Author: Persis

  • Egyptians head to the polls to elect revived senate

    Egyptians have started voting for the senate that was revived after last year’s constitutional referendum.

    Tuesday’s poll will see 200 members elected by public vote to the upper chamber of parliament, which has an advisory role and few formal powers. The remaining 100 senators are appointed by the president.

    The country’s lower chamber, the house of representatives, has a legislative role.

    The election comes at the height of the coronavirus pandemic – Egypt has the second-highest number of cases on the continent after South Africa.

    Authorities have said voters will be given face masks and polling stations are to be disinfected to prevent the spread of the virus.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigeria receives 200 ventilators from the US

    Nigeria has begun the handover ceremony for 200 ventilators donated by the US government.

    The ventilators were a promised by President Donald Trump during a phone conversation with President Muhammadu Buhari in April.

    President Trump while making the promise said the US would support Nigeria during the pandemic.

    Nigeria’s Information Minister Lai Mohammed had to clarify that the ventilators had not arrived in May after President Trump said he had already sent them.

    The minister said that when the ventilators arrived it would be made public.

    The foreign ministry on Tuesday tweeted:

    Source: bbc.com

  • Algeria eases travel curbs and curfew

    Algeria said on Saturday it will further ease its coronavirus lockdown, including shortening an overnight curfew, lifting some travel curbs and allowing large mosques to reopen.

    The North African country has recorded 34,155 coronavirus infections, with 1,282 deaths.

    In June, it resumed some economic activity, mainly in the construction and public works sectors, and allowed the reopening of some businesses.

    The new measures include lifting a travel ban on 29 provinces from Aug. 9 until the end of the month. During that period, a curfew will be shortened and will run from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. from the current 8 p.m. to 5 a.m., the government said.

    Mosques with a capacity of more than 1,000 worshipers can reopen from August 15, though weekly prayers on Fridays, which are usually attended by larger numbers of people, will remain banned throughout the country.

    The use of air conditioners in mosques remains banned, as does a prohibition of access for women, vulnerable people and children under 15 years, the government said.

    Algeria ended a curfew and travel restrictions for its remaining 19 provinces in July.

    Source: reuters.com

  • Backlash against Malawi’s new coronavirus restrictions

    New COVID-19 measures announced in Malawi over the weekend have met with a backlash, with at least one civil society organisation threatening to take the government to court.

    In the new restrictions, public gatherings of more than 10 people have been banned, except for funerals which can have up to 50 people in attendance.

    Wearing of face masks is mandatory in all public spaces and offenders could be fined up to $13 (£10). Places of worship have been closed. Bars can operate for six hours a day, between 14:00 to 20:00 local time, but only sell takeaways.

    The new measures were prompted by a recent increase in coronavirus cases in the country, the ministry of health said.

    Similar measures announced by the previous administration of President Peter Mutharika – which also included a 21-day lockdown – were blocked by a court pending determination. No verdict has been made on the matter.

    Church leaders have voiced concern over the new government restrictions on public gatherings. The influential Catholic Church said it was never consulted.

    A local civil society organisation, Centre for Democracy and Economic Development Initiatives (CDEDI), has said it will take the government to court for ignoring the court order.

    Health Minister Khumbize Chiponda has since issued a statement promising to engage religious leaders “in further consultation”.

    More than 4,600 Malawians have tested positive for Covid-19, according to Johns Hopkins University, and at least 146 have died.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Al-Shabab militants in shoot-out in Somalia prison

    At least 10 people have been killed in a shoot-out between jailed militant Islamists and security officers at a prison in Somalia, government spokesman Ismail Mukhtar has said.

    The al-Shabab militants had attempted to escape from the heavily guarded prison in the capital, Mogadishu.

    An investigation is under way into how the militants obtained weapons.

    Some reports suggested that an inmate managed to disarm a warden and then a group of them raided the armoury.

    The BBC’s Bella Sheegow in Mogadishu says Monday’s incident is highly embarrassing for the government as the prison, the second biggest in Somalia, is guarded by elite forces.

    The attack was repelled after reinforcements were called in.

    ‘No prisoners escaped’

    The most dangerous al-Shabab militants are kept in the prison, including those serving life sentences or awaiting execution after being sentenced to death.

    Inmates had also attempted to break out of the prison in 2017, and the government was under pressure to prevent further such incidents, our reporter adds.

    Somali government soldiers on a Military vehicle are seen outside the SYL hotel in Mogadishu on December 11, 2019
    Somali troops have been battling to curb the insurgency / GETTY IMAGES

    “We will not leave anything to chance. The government is investigating how this happened and who was responsible for what happened as well as who facilitated the inmates to get the weapons,” Acting Justice Minister Hassan Hussein Haji said.

    Mr Mukhtar said none of the prisoners had managed to escape.

    He said four militants were killed in the shoot-out.

    He did not give details on who the other six were, except to say that the prison guards had also suffered casualties.

    Al-Shabab, which is linked to al-Qaeda, has been waging a brutal insurgency in Somalia for more than a decade.

    It has been pushed out of Mogadishu by government and African Union troops, but the group still carries out bombings and assassinations in the city.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Two Iranians sentenced to 10 years for spying

    Iran has sentenced two men to 10 years imprisonment for allegedly spying for foreign governments.

    Massud Mossaheb was convicted of spying for Israeli and German intelligence over his senior role in the Austrian-Iranian Society, judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaili said.

    The other man, Shahram Shirkhani, was accused of working for UK intelligence.

    Five other Iranians have been arrested on charges of espionage in recent months, according to Mr Esmaili.

    International rights organisations regularly raise issues about the justice system in Iran, with Human Rights Watch noting that the country “regularly fell short of providing fair trials and used confessions likely obtained under torture as evidence in court”.

    Speaking on Tuesday, the spokesman said Mr Shirkhani had attempted to recruit others to Britain’s MI6 agency. He was also accused of passing information about Iranian banks and the defence ministry “to the enemy”.

    The length of his sentence was not confirmed by Mr Esmaili, but a state-run news outlet said Mr Shirkhani had received a 10-year sentence.

    Mr Mossaheb, meanwhile, holds both Austrian and Iranian citizenship and was arrested after travelling to Tehran in January 2019, according to Austria’s Der Standard newspaper.

    He was also sentenced to 10 years, according to Mr Esmaili, for “spying for Mossad and Germany” in the guise of the general secretary of the Austrian-Iranian Society.

    Austria called for Mr Mossaheb’s release last year, but Iran does not recognise dual citizenship and denies Iranians access to consular assistance from their other country.

    Around a dozen foreign and dual nationals are currently being held by Iran, according to Human Rights Watch, which says they are deprived of due process.

    They include British-Iranian charity worker Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who was jailed for five years in 2016, and Kylie Moore-Gilbert, a British-Australian academic serving a 10-year sentence for espionage

    The Iranian government spokesman gave no further details about the five other men arrested for spying.

    In July, Iran executed two men for espionage.

    Mahmoud Mousavi-Majd was accused of reporting on the movements of Iranian forces in Syria and of spying on the Revolutionary Guards commander, Qasem Soleimani, for the CIA and Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency.

    Earlier the same month, former defence ministry worker Reza Asgari was executed for allegedly passing on details of Iran’s missile programme to the US.

    Iran’s intelligence ministry said last year that it had arrested 17 people accused of collecting information on the country’s nuclear and military sectors for the CIA. The ministry said some had been sentenced to death but did not name them.

    US President Donald Trump dismissed that announcement as “totally false”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Putin says vaccine has been approved for use

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has said a locally developed vaccine for Covid-19 has been given regulatory approval after less than two months of testing on humans.

    Mr Putin said the vaccine had passed all the required checks, adding that his daughter had already been given it.

    Officials have said they plan to start mass vaccination in October.

    Experts have raised concerns about the speed of Russia’s work, suggesting that researchers might be cutting corners.

    Amid fears that safety could have been compromised, the World Health Organization (WHO) urged Russia last week to follow international guidelines for producing a vaccine against Covid-19.

    On Tuesday, the WHO said it had been in talks with Russian authorities about undertaking a review of the vaccine.

    Currently, the Russian vaccine is not among the WHO’s list of six vaccines that have reached phase three clinical trials, which involve more widespread testing in humans.

    More than 100 vaccines around the world are in early development, with some of those being tested on people in clinical trials.

    Despite rapid progress, most experts think any vaccine would not become widely available until mid-2021.

    What did President Putin say about the vaccine?

    Calling it a world first, President Putin said the vaccine, developed by Moscow’s Gamaleya Institute, offered “sustainable immunity” against the coronavirus.

    He said he knew the vaccine was “quite effective”, without giving further details, and stressed that it had passed “all needed checks”.

    Mr Putin also said the vaccine had been given to one of his daughters, who was feeling fine despite a brief temperature increase.

    “I think in this sense she took part in the experiment,” Mr Putin said.

    He did not specify which of his two daughters had received the vaccine. It is rare for President Putin to talk publicly about his daughters. The lives of his daughters, named Maria Vorontsova and Katerina Tikhonova in media reports, have been shrouded in secrecy.

    What do we know about the vaccine?

    Last week, the Russian government announced it was preparing to begin mass vaccinations against coronavirus in October.

    Russian scientists said early-stage trials of the vaccine had been completed and the results were a success.

