Author: Persis

  • Ablekuma South backs Former Accra Mayor ahead of 2020 elections

    Member of Parliament for Ablekuma South Constituency, Hon. Dr. Okoe Vandepuije on Friday submitted his nomination to vie for his second in parliament on the ticket of NDC amid rapturous response from his Constituents.

    The former metropolitan chief of the nation’s capital “tsentse” as he is affectionately called submitted his nomination forms at the constituency office of the party.

    Residents of Mamprobi, Chorkor, Korle Gonno areas came in their numbers to support the member of Parliament and assured him of their votes in the next general elections.

    Dr. Okoe Vanderpuiye after the submission of his nomination forms assured the constituens his support as he has always been doing.

    Tsentse has set a pace at the Constituency that will be difficult for the people to deny him their votes.

    Hon. Dr. Okoe Vandepuije earned the accolade “lord mayor of Accra” due to his immerse changed of the face of Accra during his tenure as the mayor.

    He won the Ablekuma South in the 2016 election with 19, 984 votes while his closest rival, Jerry Ahmed Shiab of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) got 16, 524 votes.

    Source: ghanaguardian.com

  • Ban on hunting, capturing of wild animals begins August 1

    The Wildlife Division of the Forestry Commission has announced a ban on hunting and capturing of wild animals, which is referred to as “Close Season,” beginning August 1 to December 1, 2019.

    The Close Season is amongst measures used to regulate the utilisation and help curb the decline of wildlife resources in the country and ensure sustainable use whilst serving as a respite for the animals during their breeding period.

    A statement signed by Mr John Allotey, Deputy Chief Executive of Forestry Commission, said during this period, the hunting, capturing or destroying of any wildlife species was prohibited.

    However, it said, the only animal which could be hunted during the Closed Season was grasscutter and that should be done with a valid license issued by the Wildlife Division of the Forestry Commission.

    The statement said that Ghana was amongst other African nations set to benefit from a period of economic growth through sustainable ecotourism and this could be achieved based on abundance of wildlife heritage.

    It appealed to the public, hunters and all stakeholders in the wildlife enterprise to halt their activities during the closed season and be circumspect during the open season to help create a sustainable environment and improve the socio-economic status of citizens.

    The statement also advised the public to obtain license before hunting within the open season which was set to start from December 2 to July 31, 2020, adding that adherence to this regulation will aid in achieving goal fifteen of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG15).

    It appealed to the security agencies to support the enforcement of the close season ban.

    Source: GNA

  • OKESS Alumni Association of North America organizes 3rd annual celebration in NJ

    It is that time of the year and the third annual OKESS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF NORTH AMERICA Celebration; Dinner & Dance happens on Saturday, July 27th, 2019. The President, Vice President, and the entire executives invite Past students and the entire Ghanaian community to attend its Second annual banquet and fundraising event in Newark, NJ.

    The theme for the event is; “In Aid of Acquiring Masters’ Bungalow”. The venue is; Marriott Hotel, Newark Airport, 1 Hotel Road, Newark, NJ 07114
    Time: 7pm – 1am.

    A known History Fact;

    Osei Kyeretwie Secondary School in Kumasi, Ghana is known as the oldest second cycle school in the Ashanti Region.

    The School prides itself having among its past students; Nana Osei Tutu II, Otumfour, The Ashanti King who celebrates his two decades since enthronement. We congratulate Otumfour on his milestone. The school many years ago was credited with producing excellent academic laurels and female athletes representing Ghana on international tournaments.

    Time has passed and many past students have successfully traveled to North America (USA and Canada) to seek higher learning and greener pastures. They came together to form an Alumni Association two years ago.known as the OKESS Alumni Association of North America. An effort to raise funds in their special way of supporting their alma mater. Some few noted famous names/past students; Rose Asiedua, Doris Frema Wiredu, Veronica Bawuah, Vida Appiah, Arthur Kennedy, Sulley Muntari, and Mr. CNN associated with Ghanaweb who featured Ghanaians in America for years before social media emerged.

    New executives are led by the President; Mr. Gordon Agblosoo and Vice President; Mr. Charles N. Ntiamoah-Mensah (Mr. CNN)

    Come in your numbers and support this good cause. Together we change lives and making a difference at OKESS.

