rocky who appears to grab one of the men and throw him to the ground. On Thursday Kim Kardashian West joined a group of celebrities who have been campaigning for the rapper to be released.

    Read:UK rapper Cadet killed in car crash on way to gig

    Thank you @realDonaldTrump , @SecPompeo, Jared Kushner & everyone involved with the efforts to Free ASAP Rocky & his two friends,” the reality star tweeted. “Your commitment to justice reform is so appreciated.”

    High profile celebrities including musical artists Post Malone and Shawn Mendes and actress Jada Pinkett Smith threw their support behind a Change.org petition last week using the hashtag “JusticeForRocky.”

    The petition demanding his release had over 600,000 signatures on Friday morning.

    Source: edition.cnn.com

  • South Africa’s President accused in corruption row

    South Africa’s watchdog has accused President Cyril Ramaphosa of misleading parliament and potential money laundering over a campaign donation.

    Mr Ramaphosa has previously denied any wrongdoing.

    His supporters say the allegations made by Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane are politically motivated.

    The scandal is seen as part of a larger power struggle within the governing party, reports the BBC’s Andrew Harding in Johannesburg.

    Last year, Mr Ramaphosa told parliament that he had not received election campaign donations from a controversial local company during his bid to lead the ruling African National Congress (ANC).

    It later emerged that was not true. Mr Ramphosa apologised, and said he had been misinformed. But South Africa’s corruption watchdog has now said Mr Ramaphosa deliberately misled parliament and should be investigated by prosecutors.

    Read:South Africa corruption inquiry: Zuma to cooperate with written statements

    ‘Bitter power struggle’

    The explosive allegations against President Ramaphosa are seen by many as a power battle for control of the ANC and South Africa itself. Party factions have only become more entrenched since former President Jacob Zuma, 77, was forced to resign as president in February 2018 amid widespread allegations of corruption, which he denies.

    He was replaced by his then-deputy, Cyril Ramaphosa, who promised to tackle corruption in the country. Many South Africans believe he means it. Mr Ramaphosa described Mr Zuma’s nine years in office as “wasted”.

    Critics of Ms Mkhwebane accuse her of bias and say she has become a participant in a fight-back by allies of former President Zuma, who is now facing numerous allegations of corruption himself.

    The battles are likely to play out in South Africa’s courts, which have remained largely independent.

    Mr Zuma is to give further testimony to an ongoing corruption inquiry, withdrawing an earlier threat to pull out. His lawyer, Muzi Sikhakhane, had said on Friday that Mr Zuma would “take no further part” in the proceedings.

    But the judge overseeing the inquiry later said Mr Zuma had agreed to provide it with written statements. The inquiry is investigating allegations that the ex-leader oversaw a web of corruption while in office..

    Read:Ghanaians no more need visa to travel to South Africa

    Why did Mr Zuma threaten to withdraw?

    The lawyer, Mr Sikhakhane, told the inquiry commission in Johannesburg: “Our client from the beginning… has been treated as someone who was accused.” He criticised the investigation led by Judge Raymond Zondo, alleging that it was a “political process where the left hand doesn’t know what the right hand is doing”. He also said Mr Zuma had been subjected to “relentless cross-examination”.

    Mr Zuma had been due to give a final day of testimony on Friday but the inquiry was adjourned. “I expected that he would co-operate,” Judge Zondo said following Mr Zuma’s withdrawal. “The first purpose was to give him an opportunity to tell his side of his story.”

    But shortly after, the judge said Mr Zuma had agreed to provide written statements and then return to the inquiry at a later date.

    What is Mr Zuma accused of?

    The allegations against Mr Zuma focus on his relationship with the controversial Gupta family, which has been accused of influencing cabinet appointments and winning lucrative state tenders through corruption.

    He has also been accused of taking bribes from the logistics firm Bosasa, which is run by the Watson family. All the parties deny allegations of wrongdoing.

    The scandal is widely referred to as “state capture” – shorthand for a form of corruption in which businesses and politicians commandeer state assets to advance their own interests.

    Read:A harrowing heroin addiction grips South Africa

    On Monday, Mr Zuma gave a lengthy address in which he claimed the corruption allegations were a “conspiracy” aimed at removing him from the political scene. “I have been vilified, alleged to be the king of corrupt people,” he said.

    He implied that the UK and US had been – and still were – part of an elaborate plot to discredit him, even as he tried to bring about political and economic change in South Africa.

    Mr Zuma also said other foreign agents had tried to poison him, without naming them or offering any proof. “I never did anything with them unlawfully,” he said of the Gupta family. “They just remained friends, as they were friends to everybody else.”

    He also objected to allegations that he had allowed the state to be “captured” by the family. “Did I auction Table Mountain? Did I auction Johannesburg?” he asked.

    On Tuesday, the former president said he had received death threats following his testimony.

    How did ‘state capture’ operate in South Africa? Many of the revelations from the inquiry concern the relationship between two families – the Zumas, centred on the former president, and the Guptas, three Indian-born brothers who moved to South Africa after the fall of apartheid.

    The two families became so closely linked that a joint term was coined for them – the “Zuptas”.

    The Guptas owned a portfolio of companies that enjoyed lucrative contracts with South African government departments and state-owned conglomerates. They also employed several Zuma family members – including the president’s son, Duduzane – in senior positions.

    According to testimony heard at the inquiry, the Guptas went to great lengths to influence their most important client, the South African state. Public officials responsible for various state bodies say they were directly instructed by the Guptas to take decisions that would advance the brothers’ business interests.

    It is alleged that compliance was rewarded with money and promotion, while disobedience was punished with dismissal.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Ghanaian youngster Kelvin Ofori begins trials at German side Fortuna Düsseldorf

    Ghanaian youngster Kelvin Ofori is undergoing a trial at German Bundesliga side Fortuna Düsseldorf.

    Ofori, 17, has commenced a two-week understudy with the Red and Whites with the aim of securing a deal in the ongoing transfer window.

    Read:Performance of Ghanaian players abroad wrap

    He will become the third Ghanaian footballer to join Fortuna Düsseldorf this transfer window after Nana Opoku Ampomah and Bernard Tekpetey.

    Read:Freak goal earns Algeria first Africa Cup of Nations title in 29 years

    Source: GHANAsoccernet.com