    The Russian vaccine uses adapted strains of the adenovirus, a virus that usually causes the common cold, to trigger an immune response.

    A news conference at the Science and Practice Center for Interventional Cardioangiology in Moscow, Russia, 15 July 2020
    In July Russian scientists announced that early-stage trials of a vaccine developed by the Gamaleya Institute had been completed / EPA

    But the vaccine’s approval by Russian regulators comes before the completion of a larger study involving thousands of people, known as a phase-three trial.

    Experts consider these trials an essential part of the testing process.

    Despite this, Russian Health Minister Mikhail Murashko said on Tuesday the vaccine had “proven to be highly effective and safe”, hailing it as a big step towards “humankind’s victory” over Covid-19.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Trump escorted out of briefing as man shot near White House

    US President Donald Trump was escorted out of a news conference after Secret Service agents shot and wounded a man who claimed to be armed outside the White House.

    The Secret Service said the incident happened one block from the compound, when an officer fired on the suspect who had run “aggressively” towards him.

    An agent then walked on stage as Mr Trump was speaking and led him away.

    The president returned minutes later to say the situation was under control.

    The US Secret Service said the incident happened on Monday on the corner of 17th Street and Pennsylvania Ave – outside the White House perimeter.

    It said a 51-year-old man, who has not been identified, approached the officer, told him he had weapons and assumed a “shooter’s stance”, whereupon the officer shot him in the torso.

    The Secret Service did not say whether the man was armed. It added that “both the officer and the suspect were then taken to hospital”, and that “at no time during this incident was the White House complex breached”.

    After Mr Trump and his staff left, doors to the briefing room were locked with the journalists inside.

    When the president returned nine minutes later, he said: “Law enforcement shot someone, it seems to be the suspect.”

    He said he did not know if the person harboured any ill intentions towards him.

    “It might not have had anything to do with me,” the president said.

    A journalist asked Mr Trump if he was rattled by the events. He replied: “Do I seem rattled?”

    The president added: “It’s unfortunate that this is the world, but the world’s always been a dangerous place. It’s not something that’s unique.”

    The District of Columbia fire department said a man suffered serious or possibly critical injuries, according to the Associated Press.

    The news agency also reported that authorities were looking into whether the individual has a background of mental illness.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Algeria jails journalist for three years over protest coverage

    During the trial, which was held by video conference because of the coronavirus, Drareni, 40, denied wrongdoing and said he was only working as an independent journalist and exercising his right to inform.

    His supporters said the verdict was reminiscent of the tightly controlled era of former President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who was pushed out by the mass demonstrations and whose successor promised a more democratic, open leadership.

    While a new president was elected in December, the pro-democracy Hirak movement is seeking deeper change in a nation whose rulers have been shadowed by the army since it gained independence from France in 1962.

    Weekly protests rocked Algeria for nearly a year since the popular movement began in February 2019 and came to a halt in March this year when the authorities banned the demonstrations to limit the spread of the coronavirus.

    ‘Arbitrary and absurd’

    In their case against Drareni, prosecutors cited a Facebook post in which he said the Algerian political system had not changed since the election of Abdelmadjid Tebboune as president, and that the journalist shared a call by multiple political parties for a general strike.

    “Khaled Drareni was only doing his job of informing citizens. He did not commit a crime,” one of his lawyers, Fetta Sadat, told The Associated Press news agency.

    The verdict “is proof that Algerian justice is not free but an instrument in the hands of power that can be used to intimidate Algerians”, he said.

    The RSF dismissed Monday’s verdict as “arbitrary and absurd” and called it “judicial persecution against a journalist who is the honour of his country”, urging global mobilisation in his support.

    At least one other Algerian journalist is currently awaiting trial, according to the media watchdog, which ranked Algeria 144th out of 180 countries in its 2020 Press Freedom Index.

    SOURCE: News agencies

  • Egyptians vote for revived upper house of Parliament

    Egyptians have started voting for the Senate, the upper chamber of Parliament that was revived as part of constitutional amendments approved in a referendum last year, in an election that comes as the country faces an uptick in daily numbers of new coronavirus cases.

    Authorities have said face masks would be handed out to voters and polling stations were disinfected in the run-up to the balloting to ease concerns amid the pandemic.

    The vote is mostly a symbolic exercise as the Senate – unlike the House of Representatives, the lower chamber – has no legislative powers and will act mainly in an advisory role.

    It replaces the Shura Council, which was dissolved in 2014.

    Billboards promoting little-known candidates have popped up across the capital Cairo and other cities in recent weeks, and online videos have explained the Senate’s role and urged people to cast their ballots.

     

    The balloting will extend for two days to allow for a maximum turnout with 63 million eligible voters who will choose two-thirds of the 300-member Senate, with 787 candidates running for those 200 Senate seats.

    Egyptian expats voted on Sunday and Monday.

    The first 100 seats in the running are reserved for individual candidates, the second for those running on a list dominated by pro-government parties. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi will choose the remaining 100 members.

    The results are expected within a week and the runoff will take place in September. Under the constitutional amendments approved last April, women will have a 25 percent quota in the chamber.

    However, the Senate vote is unlikely to revitalise “the already stagnant political scene in Egypt”, according to Mustapha Kamel al-Sayyid, political science professor at Cairo University.

    “It could be useful in terms of being a way to reward those backing Sisi,” he added.

    Egypt elections
    Election banners for candidates in the upper house of Parliament are displayed on a street in Cairo [Nariman El-Mofty/AP Photo]

    Lasheen Ibrahim, chairman of the National Election Authority, called voting “a national duty” and warned in televised comments on Saturday that those who boycott the election could be fined up to 500 Egyptian pounds ($32) under an Egyptian law that has existed for years but was never really implemented.

    The election comes despite an uptick in coronavirus cases this week.

    Egypt, a country of more than 100 million people, has reported almost 96,000 cases with more than 5,000 related deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

    Egypt’s latest constitutional amendments extended a president’s term in office from four to six years, allowing for a maximum of two terms.

    But they also included a specific article extending el-Sisi’s current second four-year term to six years and allowing him to run for another six-year term in 2024 – potentially extending his rule until 2030.

    In 2013, el-Sisi led the military overthrow of Egypt’s first democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsi. El-Sisi has since presided over an unprecedented crackdown on dissent.

    Under el-Sisi, Egypt has launched a sweeping crackdown on the opposition, especially Morsi’s now-outlawed Muslim Brotherhood group, as well as leftist and secular activists, journalists and bloggers.

    Heavy restrictions have been imposed on protests and critical websites blocked. Rights groups say freedoms gained in the 2011 uprising against Hosni Mubarak have largely been rolled back.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • Pompeo ‘cleared of wrongdoing’ over arms sales to Saudi, UAE

    US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has been cleared of wrongdoing in a disputed arms sale to Saudi Arabia and other Arab allies, according to his office, although the report on the internal investigation has not yet been released.

    Pompeo was accused of abuse of power after he used an obscure emergency procedure to ram through $8.1bn in arms sales to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Jordan in May of last year.

    At the time, members of Congress had been blocking weapons sales to Riyadh and Abu Dhabi, angry about the huge civilian toll from their air campaign in Yemen, as well as human rights abuses such as the murder of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at a Saudi consulate in Turkey.

    On Monday, a senior official at the Department of State, speaking to reporters on the condition of anonymity, said an internal probe concluded that the department had “acted in complete accordance with the law”.

    The investigation by the State Department’s Office of the Inspector General “found no wrongdoing in the administration exercise of the emergency authorities that are available under the arms export control act”, the official added.

    The comments – made before the report was made public – came after President Donald Trump abruptly fired then-Inspector General Steve Linick, who was looking into Pompeo’s certification, in May.

    Linick, whose dismissal is being investigated by Congress, was also reportedly investigating allegations that Pompeo and his wife used staff for personal favours such as walking their dog.

    He was succeeded by Stephen Akard, who resigned from his post last week after recusing himself from the arms sales investigation. The final report was completed by Akard’s deputy, Diana Shaw.

    Linick was the fourth government inspector general removed by the Republican president in recent months, raising concern among Democrats and some of his fellow Republicans in Congress about curtailment of oversight.

    In a statement, Representative Eliot Engel, the Democratic chairman of the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, said he was concerned that the State Department had discussed the report before it was released.

    “The people briefing the press were the subjects of the IG’s probe, not the report’s authors. This obvious pre-spin of the findings reeks of an attempt to distract and mislead,” Engel said.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • At least six prisoners killed in Mogadishu prison shoot-out

    Lebanon’s government has stepped down as Prime Minister Hassan Diab blamed endemic corruption for a devastating explosion last week that tore through the capital.

    President Michel Aoun accepted Diab’s resignation on Monday and asked the government to stay on in a caretaker capacity until a new cabinet was formed.

    Tensions have been boiling over in the country following the massive explosion at Beirut’s port that killed some 200 people and wounded 6,000 others, according to the latest tally.

    “This crime” was a result of corruption that is “bigger than the state”, Diab said in a televised statement, adding that he was taking “a step back” so he could stand with the people “and fight the battle for change alongside them”.

    “I declare today the resignation of this government. May God protect Lebanon,” Diab said, repeating the last phrase three times.

    The developments follow a weekend of angry, violent anti-establishment protests in which 728 people were wounded and one police officer killed amid a heavy crackdown by security forces.