    Source: OKESS Alumini Association of North America

  • What else does Amidu want? – Anim Piesie asks

    Bernard Anim Piesie, a member of the communication team of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) has questioned the strength of Martin Amidu to perform as the Special Prosecutor.

    According to him the Special Prosecutor has all the financial and law backing that propel him to perform as scuh there is no cause for him.

    Martin Amidu, Special Prosecutor in a recent write-up has accused heads of various institutions of hindering his efforts to fight corruption in the country.

    Read: Public officials make work tough Martin Amidu threatens action against AG

    According to him, these heads are simply refusing to comply with laid down regulations of good governance and the protection of the national purse.

    “What does the Government and the public expect the Office of the Special Prosecutor to do when heads of institutions refuse or fail to support the fight against corruption and corruption-related offences by not vigorously applying the regulations intended to aid the fight against corruption and other crimes? Corruption and corruption-related offences are offences committed primarily by public officers and one does not ordinarily expect heads of public institutions to protect public officers suspected of committing those offences even when they have been charged and put before the Court,” a portion of his article read.

    Inusah Fuseini, Member of Parliament (MP) for Tamale Central constituency, thinks he talks too much.

    “The man is not doing his job. All he knows is to write letters and talk,” he indicated during an interview on Neat FM.

    Adding to this during a panel discussion on Peace FM’s morning show ‘Kokrokoo’, he said everything Martin Amidu needs to work with has been provided and so he does not understand why he is still complaining.

    “It seems he doesn’t have the strength to work again . . . what else is hindering him. Since he was appointed he has been complaining about one thing or the other. What else does he want?” Anim Piesie questioned.

    Source: peacefmonline.com

  • Tension as angry Ashanti Region NDC supporters storm party office

    Hundreds of angry National Democratic Congress (NDC) supporters in the Asawase constituency on Thursday, besieged the party’s Ashanti Regional Office at Amakom in Kumasi, to vent their spleen on the regional executives.

    This followed accusations by the angry supporters that the regional executives had resorted to what they called ‘mafia tactics’ to prevent one Mr Mubarick Masawudu from contesting in the impending parliamentary primaries of the party in the Asawase constituency.

    But for the timely intervention of a well-armed security detail from the Regional Police Command, the situation would have turned nasty as the supporters threatened to force open the main gate to the party’s regional office which had been closed since morning.

    Mr Masawudu, who was present at the office to file his nomination form, expressed disappointment at the closure of the office, saying he was not happy at the turn of events.

    “Clearly, this development is an attempt to frustrate me from contesting the Asawase NDC Constituency primaries, but I’m not perturbed,” he told the Ghana News Agency.

    Mr. Masawudu, 35, a Development Consultant, had promised to develop the human resource base of the constituency if given the nod as an NDC parliamentary candidate for Asawase.

    Additionally, he intends to put in place a vibrant youth development policy to encourage them to develop their skills to an appreciable level.

    Mr Alhassan Tapsoba, an Executive Member of the Regional NDC, called on the supporters to remain calm.

    Source: Ghana News Agency

  • Creative Arts Council, media pay courtesy call on Ghana Embassy in Spain

    Representatives of the Creative Arts Council led by the President, Mark Okraku-Mantey and some media personnel, paid a courtesy call on the Ghana Embassy in Madrid, Spain.

    They engaged the embassy staff about the Casa Africa Vis-a-Vis project and also briefed them on their itinerary for activities on the team from Ghana while in Spain.

    The team met briefly with the High Commissioner H.E Elizabeth Adjei who expressed utmost excitement with the preparations so far to push the two bands from Ghana, FRA! & Kyekyeku, in Spain.

    She explained it forms a core part of their mandate as a commission with regard to public diplomacy.

    Vis a Vis concert

    The Minister in the Ghana Embassy in Spain, William Manful, also urged the team to do more international collaborations as the Vis-a-Vis, to promote Ghanaian music.

    He expressed excitement and encouraged Ghanaians to support the initiative within the media space.

    Vis a Vis concert

    He stated that the Embassy will be supporting Ghanaian musicians and bands in subsequent years for festivals whenever there is an opportunity.The Consular, Harold Quarshie, was enthused that Ghanaians are featuring on the Vis-a-Vis Festival.

    Vis a Vis concert

    The team will move to Granada to meet with the Casa Africa team and join the two bands at Jaèn and Etnosur, where they will be playing to a multitude of music lovers from all over the world.

    Vis a Vis concert

    Source: Ghana|Myjoyonline.com
  • Ramaphosa ‘deliberately misled’ South Africa parliament – Watchdog

    South Africa‘s anti-corruption watchdog has said President Cyril Ramaphosa “deliberately misled” parliament about a 500,000 rand ($35,900) donation he received for his campaign to lead the African National Congress (ANC).

    Ramaphosa, who replaced former President Jacob Zuma last year and then went on to win a presidential election by pledging to tackle corruption, had denied knowledge of the donation by services company Bosasa when he was asked about it in parliament in November.

    Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane, who investigates allegations of wrongdoing by state officials, told reporters on Friday that Ramaphosa had violated the constitution and breached the executive code of ethics in his parliamentary reply.

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

    Al Jazeera’s Fahmida Miller, reporting from Pretoria, said Mkhwebane has referred her report to the ethics committee of parliament, which is likely to investigate further.

    “Their findings will determine what happens next, but this also doesn’t stop members of parliament applying for a motion of no-confidence to the speaker,” she added. “It’s not certain that that will happen but it’s certainly an option, at this point.”

    The public protector also found that the manner in which the donation was channeled through several accounts, including the account of the Ramaphosa campaign, of raised suspicion of money laundering.

    Zuma pulls out of commission inquiry 

    Meanwhile, Ramaphosa’s predecessor on Friday pulled out of an inquiry probing wide-ranging allegations of graft in government and state-owned companies during his nine-year tenure, asserting that he was being treated unfarily.

    Zuma was due to give a final day of evidence on Friday after the inquiry was adjourned on Wednesday when he complained that the questioning was effectively a court cross-examination.

    “We are here today to say that we will take no further part in these proceedings,” Zuma’s lawyer, Muzi Sikhakhane, told the inquiry commission in Johannesburg.

    “Our client from the beginning … has been treated as someone who was accused,” he said.

    Read: South Africa deploys army to gang-hit Cape Town

    Zuma, who has faced accusations of overseeing mass looting of state assets popularly referred to as “state capture”, had dismissed all allegations made against him by previous witnesses to the inquiry, calling them part of an international intelligence conspiracy that began more than 25 years ago to assassinate his character.

    He has been questioned about his close relationship with the wealthy Gupta family and allegations that they exerted influence over cabinet appointments and state contracts.

    In 2018, he resigned in the face of growing pressure from his ruling ANC party and replaced by Ramaphosa, his deputy at the time.

    Miller said that at a time where South Africa’s focus on state corruption is especially high, Ramaphosa’s implication in fraud takes the ruling ANC party “a step back in terms of fighting corruption”.

    “[The ANC] will face a lot of questions from both parliament and the public around what happens next, and how this has opened up yet another president to similar questions and perhaps a fate of being removed from office,” she said.

    SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies

  • Lawyer avails legal service to convicted soldier

    A legal practitioner, Mr Yaw Oppong, has offered to provide legal services to the soldier, who has been convicted and sentenced to 90 days in military guardroom for flouting military regulations.

    Isaac Lincoln Wassah, who was seen recently in a viral video supporting the campaign against a new parliamentary chamber has also been stripped of his rank from Lance Corporal to a private soldier.

    Private Wassah of 2 Recce Squadron in Sunyani was sentenced after a summary trial.

    But, in an interview with the Daily Graphic, Mr Oppong said the sentence was too harsh and that he was available to offer legal services for the convicted soldier.

    Read: Punishment for #DropThatChamber Soldier too harsh Amnesty International

    Counsel explained that he would study the process leading to the conviction and advise accordingly when given the opportunity.

    Mr Oppong said he had in the past appealed the conviction of a soldier through court marshal and was successful.

    Trial

    The hearing was chaired by the Commanding Officer of the unit, Lt Col W. A. K Ackah. Other members of the board were Captain V. Bempong, WO1 V. Dafliso, Sgt R. Attor and L/Cpl J. O. Okumtey.

    Private Wassah was convicted after he had been subjected to series of questions, a source close to the trial said.

    The source disclosed that Wassah did not show remorse for his actions.

    “His acts were in clear contravention of military rules. His action brought the name of the Ghana Armed Forces into disrepute,” the source said.