    Through analysis of videos and images of the security response by the army and men in plain-clothes on the day, and examination of medical documents and interviews with doctors who treated the wounded, Al Jazeera established that security forces violated international standards on the use of force.

    Political and economic reforms

    The August 4 disaster, which was caused by highly explosive ammonium nitrate that was stored at Beirut’s port for more than six years, has fuelled popular anger and upended politics in a country already struggling with a major economic crisis.

    Most Lebanese blame their leadership’s corruption and neglect for the explosion, which has caused damage to the extent of an estimated $15bn and left nearly 300,000 people homeless.

    Since October, there have been mass demonstrations demanding the departure of the entire sectarian-based leadership over entrenched corruption, incompetence and mismanagement.

    But the ruling oligarchy has held onto power for so long – since the end of the civil war in 1990 – that it is difficult to find a credible political figure not tainted by connections to them.

    Although Diab’s resignation had appeared inevitable after the catastrophe, he seemed unwilling to leave and only two days ago made a televised speech in which he offered to stay on for two months to allow for various factions to agree on a road map for reforms. But the pressure from within his cabinet proved to be too much.‘Historic turning point’

    Diab’s government was formed after his predecessor, Saad Hariri, stepped down under pressure from the protest movement. It took months of bickering among the leadership factions before they settled on Diab.

    His government, which was supported by Hezbollah and its allies and seen as one-sided, failed to implement the sweeping political and economic reforms that it had promised.

    Now the process must start again, with Diab’s government in a caretaker role as the same factions debate a new one.

    Al Jazeera’s Bernard Smith, reporting from Beirut, said the change is going to be challenging because Lebanon’s electoral system is set up “to protect the political elite in the country”.

    “To change that system, those political elites have to agree to it,” Smith said.

    “Even an explosion as catastrophic as Tuesday’s might not be enough to get those elites easily give up their grip on power … That’s why international pressure, people believe, is necessary.”

    On Sunday, world leaders and international organisations pledged nearly $300m in emergency humanitarian aid to Beirut, but warned no funds would be made available until Lebanese authorities committed themselves to the political and economic reforms demanded by the people.

    Rami Khouri, a professor at the American University of Beirut, described the developments of the past week as “a historic turning point in the modern political governance of Lebanon” that is “just at the beginning”.

    Khouri said there were essentially two main forces currently in Lebanon: “One is Hezbollah and its close allies, and the other one is the protest movement, or the revolution as they call themselves – these are all kinds of people but they do represent the majority of the population.”

    “The question is, will there be a serious negotiation now,” he said, noting that the formation of “a hybrid government” tasked to address Lebanon’s critical issues was likely.

    “They will have to agree on whether the transitional government that comes in is a serious reformist government, with ‘clean’ and efficient people that can get the support of the international community and do a quick deal with the IMF.”

    Meanwhile, Habib Battah, a Lebanon-based journalist, questioned how long the caretaker government would remain in place since it is “very difficult” to form a government in Lebanon.

    “The Diab government was many months in the making,” Battah said.

    He said while the resignation could be seen as a victory for the protesters who view the government as a “corrupt system”, it is important to note that others benefit from it.

    Political parties control schools and hospitals, among other things across the country.

    “These parties are really tough to compete against in elections,” Battah said, adding that it was up to the international community to stop supporting these parties if it were serious about helping Lebanon.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • Tracking Africa’s coronavirus cases

    Lebanon’s government has stepped down as Prime Minister Hassan Diab blamed endemic corruption for a devastating explosion last week that tore through the capital.

    President Michel Aoun accepted Diab’s resignation on Monday and asked the government to stay on in a caretaker capacity until a new cabinet was formed.

    Tensions have been boiling over in the country following the massive explosion at Beirut’s port that killed some 200 people and wounded 6,000 others, according to the latest tally.

    “This crime” was a result of corruption that is “bigger than the state”, Diab said in a televised statement, adding that he was taking “a step back” so he could stand with the people “and fight the battle for change alongside them”.

    “I declare today the resignation of this government. May God protect Lebanon,” Diab said, repeating the last phrase three times.

    The developments follow a weekend of angry, violent anti-establishment protests in which 728 people were wounded and one police officer killed amid a heavy crackdown by security forces.

    Through analysis of videos and images of the security response by the army and men in plain-clothes on the day, and examination of medical documents and interviews with doctors who treated the wounded, Al Jazeera established that security forces violated international standards on the use of force.

    Political and economic reforms

    The August 4 disaster, which was caused by highly explosive ammonium nitrate that was stored at Beirut’s port for more than six years, has fuelled popular anger and upended politics in a country already struggling with a major economic crisis.

    Most Lebanese blame their leadership’s corruption and neglect for the explosion, which has caused damage to the extent of an estimated $15bn and left nearly 300,000 people homeless.

    Since October, there have been mass demonstrations demanding the departure of the entire sectarian-based leadership over entrenched corruption, incompetence and mismanagement.

    But the ruling oligarchy has held onto power for so long – since the end of the civil war in 1990 – that it is difficult to find a credible political figure not tainted by connections to them.

    Although Diab’s resignation had appeared inevitable after the catastrophe, he seemed unwilling to leave and only two days ago made a televised speech in which he offered to stay on for two months to allow for various factions to agree on a road map for reforms. But the pressure from within his cabinet proved to be too much.

    ‘Historic turning point’

    Diab’s government was formed after his predecessor, Saad Hariri, stepped down under pressure from the protest movement. It took months of bickering among the leadership factions before they settled on Diab.

    His government, which was supported by Hezbollah and its allies and seen as one-sided, failed to implement the sweeping political and economic reforms that it had promised.

    Now the process must start again, with Diab’s government in a caretaker role as the same factions debate a new one.

    Al Jazeera’s Bernard Smith, reporting from Beirut, said the change is going to be challenging because Lebanon’s electoral system is set up “to protect the political elite in the country”.

    “To change that system, those political elites have to agree to it,” Smith said.

    “Even an explosion as catastrophic as Tuesday’s might not be enough to get those elites easily give up their grip on power … That’s why international pressure, people believe, is necessary.”

    On Sunday, world leaders and international organisations pledged nearly $300m in emergency humanitarian aid to Beirut, but warned no funds would be made available until Lebanese authorities committed themselves to the political and economic reforms demanded by the people.

    Rami Khouri, a professor at the American University of Beirut, described the developments of the past week as “a historic turning point in the modern political governance of Lebanon” that is “just at the beginning”.

    Khouri said there were essentially two main forces currently in Lebanon: “One is Hezbollah and its close allies, and the other one is the protest movement, or the revolution as they call themselves – these are all kinds of people but they do represent the majority of the population.”

    “The question is, will there be a serious negotiation now,” he said, noting that the formation of “a hybrid government” tasked to address Lebanon’s critical issues was likely.

    “They will have to agree on whether the transitional government that comes in is a serious reformist government, with ‘clean’ and efficient people that can get the support of the international community and do a quick deal with the IMF.”

    Meanwhile, Habib Battah, a Lebanon-based journalist, questioned how long the caretaker government would remain in place since it is “very difficult” to form a government in Lebanon.

    “The Diab government was many months in the making,” Battah said.

    He said while the resignation could be seen as a victory for the protesters who view the government as a “corrupt system”, it is important to note that others benefit from it.

    Political parties control schools and hospitals, among other things across the country.

    “These parties are really tough to compete against in elections,” Battah said, adding that it was up to the international community to stop supporting these parties if it were serious about helping Lebanon.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • Mali swears in new Constitutional Court judges

    Mali’s embattled President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita has attended a swearing-in ceremony for new Constitutional Court judges, appointed last week in an attempt to end a deepening political crisis in the country.

    The 75-year-old president, wearing a protective face mask and visor, had the nine new judges – six men and three women – pledge to conduct themselves as “worthy and loyal” judges.

    Diplomats and prominent members of the country’s civilian society were also present at the event in the capital, Bamako.

    The appointment of the judges was aimed at helping to resolve a weeks-long political impasse between Keita and an opposition protest movement which is determined to secure the president’s resignation.

    Although dissatisfaction over the country’s economic woes, corruption and worsening security situation has been simmering for a while, the spark for the current crisis was a decision by the Constitutional Court in April to overturn the results of parliamentary polls for 31 seats, in a move that saw candidates with Keita’s party get re-elected.

    The protests turned violent earlier this month when three days of clashes between security forces and protesters left 11 people dead, in the worst political strife Mali has seen in years.

    Heads of government from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) stepped in, suggesting on July 27 the formation of a new unity government to include opposition members, while sticking by Keita.

    The ECOWAS bloc also urged the appointment of the new Constitutional Court judges to resolve a festering election dispute, among other measures.

    There is little indication that the new appointments will soothe tensions, however.

    Mali’s opposition June 5 Movement has repeatedly spurned the ECOWAS proposal and is expected to stage anti-Keita protests on Tuesday.

    In a sign that regional leaders are still engaged in resolving Mali’s political crisis, former Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan flew into Bamako on Monday to attend the swearing-in ceremony.

    Jonathan, who had led the ECOWAS mediation mission to Mali, was also due to meet opposition and civil society members on Monday, one of his staffers said.