    Read: Our lawyers are handling court case against election MUSIGA

    Drop That Chamber  

    The Drop That Chamber campaign was initiated on social media with the aim of mounting pressure on Parliament to discontinue with the proposal to build a new chamber that cost an estimated $200 million and could accommodate about 450 Members of Parliament (MPs).

    Many Ghanaians joined the social media campaign that was also intended to mobilise about two million Ghanaians to march on the streets on July 13, this year to register their displeasure, if the request was not heeded.

    That was when Wassah also made a video, urging President Nana Addo Dankwah Akufo-Addo not to buy into the idea to have a new parliamentary chamber built since there were many pressing issues facing the country.

    Following the release of the video, Wassah was arrested by the Military High Command for interrogation.

    Source: graphic.com.gh

     

  • Assembly gives financial support to persons with disabilities

    The Ga East Municipal Assembly (GEMA) has issued cheques worth GH¢27,300 to 18 persons with disabilities (PWDs) in the municipality.

    The beneficiaries received cheques, which ranged from GH¢500 to GH¢2,500, primarily to cater for their educational needs and medical expenses.

    The amount was from the three per cent allocation to the PWDs from disbursement of the District Assemblies Common Fund (DACF).

    Agenda

    Speaking at a short ceremony last Wednesday to present the cheques to the beneficiaries, the Municipal Chief Executive of GEMA, Ms Janet Tulasi Mensah, said the move was in fulfillment of the government’s responsibility to support PWDs in the country, as stipulated under the constitution.

    Read: Mahama to build 2000-acre Village for PwDs

    She said that was the second presentation in 2019 after GEMA in January disbursed an amount of GH¢78,000 to 68 beneficiaries in the municipality.

    She explained that GEMA settled on education and health because of its importance in the development and wellbeing of any individual.

    Use wisely

    Ms Mensah admonished the beneficiaries to use the money for its intended purpose and assured them that the next tranche would go into the economic needs of the PWDS in the municipality.

    She also called on the PWDs in the municipality to continuously support GEMA to enhance their living conditions and provide them with the right services due them under the constitution.

    Read: Court sentences PWD for defrauding by false pretence

    She also appealed to able-bodied individuals not to stigmatise or discriminate against PWDs but rather co-exist with them peacefully as one people with a common destiny.

    Appreciation

    On behalf of the beneficiaries, the Vice President of the Ghana Federation of Persons With Disabilities, GEMA branch, Mr Anthony Opoku Ayeh, thanked the government and GEMA for the continuous support to PWDs.

    He also encouraged PWDs not to look down on themselves but strive to develop their talents for their benefit.

    Source: graphic.com.gh

     

  • Promasidor starts 20 boreholes across country

    PROMASIDOR Ghana Limited (PGL), producers of Cowbell brand of beverages, has cut the sod for the drilling of 20 boreholes across the country.

    The sod-cutting ceremony for the manual boreholes to be constructed in selected communities across the country over a month-long period was performed at Aminapah in the Ada East District in the Greater Accra Region.

    The project is part of events to commemorate the 20th anniversary of operations of the Cowbell brands producer in the country.

    The Marketing Manager of (PGL), Mr Shine Akiem Torsoo, said all the boreholes would be completed and operational within a month and it was expected to help solve the water supply challenges of some underprivileged communities in the 16 regions of the country.

    He mentioned that a needs assessment of the Aminapah community revealed that the people currently had to trek about eight kilometres to access potable water.

    “This is part of an initiative to give 20 boreholes to the regions in Ghana and this is the first place that we have chosen to start.

    Twenty because Cowbell has operated in Ghana for 20 years and this is to show that we are not just here for business but also the development of the country, ” Mr Torsoo said.

    Initiative

    The Brand Manager of Cowbell, Mr Joseph Ashong, in an address at the ceremony, said the project was in fulfilment of a pledge made at the media launch of the 20th anniversary celebration of Cowbell in May.

    “We are told Aminapah is home to about 600 people, most of whom are women and children.

    Their nearest source of water is the next community at Toku or Goi, which is about eight kilometres from here.

    “Those who are unable to make the trip such as the vulnerable have to wait on the rains to bath, cook or even wash clothes,” he said, adding that the provision of boreholes was a demonstration of how the company cared and loved its consumers for their support over the years.

    He advised the residents of all the beneficiary communities to service and maintain the boreholes  regularly to ensure that it would be functional for generations to come.

    Appreciation

    In an address read on his behalf, the Chief of Aminapah, Nene Amartey Korley Adegu, said since his people settled in the area in 1909, they had been bedevilled by water supply and infrastructural challenges.

    He said the decision by Promasidor to construct a borehole was timely because the cost of travelling to fetch water in a neighbouring community was becoming a burden on residents.

    “As at now, the population of this town is 513, made up of 107 men, 193 women and 213 children. Water, roads and schools are our challenges, so we thank Promasidor for coming to our aid,”  Nene Adegu said.

    He gave an assurance that the community would gather resources to ensure a periodic maintenance of the borehole upon completion.

    Source: graphic.com.gh

  • Two jailed 20 years for robbery, acid attack on Mobile Money vendor

    The Kasoa Ofaakor Circuit Court has sentenced two persons who poured acid on a Mobile Money vendor at Gomoa Fetteh in the Central Region to 20 years imprisonment.

    The two, Daniel Amoah and Yaw Danso were charged with conspiracy to commit crime to wit robbery and robbery.

    In March 2019, the two individuals went to Kate Aidoo a Mobile Money vendor at Gomoa Fetteh and withdrew GHc10.

    Read: Armed robbery, organized crime in Ghana originated from Nigeria Adu Asare

    They came back later under the pretext of buying airtime and Yaw Danso removed a container filled with concentrated acid and poured it on her.

    Speaking to Citi News in an interview, DSP Irene Oppong, the Central Regional Police Public Relations Officer explained that the victim as a result of the acid sustained several bodily burns on the face and chest area.

    The two accused persons, who made away with an unspecified amount of money, were later arrested by the Gomoa Ojobi Police command.

    Armed robbers rape market women after robbery

    “The Gomoa Ojobi Police Command arrested the two individuals and arraigned them before court,” the Police PRO said.

    “They have been taken to the Nsawam Prisons,” DSP Irene Oppong added.

    Source: Calvis Tetteh | citinewsroom.com

  • Six insurance companies create pool to insure 1D1F companies

    Six insurance companies have announced the creation of an insurance pool to support factories under the One District One Factory initiative.

    The pool will be used to essentially give investors the needed security and safety in operating those factories.

    The six insurance companies include SIC Insurance, SIC Life, Glico Insurance, Enterprise Insurance, Vanguard Assurance, and SIBL. The pool will help the companies raise the necessary funds to pay claims in case of losses by the factories.

    Read: 1D1F: 2 companies start production

    Speaking at a stakeholder engagement, Chief Executive Officer of SIC Insurance Stephen Kwame Oduro said the insurance companies are committed to the sustainability of the 1D1F initiative.

    “The partners in the insurance pool are at the top bracket of insurance companies in the country. That means we have the weight to support the companies. We collectively see this assignment as a national call to play our role as we support the vision of the government of Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in the transformation agenda for mother Ghana,” he stated.

    Because most factories under the 1D1F policy are engaged in manufacturing and the storage of goods, they will need insurance packages to cover for financial losses in case of damages to their goods, workers or machinery both in and outside their premises.

    Read: 1D1F factory takes shape in Tano North

    National Coordinator of the One District One Factory Secretariat Gifty Ohene-Konadu commended the companies for their support.

    She further urged IDIF companies to ensure there is transparency in their operations to enable them to win the trust of investors.

    source: citibusinessnews.com

  • Police open investigation into fatal Akrokerri mine pit collapse

    Police in Obuasi have launched investigations into a mine pit collapse at Akrokerri Bronikrom, in the Ashanti Region, which has claimed the life of a 35-year-old man.

    It took personnel from the National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO) and the police several hours to retrieve the body which was trapped under the rubble, Thursday.

    It took more than six hours for rescue efforts to successfully retrieve the body.

    Read: Operation Vanguard arrests 50 illegal miners

    Obuasi District Police commander, DSP Martin Asenso, said the area has been declared a crime scene following the retrieval of the body.

    “Five persons have been retrieved and are still at the Adanse North District Assembly Hospital…looking at the circumstances the engineers have advised that the pit or where the body was retrieved to be covered,” he said.

    Earlier, the Ashanti Region police PRO, ASP Godwin Ahianyo, explained that the rescue team used an excavator to clear the grounds and save those trapped in the collapsed pit.