    Anti-government protesters burn tires and barricade roads in the capital Bamako, Mali, Friday, July 10, 2020. Thousands marched Friday in Mali's capital in anti-government demonstrations urged by an o

    Opposition protesters have staged rallies in Bamako demanding Keita’s resignation [File:Baba Ahmed/AP Photo]

    Regional leaders are eager to avoid further instability in Mali, a country of some 20 million people that has been plagued by a conflict that began in 2012 and has since spilled into neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.

    According to the United Nations, attacks grew fivefold between 2016 and 2020, with 4,000 people killed in the three countries last year, up from about 770 in 2016. The fighting has also forced hundreds of thousands of people from their homes and led to the closure of thousands of schools.

    In central Mali, a multitude of armed groups have been jockeying for control while exploiting the poverty of marginalised communities and inflaming tensions between ethnic groups.

    The presence of thousands of foreign troops has failed to stem the violence, while allegations of abuses and extrajudicial killings by Malian forces have perpetuated deep-rooted mistrust and enmity in parts of the country with little government presence otherwise.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • Lumor Agbenyenu and Baba Rahman to leave Spanish La Liga side Real Mallorca

    Black Stars duo, Lumor Agbenyenu, and Baba Rahman are set to leave Spanish La Liga side, Real Mallorca after the expiration of their respective loan deals.

    Lumor Agbenyenu joined the club on loan from Portuguese side, Sporting CP whiles Baba Rahman joined the club from English giant Chelsea before the start of the just-ended season.

    Baba and Lumor have been left out of Mallorca squad that begun pre-season on Tuesday at the Son Bibiloni facilities.

    Real Mallorca were relegated to the lower side in the just-ended season finishing 19th on the league log with 33 points.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • John Paintsil reveals plan to transform Legon Cities into a continental giant

    Former Black Stars defender, John Paintsil has disclosed plans to transform Ghana Premier League side Legon Cities into a continental giant.

    The grand plan includes establishing a stadium and budling a special training facility to develop their players to excel in both domestic and international competitions.

    Legon Cities’ management is also putting measures in place to establish a clubhouse to ease the accommodation challenges of players.

    “We have a mission to be one of the top three teams after each league in Ghana and also become one of the top five teams in Africa. This is part of our five-year development plan,” Paintsil, who is also a management member of the club told Graphic Sports Online.

    “There is a projected action plan to construct our own stadium to add value to the club. We are also establishing our own training facilities, and hostels to accommodate our players to motivate them to excel.”

    He added, “We also want to groom many of our young players to play actively for the various national teams in Ghana and at the international level.”

    “We have now started a football academy to develop our young and talented footballers to enable them to play prominently locally as well as for clubs in Europe and beyond.”

    “Within the five-year period, we should be able to complete all these laudable projects to transform Legon Cities to be one of the most attractive and successful football clubs in Africa.”

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Ghana midfielder Joseph Paintsil to leave KRC Genk – Reports

    Belgian side, KRC Genk is set to part ways with midfielder, Joseph Paintsil according to reports.

    The Ghana midfielder joined Genk from Ferencvaros.

    Paintsil was not in the match squad against Zulte Waregem and is said to be allowed to leave after one season.

    The midfielder was unable to breakthrough the team due to tough competition in the Genk first team and is now free to look for a new club.

    Paintsil joined the club with huge prospects but could not justify his price tag of two million euros.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • 13-year-old boy who killed dad over GHC70 arrested

    A 13-year-old boy, who allegedly murdered his father at Adanse Pipiiso in the Adanse Asokwa District of the Ashanti region, has been arrested.

    The fugitive minor reported himself to the police together with his mother, Madam Grace.

    The suspect and his mother fled after he cut his father’s hand leading to his death.

    Fifty-year-old Kwaku Akromah was rushed to a nearby hospital and was later pronounced dead.

    Superintendent Fii Ochil, the District Police Commander, told Class News’ regional correspondent Elisha Adarkwah that the incident occurred on Friday, August 7, 2020, when the boy was struggling with his father over GH?70.

    The father, Supt. Ochil said, had sent the son to buy him something and was demanding his change, which led to the incident.

    Superintendent Ochil revealed that the suspect is being processed for court.

    The body of the deceased has since been deposited at the Eastland Mortuary at Adanse Adiembra awaiting autopsy.

    Source: Class FM

  • Coronavirus restrictions : Open the borders – Kofi Bentil to government

    The Vice President and Policy Analyst of IMANI Ghana, Kofi Bentil has called on the government to open the country’s borders for free movement of people saying that restrictions now are needless.

    According to Kofi Bentil, governments all over the world have realized the significant threat posed by the COVID-19 pandemic but they do not see it to be enough to bring to halt life.

    “As it stands now, it seems govts across the world have decided that Covid is serious but not enough to stop life…”, part of Mr. Bentil’s statement reads.

    He is also of the view that the fight against COVID-19 should be a personal responsibility for all; saying people should go back to life and protect themselves against the coronavirus which has so far claimed the lives of more than 200 persons in the country.

    Source: ghanavanguard.com

     

  • Ghana mourns with Lebanon

    Ghana has conveyed its condolences to Lebanon on the disaster that befell the nation on Tuesday, 4 August 2020.

    An explosion at the Port of Beirut in Lebanon led to the loss of 154 persons.

    About 5,000 persons were also left wounded while 300,000 were displaced.

    Signing the book of Condolence at the Embassy of Lebanon on Monday, 10 August 2020, Ghana’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Shirley Ayorkor Botchway, noted that: “The government of Ghana received with shock and sad news of the massive explosion” leading to the deaths.

    She continued: “This disaster, happening at a time that the whole world is battling with the COVID-19 pandemic, is most unfortunate and, regrettably poses an even greater challenge for the Lebanese Government and people.”

    Ms Botchwey, on behalf of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and the people of Ghana, conveyed the “deep condolences to the government and people Lebanon” on the tragedy.

    She added: “Our thoughts and prayers are with the bereaved families, the wounded and the displaced. May Allah be their comfort, and may the souls of the departed rest in peace. Lebanon shall overcome this tragedy!”

    Source: Class FM

  • 3 arrested following ‘bloody’ NDC, NPP clashes at Nkrankwanta

    The Bono Regional Police Command has arrested three individuals following violent clashes at Nkrankwanta in the Dormaa West District of the Bono Region on August 8, 2020.

    The three whose identities have not yet been revealed are currently being transferred to Sunyani to assist in investigations.

    The Bono Regional Police Public Relations Officer (PRO), Chief Inspector Augustine Kingsley Oppong, who spoke to Ghanaweb revealed that the suspects were arrested by the police for their alleged roleS in the confusion which claimed one life.

    Chief Inspector Augustine Oppong reveals that despite the confusion witnessed over the weekend, there is relative calm in the area as they have intensified security.

    He confirmed the death of Kofi Labatu, a 39-year-old resident of Nkrankwanta in the ensuing confusion.

    “I can speak on authority that the security situation at Nkrankwanta is relatively calm and I want to place on record that residents are not fighting among themselves. The confusion was orchestrated by the two leading political parties, that is the NDC and the NPP following the death of Kofi Labatu but I can tell you there is calm and the people are going about their normal activities,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the Member of Parliament for the Dormaa West Constituency, Ali Maiga Halidu, has rubbished allegations that his personal driver fired the gunshot that led to the death of Kofi Labatu.

    According to him, there is enough indication that the deceased was shot and killed by a security operative looking at the nature of the wound.

    He further alleged that preliminary investigations have identified the officer who discharged the riffle and he is hopeful that the law will take its cause.

    Background

    On Saturday, August 8, clashes between some supporters of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the National Democratic Congress (NDC) resulted in the death of one person.

    The confusion erupted during the mop-up voter’s registration exercise leading to the firing of gunshots which allegedly killed one person and injured two other persons.

    Two vehicles and a motorbike were also set ablaze in the heat of the confusion.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Obuasi Municipal Assembly supports trainees with start-up kits

    The Obuasi Municipal Assembly in collaboration with the National Board for Small Scale Industries (NBSSI) has presented start-up kits to over 300 trainees in the area.

    The gesture was to support the beneficiaries who received training in soap making, gari processing, cake and bread making, to start their own businesses to fend for themselves and their families.

    Mr Elijah Adansi Bonah, Municipal Chief Executive, who made the presentation said it would help reduce unemployment in the area.

    He said the beneficiaries were carefully selected from the Sansu, Kunka, Antobuasi and Anyinam electoral areas to cover as many young people as possible.

    Mr Adansi Bonah charged the beneficiaries to make judicious use of the kits to support their businesses to increase their incomes and improve on their living conditions.

    He said the assembly would monitor the activities of the beneficiaries to help achieve the objectives of the programme.

    Mr Kelvin Ofori- Atta head of Obuasi Business Advisory Centre urged the gari processors to make good use of the gari processing machine since those staying around Mmamiriwa, Sansu and Awona could benefit immensely from the business since they had a ready market in Obuasi.

    Some of the trainees commended the government for the opportunity and said it would then train other people to also become self-employed.

    Source: GNA

  • Some 398 register for mop-up in Oti Region

    A total of 398 applicants have been issued with the new voter identity cards by Electoral Commission (EC) in the two-day mop-up registration exercise in the Oti Region.

    Mr Nuhu Mahama, Oti Regional Director of Electoral Commission (EC) told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) that males were 21, while females recorded 20 applicants.