    The mining pit caved in early Thursday while some miners were underground.

    Police have, however, dispelled rumours there were many trapped under the rubble.

    Meanwhile, the body of the 35-year-old has been sent to the hospital for autopsy.

    Read: Some locals are protecting illegal miners Operation Vanguard

    The site of the accident is near a public toilet facility in the centre of the Akrokerri town.

    Two years ago, a similar incident in the same region claimed two lives.

    At least two people were been confirmed dead, with 11 others trapped after a mining pit collapsed at Patriensa in the Asante-Akyem Central District of the Ashanti Region in 2017.

    The Patriensa tragedy came two weeks after another pit caved in on some illegal miners in Prestea-Nsuta in the Western Region.

    The two disasters were recorded during a renewed fight by the government to clamp down on illegal mining.

    Watch the video below for more about the Akrokerri Bronikrom tragedy yesterday.

    Source: Ghana | Myjoyonline.com

  • Forestry Commission bans hunting, capturing of wild animals

    The Wildlife Division of the Forestry Commission has announced a ban on hunting and capturing of wild animals, which is referred to as “Close Season,” beginning August 1 to December 1, 2019.

    The move is among measures used to regulate the utilisation and help curb the decline of wildlife resources in the country and ensure sustainable use whilst serving as a respite for the animals during their breeding period.

    A statement signed by Mr John Allotey, Deputy Chief Executive of Forestry Commission, said during this period, the hunting, capturing or destroying of any wildlife species was prohibited.

    Read: Forestry Commission to monitor forests with drones

    However, it said, the only animal which could be hunted during the Closed Season was grasscutter and that should be done with a valid license issued by the Wildlife Division of the Forestry Commission.

    The statement said that Ghana was amongst other African nations set to benefit from a period of economic growth through sustainable ecotourism and this could be achieved based on the abundance of wildlife heritage.

    It appealed to the public, hunters and all stakeholders in the wildlife enterprise to halt their activities during the closed season and be circumspect during the open season to help create a sustainable environment and improve the socio-economic status of citizens.

    It appealed to the security agencies to support the enforcement of the close season ban.

    Source: Ghana News Agency

     

  • We did no wrong awarding contract to David Adjaye Parliament

    The Parliamentary Service Board (PSB) has justified its decision to award a contract for the architectural design of the proposed new complex to UK-based Sir David Adjaye and Associates.

    According to Board, it followed the required process leading to the choice of the eventual winner, which is owned by renowned British architect of Ghanaian descent, Sir David Adjaye.

    Read: Ghanaian Architects protest multiple government projects awarded to Sir David Adjaye

    This follows complaints by local architects suggesting that the government had sidelined them by favouring the foreign-based architectural firm which they claimed had been awarded “juicy” government projects.

    Earlier in the week, Design Associates Development Consortium owned by Dr. Ekow Sam, petitioned President Akufo-Addo citing legal breaches in the award of multiple projects to Sir David Adjaye, renowned for his iconic design ideas.

    However, the PSB in a seven-page response signed by Secretary, Matthew Abrefa Tawiah, described claims in the petition “unfortunate” and “far-fetched”.

    See the full letter below:

     

    Source: myjoyonline.com

  • Death toll rises to 3 in attack on Turkish diplomat in Iraq

    The death toll from Wednesday’s attack on Turkish consular employees in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish region has risen to three after one victim died of his wounds, his family told AFP.

    The Turkish vice consul and one Iraqi citizen were shot dead by at least one attacker on Wednesday in a restaurant in the northern regional capital of Arbil, a police source told AFP.

    The shooting also wounded another Iraqi, 26-year-old Bashdar Ramadan, who died overnight, his cousin told AFP on Thursday.

    According to Turkish state media, the lone attacker was dressed in plainclothes and carried two guns when he stormed the restaurant in Arbil’s Ainkawa district.

    Checkpoints were quickly erected in and around the neighbourhood, but the perpetrators are still on the run.

    “The relevant authorities have launched a thorough investigation to find and prosecute the perpetrators of this criminal act,” said the Kurdistan Regional Government in an online statement.

    It warned against anyone trying to “harm the security and stability” of the autonomous region.

    There was no claim of responsibility for the attack, which came as Turkey wages a ground and bombing offensive against bases of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in northern Iraq.

    The PKK is classified as a “terrorist” group by Turkey, the United States and the European Union because of the three-decade insurgency it has waged against the Turkish state.

    Earlier this month, the PKK announced senior leader Diyar Gharib Mohammed and two other fighters had been killed in a Turkish raid.

    A spokesman for the PKK’s armed branch denied the group was involved in Wednesday’s shooting.

    Ibrahim Kalin, spokesman for the Turkish president, vowed “the necessary response will be given to those who committed this treacherous attack.”

    In Baghdad, the UN mission to Iraq called for “maximum restraint” from all sides.

    The US embassy offered its condolences to the Turkish mission after the “heinous” attack, calling for “the defence and safety of foreign diplomats and diplomatic missions in Iraq”.

    Source: France24

  • Dynamic Club donates to homeless facility in Virginia

    On Saturday, July 13, 2019, the Dynamic International Charitable Association, DMV Branch (DICA-DMV ) branch) donated items worth several hundreds of dollars to the PRTC Shelter house, in Woodbridge, Virginia. The items included drinking water, snacks, and toiletries.

    Dr. Kwasi Boakye, the President of the club led about 50 members of the club to make the donation.
    Receiving the items on behalf of the shelter, Ms. Bonnie Schrader the administrator expressed her profound appreciation to the group.

    This PRTC shelter which is open all year round offers comprehensive services including case management, job readiness, mental health counseling and medical referrals.

    The association later in the day capped the events on Saturday with a Barbeque picnic at the MLK Jnr Park, Alexandria, Virginia.

    The Dynamic Club has 8 branches Worldwide with headquarters in London. In addition to the Washington DC metro branch, there are branches in Ghana (Kumasi & Accra), Hannover, Hamburg, Denver, and Toronto, Canada.

    The Dynamic International Club, Washington DC/ Virginia Branch was formed in January 2018 and was officially elevated with full status in June 2018.

    Some of their major charitable contributions include a huge water tank reservoir presented to Tema General Hospital and a Flagstar 3 room fully furnished clinic for Mamponteng general hospital in Kumasi.

    Source: afrikanpost.com

  • Court sets July 31 to rule on application to stay proceedings

    An Accra High Court hearing the case involving Mr Mahama Ayariga, Member of Parliament for Bawku Central and six others has set July 31, to rule on an application for stay of proceedings pending an appeal at the Court of Appeal by counsel for Mr Ayariga.

    When the case was called on Wednesday afternoon, the court said it had before it three application, one for the extract of diary of action, filed on June 8, another directed at respondents to release ambulance, filed on June 8, and another for stay of proceedings pending the determination of an appeal at the Court of Appeal, filed on June 21.

    Counsel for Ayariga, Mr Edudzi Tamakloe, moving the application said the application to stay proceedings was that the substantive appeal was founded on the same ground with the affidavit in support of the motion paper.

    He said the matters raised were matters that raise fundamental constitutional issues which also relate to the enforcement of the supreme law, and a determination of this constitutional issue would have the effect of either terminating the entire process.

    He said the courts have held that in an application to stay proceedings the applicants must demonstrate that there were exceptional circumstances to warrant the stay.

    He said the case relates to whether or not the charge sheet signed by Mr Martin Amidu should stand on the basis of capacity raised, saying should the court take the view that he was not qualified to occupy the office, we contend that the entire case has to come to an end.

    He argued that the application goes to the very root, and that there were real exceptional circumstances.

    Counsel for the second and third accused persons associated themselves with the arguments of Mr Tamakloe, while counsel for the first, fourth, fifth and sixth accused persons told the court that they were indifferent.

    The prosecution, led by Michael Baafi from the Office of the Special Prosecutor said they were opposed to the application.

    He argued that technically speaking there was no appeal pending before the Appeals Court in this matter for which this court must grant stay of proceedings.

    He said in considering whether or not to grant stay, a look must be done as to whether or not there would be lost should the appeal succeed.

    He said counsel has also failed to disclose any special circumstances, and has nowhere in the reliefs asked the court to refer the alleged constitutional matter to the Supreme Court. This application is just an intent to have the charge sheet struck out.

    “To stay this application, will mean you are hindering the smooth proceeding of the trial which has the tendency of creating a chaos state. Dismiss the application and allow for the continuation of this case.”