    He said a total of 37 applicants were 19 years with 320 being above 20 years.

    Mr Nuhu said a total of 263 presented Ghana card as evidence of eligibility, with 133 applicants showing passports.

    He said a total of 20 applicants were challenged with 1 person being a disabled person during the mop-up exercise.

    Mr Nuhu expressed gratitude for the turnout during the voter’s registration exercise in Oti Region.

    He was also grateful for not recording any incident from June 30, which ended on August 6, 2020 in all the polling stations and thanked all applicants for their commitment, which contributed to the success of the exercise.

    The breakdown under mop -up in Oti Region are: Jasikan /Buem constituency 35, Biakoye constituency 18, Kadjebi constituency 17, Krachi East constituency 51, Krachi West constituency 26, Krachi Nchumuru constituency 20, Nkwanta South constituency 204 and Nkwanta North constituency 27.

    A provisional figure of 300,750 was realised before the mop-up exercise.

    Source: GNA

  • NDC man contests Zanetor Rawlings as an independent candidate

    Member of Parliament (MP) for Klottey Korle Constituency, Dr Zanetor Agyeman-Rawlings, may have her votes slashed in the 2020 general elections, as a leading member of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) has decided to contest the race as an Independent candidate.

    Alhaji Danjumah Alhassan as he’s known, says he is going to contest the sitting lawmaker in the impending elections because she has failed the people according to his assessment of her performance.

    According to him, Dr Agyeman-Rawlings, cannot boast of any specific developmental initiative in the Klottey Korle Constituency, since she took over as a Member of Parliament in the Constituency.

    Alhaji Danjumah Alhassan, said what even beats his imagination is the fact that the daughter of Ghana’s former President, Jerry John Rawlings is not an open Member of Parliament who is easily approached by the people, hence making the NDC unpopular in the constituency.

    He noted that the MP, apart from being incompetent, since taking over the seat has never given out funds to the executives in the constituency to organize campaigns in order for the NDC to win power.

    On the back of the many ills by Zanetor Rawlings, Alhaji Danjumah Alhassan believes he needs to go into the race as an Independent candidate to save the people of Klottey Korle or else they will be left behind in terms of development.

    When asked if he’s not going contrary to the party’s constitution, he told Tema-based Green FM in an interview monitored by MyNewsGh.com that “I’ve served the NDC since 1992 but it has always been monkey dey work baboon dey chop so I don’t even care about the repercussions. I honestly don’t care what will happen. I’ve taken my decision and nothing is stopping me.”

    Source: The Herald

  • Brazil’s coronavirus death toll surpasses 100,000

    Brazil on Saturday surpassed 100,000 Coronavirus deaths and three million cases of infection, crossing the grim milestone after President Jair Bolsonaro said he had a “clear conscience” on his response to the outbreak.

    With 100,477 fatalities and 3,012,412 confirmed cases, the South American nation of 212 million people is the second hardest-hit country in the global pandemic, after the United States.

    The health ministry reported 905 new deaths in the past 24 hours, as well as 49,970 fresh cases.

    But the official figures are most likely an undercount, with experts estimating that the total number of infections could be up to six times higher due to insufficient testing.

    Brazil has seen 478 deaths per million people, a figure roughly equivalent to that of the United States (487), but lower than that of Spain (609) or Italy (583).

    Senate speaker Davi Alcolumbre announced four days of mourning in Congress to pay tribute to the country’s 100,000-plus virus victims.

    The Coronavirus outbreak in Brazil is showing no sign of slowing as it enters its sixth month.

    The country’s first confirmed COVID-19 case was identified in Sao Paulo on February 26, with the first death on March 12, also in the city.

    Brazil marked 50,000 deaths a hundred days later, but then doubled that total in just half the time.

    Infections have accelerated in recent weeks in the countryside as well as inland regions and areas where the virus was late arriving, particularly the country’s south and center-west.

    In southeastern states such as Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, hardest-hit by the virus in absolute numbers, the situation has stabilized, while the virus’ presence has declined in northern regions after reaching catastrophic levels in April and May.

    ‘Arrogance’

    At Copacabana beach in Rio, activists from the NGO Rio de Paz released 1,000 red balloons Saturday while standing between 100 black crosses stuck in the sand, in a tribute to Brazilians who have died of coronavirus.

    Former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Bolsonaro’s leftist nemesis, on Twitter denounced “the arrogance of a president who has chosen to describe this cruel virus as a little flu, defying science and even death, and who bears in his soul the responsibility for all the lives lost.”

    The contagion has cast a harsh light on Brazil’s inequalities, with the virus wreaking particular havoc on the country’s favelas and hitting black populations especially hard.

    The country’s indigenous Amazon populations have also been hard hit, with one of Brazil’s leading chiefs, 71-year-old Aritana Yawalapiti, dying Wednesday of respiratory complications caused by COVID-19.

    Bolsonaro’s government, which has been criticized for managing the epidemic in a chaotic fashion, is on its third health minister since the virus reached the country.

    The right-wing leader, who tested positive for the virus last month but has since recovered, said Thursday he had “a clear conscience” and had done “everything possible to save lives.”

    Bolsonaro also called the governors of states that took containment measures which he opposed for economic reasons “dictators.”

    Brazil resumed its national football championship on Saturday, three months behind schedule.

    Source: france24.com

  • Trump signs executive orders extending financial relief for Americans amid pandemic

    President Donald Trump on Saturday, August 8, 2020, signed executive actions extending financial relief to Americans hit by the Coronavirus pandemic as polls showed a large majority of voters unhappy with his handling of the crisis.

    The four measures marked a presidential show of strength after Trump’s Republican party and White House team failed to agree with opposition Democrats in Congress on a new stimulus package aimed at stopping vulnerable Americans from falling through the cracks.

    “We’ve had it and we’re going to save American jobs and provide relief to the American workers,” Trump said at a press conference at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, where he was spending the weekend.

    With double digit unemployment, disruption to businesses from social distancing rules, and persistent Coronavirus spread, many Americans had been relying on relief measures approved earlier by Congress, but which mostly expired in July.

    Trump said his decision to circumvent Congress with executive actions would mean relief money getting “rapidly distributed.”

    In reality, his measures are likely to face court challenges because Congress controls federal spending, and in any case they may add up to less money than initially appears.

    For Trump, lagging badly in the polls against his Democratic rival Joe Biden ahead of the November 3 presidential election, the orders were partly about showing he is in charge.

    He turned the signing ceremony in the ballroom of the golf club into an assault on his opponents and threw in several false claims about his accomplishments in office.

    To cheers from club members invited to watch the event, Trump insulted the Democratic “crazy” leader of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi, denounced Biden as “far left,” and claimed that Democrats want to “steal the election.”

    Biden called Trump’s orders Saturday “a series of half-baked measures.”

    “They are just another cynical ploy designed to deflect responsibility,” Biden said, adding that Americans need a “real leader” who would work to hammer out a deal with lawmakers.

    Haggling in Congress

    One key Trump order promises to get $400 a week added to Americans’ unemployment benefits, while two others offer some protection from evictions and relief for student loans.

    The $400 assistance is below the $600 offered in the expired stimulus package. It may also end up amounting only to $300 extra a week, because Trump said $100 would be provided from state, not federal, budgets – and only if states were willing or able to do so.

    A fourth measure – opposed by many Republicans as well as Democrats – ordered a freeze in payroll taxes. This makes a big headline for Trump but is only a deferral, rather than a cut in the tax.

    “Today’s meager announcements show President Trump still does not comprehend the seriousness or the urgency of the health and economic crises facing working families,” Pelosi said on Twitter Saturday. “These policies provide little real help for families.”

    Democrats, Republicans and White House negotiators had worked all last week without coming close to a deal on an overall congressional relief bill for those struggling to make ends meet in the world’s richest economy.

    Democrats pushed for a massive new $3 trillion stimulus package aimed at propping up the economy, repairing the tattered postal system in time for the presidential election and giving the unemployed an extra $600 a week.

    Democrats later announced they could drop the price tag but refused the Republicans’ offer of a $1 trillion package.

    Source: france24.com

  • Hong Kong pro-democracy tycoon Jimmy Lai arrested

    Hong Kong business tycoon Jimmy Lai has been arrested and his newspaper offices raided by police over allegations of collusion with foreign forces.

    His case is the most high-profile arrest so far under the controversial security law imposed by China in June.

    Mr Lai has been a prominent pro-democracy voice and a supporter of protests that erupted last year.

    In February the 71-year-old, who also holds UK citizenship, was charged with illegal assembly and intimidation.

    He was later granted police bail.

    Mr Lai’s arrest on Monday was first announced by Mark Simon, an executive at his media firm Next Digital.

    “Jimmy Lai is being arrested for collusion with foreign powers at this time,” he said.

    Scores of police were also seen entering the building of his newspaper Apple Daily, searching the offices.

    Police have confirmed that seven people were arrested on Monday on suspicion of breaking the national security law, but have not yet named Mr Lai.

    News agency Reuters and local media cited sources saying that other senior executives of the company were among those detained.

    Who is Jimmy Lai?

    The businessman is estimated to be worth more than $1bn (£766m).

    Having made his initial fortune in the clothing industry, he later ventured into media and founded the newspaper Apple Daily, which is frequently critical of Hong Kong and mainland Chinese leadership.

    He has also been himself an activist against Beijing’s increasingly tight grip on the Hong Kong. In 2019 he supported the reform protests and participated in the demonstrations.

    When earlier this year he was charged for his involvement in those protests, Chinese state media dubbed him a “riot’s mastermind” who “has spread waves of hatred and negative information about the Chinese mainland day and night”.

    On 30 June, when the security law was passed, Mr Lai told the BBC that this “spells the death knell for Hong Kong”.

    He warned that Hong Kong would become as corrupt as mainland China because “without the rule of law, people who do business here will have no protection”.

    In a separate interview with the AFP news agency, Mr Lai said: “I’m prepared for prison. If it comes, I will have the opportunity to read books I haven’t read. The only thing I can do is to be positive.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Letter from Africa: ‘How I helped put Gambians on Google Maps’

    In our series of letters from African journalists, Sierra Leonean-Gambian writer Ade Daramy explains how he was instrumental in getting Gambians an address.

    Last year I did a piece for the BBC about how easy was to get lost in The Gambia where very few streets are named.

    It sparked lively debate here in the small West African nation and I also received lots of messages on social media from people saying: “It’s the same in my country.”

    Some viewed it as humour – as I explained how bank forms, for example, had boxes big enough for you to draw where your house was, in relation to the nearest landmarks.

    But it has taken Covid-19 to show us that addresses are not a cosmetic add-on but a necessity.

    How do you contact trace and monitor suspected coronavirus-infected people, if you do not have a proper address where you can find them?

    How do you pick up all the suspected cases to take to a quarantine centre, when you spend hours being directed to a single house and there are hundreds of patients in other places who also need to be picked up?

    Coronavirus ‘to the rescue’

    Well, imagine my surprise and delight when the non-profit organisation Finding Gambia called the TV channel where I work to see if we could cover a pilot scheme to give people addresses.

    My name and telephone number were given as contacts, at which point they said: “Is it the same Ade Daramy who wrote that BBC article?”

    I was quite flattered to be told that my piece had been used in several meetings to convince potential partners – central government and municipal councils – of the necessity for addresses.

    The people who started Finding Gambia, Bakary Suso and Alieu Sowe, explained that they were using something called “plus codes” to do this.

    It is Google technology, useable both online and offline, that creates a short code for any location which can easily direct people using Google Maps.

    The codes work just like street addresses – and are made up of a combination of two elements:

    *First is a short code of between six and seven letters and numbers

    *And then a locality – a town or city.

    Needless to say, I was intrigued, as our team set off to “address” the issue.

    We arrived at the first house where a sign with its code printed on was fixed to the outside wall.

    The process was repeated at residences and businesses in one of the largest residential areas of The Gambia, each with its own unique identifier.

    I tested it out on my Google Map app – and indeed it worked – pointing me directly to one of the doors.

    Despite the unarguable logic of this or any address system, Mr Suso and Mr Sowe told me they had been having a hard time getting the required authorities on board, which is where Covid-19 has probably come to their rescue.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Zimbabwe opposition says 30 members have fled homes

    Zimbabwe‘s main opposition party MDC Alliance says about 30 of its members have fled their homes for fear of being abducted.

    The party has tweeted that some members were contemplating “moving their children to safer places”.

    Many fear being tortured or detained, it said.

    Opposition supporters and activists called for anti-government protests towards the end of last month to decry economic mismanagement and corruption.

    The government suppressed the protests by warning people to stay indoors and cracked down on solo protesters.

    Those arrested have been charged with various offences that activists say have been fabricated to fall within the constitution.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mauritania leader appoints new government

    Mauritania’s president has appointed a new government after some of his ministers were named in a report on the financial dealings of former President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz.

    President Mohamed Ould Cheikh El Ghazouani made the changes and for the first time his office confirmed it was because of the report.

    The president had on Thursday replaced his prime minister for undisclosed reasons.

    The former prime minister and three ministers were mentioned in the report that looked into the sale of state properties and handling of oil revenue, according to a news report by AFP news agency.

    The new cabinet was announced on Sunday and the presidency secretary general Adama Bocar Soko said excluding the named ministers would give them “the time they need to prove their innocence”.

    Local media reports that the former President Aziz has been summoned in connection with the report.

    An investigation is expected to begin before parliament votes on whether to proceed to trial.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Niger attack: French aid workers among eight killed by gunmen

    Gunmen have attacked a group of aid workers in Niger, killing six French citizens, their local guide and driver, officials say.

    The gunmen arrived on motorcycles and opened fire, the governor of Tillabéri region, Tidjani Ibrahim, told the French news agency AFP.

    They were in the Koure region, which attracts tourists who want to see the last herds of giraffe in West Africa.

    The French presidency confirmed the deaths of the French citizens.

    The French nationals worked for an international aid group, Niger’s defence minister Issoufou Katambé told Reuters news agency. Earlier, officials had described them as tourists.

    ACTED, a French humanitarian NGO, confirmed its staff members were involved in the incident in Niger.

    President Emmanuel Macron spoke on the phone with his Niger counterpart Mahamadou Issoufou on Sunday, a statement said, without giving further details.

    In photos seen by the BBC, the victims’ bodies were found lying on a dirt road by the side of a 4×4 vehicle.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Journalists call for release of Kenyan held in Ethiopia

    The Foreign Correspondents’ Association of East Africa has called for the release of Kenyan journalist Yassin Juma who they say is still being detained in Ethiopia despite being granted bail by a court.

    The association on Monday tweeted that the journalist was granted bail on Thursday but the Ethiopian authorities have not released him.

    The journalist was arrested last month after the assassination of popular Oromo musician Hachalu Hundessa.

    He was arrested at the home of Ethiopian activist and Oromia Media Network owner Jawar Mohammed, according to his lawyer.

    He was charged with incitement and involvement in violence. He said he was at Mr Jawar’s home to conduct research for a report for a global human rights organisation.

    Journalists want the Ethiopian and Kenyan governments to have him released:

    Source: bbc.com

     

  • Daniel Opare picks injury on his debut for Zulte Waregem

    Ghanaian defender Daniel Opare was forced out of the game on his debut for Zulte Waregem in the Belgium Pro League season on Sunday.

    The versatile defender started on the right side for his side but was withdrawn on the 70th minute for Jean-Luc Dompe afters suffering a knock.

    KFC Genk came back from a goal down to beat Zulte Waregem 2-1.

    The injury will be a big blow to the former Real Madrid youth player having missed the whole of last season due to injury.

    Daniel Opare joined Zulte Waregem from fellow Belgian Pro League outfit Royal Antwerp on a two-year deal in June.

    Source: footballmadeinghana.com

  • Amanda Clinton backs Nana Yaw Amponsah to succeed at Kotoko

    Amanda Akuokor Clinton Presidential aspirant of the Ghana Football Association (GFA) in the last elections, is convinced the newly appointed Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Asante Kotoko, Nana Yaw Amponsah has the quality to succeed at the club.

    Speaking in an interview with the GNA Sports, Akuokor Clinton said, the decision by Nana Yaw Amponsah to join Kotoko after he failed to get the backing to become the president of the Ghana Football Association (GFA) was a great move.

    “I think it’s a very strategic and brilliant move on his part to take up the job at Kotoko. It is also a great move on the part of Kotoko to appoint him as the CEO of the club.

    “He is very good at strategy and outlining policies. He is strategic guy with a lot of international connections.

    “He thinks big and Kotoko would benefit from his connections. He is a great guy, way ahead of his generation,” he added,

    According to Akuokor Clinton, the trials on the part of Nana Yaw Amponsah in his quest for the GFA seat, had given him the platform to demonstrate how he would have led the GFA if he was given the chance.

    She was confident the new CEO of Kotoko would succeed and make Kotoko great again.

    Akuokor Clinton was the only female that joined the race to become the President of the GFA last year.

    She is an international lawyer with many years of experience and founder of Clinton Consultancy.

    Source: GNA

  • Solomon Asante delighted with win over New Mexico United

    Ghanaian attacker Solomon Asante has expressed delight after contributing to Phoenix Rising impressive victory over New Mexico United the USL Championship on Sunday.

    Asante, who last 83 minutes assisted two goals as Phoenix claimed a 5-2 victory at the Casino Arizona Field.

    The win sees Phoenix sit top of the Group B USL standings.

    Asante took to Twitter to congratulate the team after the match and also thanked the fans for supporting from their homes.

    “Great team effort, quality play, nice goals, and a deserved victory. Let’s keep the #confidence #teamwork #teamspirit. Thanks for your amazing support from various homes,” he wrote.

    Asante has been in great form since the league restarted after a long break due to the coronavirus pandemic. He has been nominated for USL Championship Player of the Month for July.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Hearts NCC to meet Joseph Esso for a possible return to the club

    1st vice-chairman of Accra Hearts of Oak‘s National Chapters Committee, Joe Salu has disclosed that the supporters union will be meeting free agent Joseph Esso for a possible return to the club.

    Joseph Esso was among the five players who were released by the Phobians after they opted not to extend their contracts.

    The 23-year-old played 14 games in the truncated 2019/20 Ghana Premier League season and scored three goals.

    “Many of us were taken aback at the news of the release of Joseph Esso so we spoke to management to find out and later met Joseph Esso,” Joe Salu told Oyerepa FM.

    “One thing we realised was that both parties were not ready to come to a compromise. They had take entrenched positions but have told the player to come down on his demands of GHc 50,000 for a year. The amount is not that an issue but the duration he wants to sign.

    “We are waiting to hear from the player and then meet management also so we find a way out of this.”

    Source: footballghana.com

     

  • Lee Addy holds discussions with Kotoko, Hearts over potential transfer

    Ghanaian defender Lee Addy has disclosed he is currently in talks with Premier League trio Asante Kotoko, Ashanti Gold SC, and Hearts of Oak over a potential transfer.

    Addy was among the contingent of footballers who arrived back home from Ethiopia last month and had to go through 14-day mandatory quarantine following a distress call to the Government of Ghana and the Ghana Football Association (GFA) for help.

    The 30-year-old played for Berekum Chelsea in the top-flight before moving abroad to continue his playing career.

    “I am talking to three clubs Kotoko, Ashanti Gold, and Hearts of Oak and we hope to come to a conclusion soon,” Addy told Max FM.

    “Hearts and Kotoko are like Barcelona and Real Madrid but I also respect AshGold very well, so any of them that gives me a good offer I will gladly accept.

    “I am a footballer and will take any offer which is good for me, it could be in Africa or Europe and I will embrace the offer.”

  • Italian clubs on the hunt for Ghana’s Afriyie Acquah

    Black Stars midfielder, Afriyie Acquah is being chased by a number of Italian Serie A clubs according to reports in the Turkish media.

    Acquah, 28, joined the Turkish Super Lig outfit as a free agent after his contract with Empoli came to an end in June 2019.

    The dynamic midfielder established himself as a key figure for the team, registering 3 assists and scoring 1 goal in 27 appearances.

    The Ghana international has attracted interest from several Italian clubs following his performance in the just ended Turkish football season.

    “We have to think about the interests of the country. There are transfer offers from Italy for Afriyie Acquah,” Yeni Malatyaspor president, Adil Gevrek disclosed.

    Afriyie Acquah was close to a return Italy by joining Lecce during the January transfer window but the move collapsed after Yeni Matalyaspor decided against cashing in on him.

  • Coronavirus death toll rises to 215 while active cases reduce further to 2,458

    Active Coronavirus cases in Ghana keeps reducing in consecutive updates by the Ghana Health Service, now standing at 2,458 cases.

    In the previous update by the GHS, active cases of COVID-19 dropped from 3,253 to 2,625 and now to the 2,458 representing a drop by 167 cases.

    The latest update released on Sunday, August 9, 2020, however, indicates that the death toll has risen marginally from 206 from the previous update to 215.

    Meanwhile, cumulative cases so far stand at 41,003 after 470 new cases recorded on August 6, 2020, with 38,330 recoveries/discharges.

    “A total of 470 new cases were reported on August 6, 2020. These are samples that were taken from the period 4 July to 5 August 2020… but reported from the lab on August 6, 2020,” the GHS said on the COVID-19 dedicated website.

    Greater Accra Region still tops all the regions with the number of confirmed cases.

    The region has recorded close to 50% of all confirmed cases in the country, followed by the Ashanti Region and Western Region.

    See below the cumulative cases per region.

    – Case Count from Highest to Lowest-

    Greater Accra Region – 20,491

    Ashanti Region – 10,251

    Western Region – 2,801

    Eastern Region – 1,923

    Central Region – 1,721

    Bono East Region – 660

    Volta Region – 622

    Western North Region – 568

    Northern Region – 454

    Bono Region – 439

    Ahafo Region – 428

    Upper East Region – 282

    Oti Region – 204

    Upper West Region – 88

    Savannah Region – 62

    North East Region – 9

  • Police Service rolls out special promotion for personnel serving in northern Ghana

    The Ghana Police Service has rolled out a special promotion scheme for servicemen who are posted to hard-to-reach parts of northern Ghana.

    The scheme, aimed at motivating police personnel posted to the northern parts of the country, will ensure that policemen and women who graduate from the training school and are posted to the northern parts of the country will be promoted three years earlier than their counterparts posted to the southern parts of the country, like Accra and Tema.

    According to state-owned newspaper, Daily Graphic, the Inspector General of Police (IGP), James Oppong-Boanuh made this known when he inaugurated a 250-capacity conference room and a police band for the Northern Regional Police Command in Tamale last Friday, August 7, 2020.

    IGP also urged all police officers to be very circumspect, highly professional and impartial in the discharge of their duties during the upcoming December 7 elections.

    He further urged officers and men of the service to follow laid down procedures to police the ballot and protect life and property.

    “You must act on every complaint that you receive and you must do so speedily to clear the doubt of all critics”, the Daily Graphic quoted him in the report.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Akufo-Addo wants GES to reconsider punishment for 14 expelled 2020 WASSCE candidates

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has directed the Minister of Education, Matthew Opoku-Prempeh, to engage the Ghana Education Service (GES) to reconsider punishment meted out to 14 Senior High School students taking the 2020 West Africa Senior School Examination (WASSCE).

    The GES last week dismissed the 14 final year students who took part in chaos and destruction of properties in their schools after the Intergrated Sciece 2 paper of the ongoing WASSCE.

    They were also banned from taking the rest of the papers in the final year examination.

    The GES in a statement said the punishment was to serve as deterrent for other students who are still partaking in the exams.

    But a statement issued on Sunday, August 9, 2020, by the Director of Communicaitons at the Office of the President, Eugene Arhin, said even though the acts of indiscipline by the students are intolerable, the President is of the view that the dismissal alone is enough punishment.

    “The President believes that everyone deserves a second change in life, and is thus, hopeful that the students will be allowed by the GES to take their final examinations as scheduled,” the statement explained.

    Before the statement from the Presidency on Sunday, a former Deputy Minister for Education, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, had said the GES was too harsh in the punishment meted out to 14 students.

    The National Democratic Congress MP for North Tongu said although the acts of indiscipline and vandalism are condemnable, the GES seems to have killed an ant with a sledgehammer.

  • Beirut explosion: World leaders to hold aid summit

    International leaders will hold talks on Sunday to raise aid for Beirut, five days after the massive explosion which devastated the Lebanese capital.

    The virtual conference – set up by France and the United Nations – starts at 14:00 Lebanon time (11:00 GMT).

    US President Donald Trump has said he plans to join the call.

    Officials estimate the blast at the warehouse, which stored 2,000 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, caused up to $15 billion (£11.5bn) in damage.

    The explosion left at least 158 people dead, 5,000 injured and 300,000 homeless.

    On Saturday several thousand people took to the streets, with police firing tear gas at stone-throwing protesters and some demonstrators storming government ministries.

    In a televised address, Lebanese PM Hassan Diab said he would ask for early elections as a way out of the crisis. The issue will be discussed in cabinet on Monday.

    Lebanon was already mired in a deep economic crisis and struggling to tackle the coronavirus pandemic before the explosion tore through Beirut.

    An anti-government protest movement erupted last October, fuelled by the financial situation and a collapsing currency.

    What’s happening on Sunday?

    French President Emmanuel Macron visited Beirut on Thursday, and announced he wanted to co-ordinate international aid for the country.

    A statement from France’s presidential palace says Sunday’s conference “will aim to mobilize Lebanon’s main international partners and to organize and co-ordinate emergency support from the international community”.

    Representatives from European Union member states, China, Russia, Egypt, Jordan and the UK will all take part, with many others invited to attend.

    In a series of tweets, President Trump said he had discussed the “catastrophic event” in Beirut with Mr Macron and would himself join the call.

    “Everyone wants to help!” he wrote.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Vijayawada: Fire at coronavirus facility in India kills at least seven

    At least seven patients have died after a fire at a temporary Covid hospital in Vijayawada, south-east India.

    The fire broke out at Swarna Palace, a hotel being used to house patients, on Sunday morning.

    It was brought under control in half an hour and all surviving patients have been moved to another hospital in the city, officials said.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he was “anguished” by the blaze, the second fire at a Covid centre in days.

    Sunday’s fire started shortly after 05:00 (23.30GMT).

    The cause is unknown and an investigation has been launched.

    Vijayawada Police Commissioner B Srinivasulu told BBC News Telugu that more than 30 people were at the hotel and the death toll was likely to increase.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Twitter that his thoughts were with those affected.

    Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister YS Jagan Mohan Reddy has already announced that the victims’ relatives will receive compensation of five million rupees (£51,000).

    The fire comes after eight patients died at a Covid hospital in Ahmedabad on Thursday after a fire broke out inside its critical care unit.

    A senior fire department official told BBC Gujarati that the blaze had spread after a staff member’s PPE kit caught fire due to a short circuit.

    India has the third-highest number of Covid cases in the world, with more than 2.1 million infections recorded. More than 43,000 have died, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

    On Sunday, the country recorded 64,000 cases, a new single-day record.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Zambia spy chief Samuel Nkhoma dies of coronavirus

    Zambia’s intelligence chief, Samuel Nkhoma died Friday, August 7, 2020 from an undisclosed illness, state radio reported.

    But medical sources said he died after testing positive for Coronavirus and was being treated at an isolation centre in the capital Lusaka.

    Secretary to the Cabinet, Dr Simon Miti was quoted as saying Mr Nkhoma died after “being sick for some time and was being attended by medical personnel.”

    He was last seen publicly few days ago when President Edgar Lungu commissioned a flyover bridge as part of the Lusaka decongestion project.

    The number of COVID-19 deaths in Zambia have now hit 200.

    On Thursday, August 6, 2020, the country recorded 21 deaths of the Coronavirus with over 7,000 infections so far.

    20 COVID-19 deaths were recorded at Lusaka’s University Teaching Hospital while another was at the outpost in a populated slum of Kanyama west of the capital.

    80 patients were currently admitted to health facilities and 37 were on oxygen support while six were in the Intensive Care Unit.

    Health officials were concerned with the low levels of compliance to public health measures against COVID-19 among members of the public and that this is contributing to the increase in COVID-19 infections.

    Several people in the capital seem to have gone back to the cavalier attitude of going into public places with much concern.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Gunmen kill more than a dozen in attack in eastern Burkina Faso

    Unidentified gunmen have killed about 20 people in an attack on a cattle market in eastern Burkina Faso, the government said in a statement.

    There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack in the village of Fada N’Gourma, around which the army is carrying out a search operation.

    “Unidentified armed individuals burst into a cattle market in Namoungou village in the region of Fada N’Gourma and attacked the population,” the governor, Colonel Saidou Sanou, said in a statement on Friday.

    “According to an initial toll, around 20 people have been killed and numerous others wounded.”

    Gunmen killed 25 people in an attack on another cattle market in the eastern village of Kompienga in May.

    Burkina Faso has been battling armed groups with links to al-Qaeda and ISIL (ISIS) since 2017.

    Hundreds of people have been killed in the past year in the Sahel nation, and more than half a million have fled their homes due to the violence, which has also raised ethnic and religious tensions.

    In the past five years, more than 900 people have been killed by armed groups, while some 860,000 people have fled their homes.

    The Sahel country is taking part in a regional effort to battle an armed uprising along with Mali, Niger, Mauritania and Chad.

    Their militaries, under-equipped and poorly trained, are supported by 5,000 French troops in the region.

    Unrest in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger killed approximately 4,000 people last year, according to United Nations figures.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • Hohoe Municipal Assembly gets new office complex

    Mr. Andrews Teddy Ofori, Hohoe Municipal Chief Executive (MCE), has said the Assembly is poised to render expedited services to businesses and residents through its departments and structures.

    He said the Assembly had provided adequate infrastructure backed by its ready-to-assist staff to serve clients, who would throng the Assembly to do business.
    Mr. Ofori, who commissioned a two-storey office complex for the Assembly said, there was the need for the provision of a solid infrastructural base around which development would revolve ‘has been our target’.

    The office complex funded under the District Assembly Common Fund (DACF) was completed at an estimated cost of GHC805,519.00 has 18 offices and washrooms.

    The MCE said the project, which began in 2011 was only 46 per cent completed after six years and his administration saw the need to commit resources to seeing the project reach its current stage.

    Some of the Offices on the block include the Legal Aid Commission, Works Department, Minerals Commission, Social Welfare Department, Cooperative, Environmental Health and Sanitation.

    Others are National Centre for National Culture, Lands Commission and the Hohoe Municipal Art Centre.

    Source: GNA

  • Mogadishu: Several killed in attack at Somali military base

    An attack on a military base in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, has killed at least eight people and injured 14 others, officials say.

    A suicide bomber driving a car targeted the gates of the base near Mogadishu Stadium, military officials said.

    The extremely loud explosion was heard across the city.

    Islamist militant group Al-Shabab said it was behind the attack. It often carries out bombings targeting security forces and officials.

    Col Ahmed Muse told Associated Press that the explosion took place at the gates of the 12th April Army Brigade base close to the recently reopened sports stadium in the Warta-Nabadda district.

    The stadium opened in June and was seen as a symbol of the country rebuilding after years of conflict.

    Halima Abdisalan, a mother of three who lives near the area told Reuters news agency that soldiers opened fire after the explosion. “We ran indoors in fear,” she said.

    Al-Shabab – a group of Islamist militants, allied to Al-Qaeda – has waged an insurgency for more than 10 years. It was forced out of the capital in 2011 but still controls areas of the country.

    Hitting a military base is an audacious act which is likely to worry the government, BBC World Service Africa editor Will Ross reports.

    International peacekeepers from an African Union force have also been targeted in the past.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Businessman in court over robbery and possession of firearms

    A 42-year-old businessman has appeared before an Accra Circuit Court for allegedly robbing a man of $200,000.00 and possessing an AK 47 rifle and two foreign pistols.

    Mohammed Umar, aka Baba Guntu charged with robbery and possession of Firearms without lawful authority, has pleaded not guilty.

    Umar has been admitted to bail in the sum of GH¢500,000 with four sureties to be justified.

    He is to reappear on August 31 before the court presided over by Mrs Evelyn Asamoah for Case Management Conference.

    Prosecuting Chief Inspector Dominic Tekpetey earlier prayed the court to lawfully remand Umar pending further investigations into the matter.

    According to Chief Inspector Tekpetey, accused has series of cases against him and therefore the Police would need him in their custody to assist in investigations.

    Opposing to bail, Chief inspector Tekpetey said the accused when released on bail would commit further crimes.

    Prosecution explained that the Police did not want to infringe on the 48 hour rule hence produced the accused person before court.

    He said when he is remanded, all other matters or issues against him would be investigated.

    However, Umar’s Lawyer, Mr Paul Asibi Abarigah prayed the court to admit Umar to bail.

    According to Mr Abarigah, Umar has four wives who were also present in court and there was no way he could abscond.

    Defense Counsel held further that, Umar is a resident of Ashiaman and he has relations who are willing to stand as sureties.

    He said his client is now presumed innocent until he is proven guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction or he (accused) pleads guilty.

    Defense Counsel said the court in granting his client bail should set out conditions that would compel Umar to appear to stand trial.

    The case of the prosecution is that the complainant is the Greater Accra Regional Police Command. Umar is a resident of Ashiaman, Zenu, in the Greater Accra Region.

    Prosecution said during the month of April 2018, Umar and one Iddi Kankansu, now deceased, and Kwame Takyi aka Haruna Owuo armed themselves with an AK 47 rifle and foreign pistols and attacked One Samuel Ankrah, Ghanaian resident in the US at Dallas Court at East Legon.

    The Prosecutor said the accused and his accomplices robbed Mr Ankrah of his wallet containing assorted foreign currencies, a Roger Foreign pistol and cash in the sum of $200,000.

    On November 20, last year, Prosecution said, Takyi was arrested in an attempted robbery at Sukura Takyi. After the incident, he hid the rifle, but Umar went for it and same was sent to another place.

    Again prosecution said when Umar heard about the death of Kankansu, he visited the deceased home and collected a foreign made pistol.

    Prosecution said when Umar realised that the Police was closing up on him, he relocated from Ashiaman Asutware area. Following his alleged involvement in land guard activities, the accused was picked up by the Police on August 3, this year.

    Prosecution said efforts were underway to retrieve the AK 47 rifle.

    Source: GNA

  • Fire destroys wares worth thousands of cedis at Tarkwa

    Fire has destroyed three stores around the Tarkwa railway station, destroying goods and properties worth thousands of Ghana cedis.

    The affected structures included a mobile phone shop, saloon, and a boutique.

    The blaze was alleged to have started in the early hours on Wednesday, August 5, 2020, from the boutique and spread to the others.

    Although the cause of the fire is yet to be established, some eyewitnesses attributed the fire outbreak to an electrical fault in the area where the fire started.

    In an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA), the Divisional Officer Grade III, Mr Alex Assiem, the Acting Municipal Officer of Ghana National Fire Service, Tarkwa, said his officers had a hard time putting off the fire as they had to struggle through the crowd to bring the situation under control.

    He stated that no one was injured and investigations had already begun to ascertain the cause of the fire.

    Meanwhile, Mr Francis Amoah, the Municipal National Disaster Management Organization, (NADMO) Coordinator for Tarkwa-Nsuaem, had also visited the scene to access the impact and damage caused.

    Source: GNA

  • Zoomlion clears heaps of refuse at Lamashegu after viral video

    A resident of Lamashegu in the Northern Region, Madam Hajia Maria, heaved a sigh of relief as waste management company, Zoomlion Ghana Limited (ZGL), in partnership with the Sanitation Ministry, embarked on a clean-up exercise to clear a heap of refuse in the community.

    The exercise followed a virial video by Madam Hajia Maria, appealing to the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, and the sanitation ministry to intervene in ensuring that a hump of refuse in the community which was posing health risks to the residents was cleared.

    And following that appeal, Zoomlion responded swiftly by evacuating the refuse, bringing smiles to the faces of the community members. The exercise was carried out.

    As early as 7:00 a.m., Zoomlion had deployed a wheel loader and 5 garbage trucks at the refuse location to facilitate the exercise.

    The exercise, which lasted for five (5) hours, witnessed many of the community members expressing delight at the clearing of the refuse.

    The assembly member for the area was equally glad and thanked Zoomlion and all the stakeholders who helped in the exercise.

    Speaking shortly after the exercise, Hajia Maria, who was highly elated, expressed her gratitude to President Akufo-Addo, the sanitation minister and ZGL.

    She gave the assurance that she will lead the attitudinal change in the community.

    Source: kingdomfmonline.com