    The court presided over by Justice Afia Serwaa Asare Botwe then set July 31 for her ruling on the application.

    Ayariga, and the six others are facing seven counts of conspiracy, abetment, contravention of the procedure for request for quotation, using public office for profit and transfer of foreign exchange from Ghana through an unauthorized dealer.

    The six include Hajia Hawa Ninchema, Municipal Chief Executive for Bawku, Sumaila Ewuntomah Abudu, Former Municipal Coordinating Director, Bawku Municipal Assembly (BMA), Alex Vadze, Procurement Officer, BMA, Alhaji Abdul Mumuni Jesewunde, Municipal Financial Officer BMA, Mary-Stella Adapesa Municipal Health Director, Bawku and Mumuni Yakubu Nambe, Assembly Member BMA.

    The seven accused persons were alleged to have acted together to import an ambulance without following due procurement process, as stipulated by law.

    They have all pleaded not guilty to all seven counts charges.

    Ayariga is on a self-recognisance bail in the sum of GHc 100,000.00, while the other six have also been admitted to bail in the sum of GHc50, 000 with two sureties each. One of the sureties the court said must be a resident of Accra since all six accused persons are base in the Upper East Region.

    The court has also directed all the accused to deposit their passports at the court and notify the court in writing anytime they intend to travel.

    Meanwhile, in another development a case against Ayariga, and one other before the same court, relating to charges of using public office for private benefit, the court granted the request by the Prosecution to substitute the charge sheet filed earlier on March 27, with a new one.

    Source: ghananewsagency.org

  • Farmers schooled on fall armyworm infestation

    The Bolgatanga Municipal Directorate of the Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MOFA) has sensitized peasant farmers at Kalbeo, a community in the Municipality on effective ways to spray their farms to reduce the invasion of fall armyworms.

    The farmers were shown the various types of chemicals used to spray the fall armyworms, how to reconstitute the chemicals with water, the process of spraying and precautionary measures needed to be observed when applying the chemicals.

    Dr Bernard My-Issah, the Bolgatanga Municipal Director of MOFA, said during their monitoring visits to farms within the Municipality, they observed that the fall armyworm infestation was a major concern.

    He said, “there is a gap in terms of the capacity to fight the fall armyworms and the technical know-how on the part of the farmer”.

    Dr My-Issah said “the worm has certain characteristics, it is, first of all, a flying insect, it will lay eggs, pupate and fly away. The dangerous stage is when it turns into larvae and moves about to destroy the crops”.

    “If we identify eggs on the field and start the spraying, we will reduce the hatchery rate and if the larvae are there, we will also reduce them to pupates. The adult insect has no problem, the problem is when it becomes larvae or caterpillar moving about.”

    The Director said the caterpillar is different from other caterpillars because whereas ordinary caterpillars would only devour the leaves of plants and they could rejuvenate, the fall armyworms bowed into the follicle of plants, especially maize plants and ate them up.

    He said even though the government has supplied some quantities of chemicals to combat the worms, the quantities were “woefully inadequate, it cannot reach every farmer, and should you identify few farms and spray, you have done nothing.”

    He said series of sensitizations efforts have been made on the effective use of chemicals to halt the spread of armyworms in farming communities.

    Dr My-Issah said there are different types of chemicals that have the potency to reduce the rate of infestation and called on farmers who could afford the chemicals on their own to acquire them as the current supply from the government is limited.

    The Director said his outfit would ensure that the chemicals provided by the government would be used to demonstrate to farmers in all farming communities to raise awareness on how to combat the fall armyworms.

    “After we demonstrate to farmers on how to use the chemicals, whatever chemical is left, we leave it with the community to share among themselves.”
    He called on farmers to be vigilant. “As soon as you see the fly hovering around your farm, know that it will deposit eggs, so arm yourself immediately to spray”.

    Mr Richard Akeemboya, a farmer in the Kalbeo community, said the move by MOFA to sensitize farmers was in the right direction adding that it would help them identify early signals of the presence of the worms to enable them to respond swiftly.

    Source: ghananewsagency.org

  • Bawumia leads government trade, investment delegation to Canada

    Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia is leading a government delegation on a trade and investment mission in Canada.

    The mission in Vancouver on Saturday is organised by the Ghana High Commission in collaboration with the Canada Africa Strategic Investment Group Inc.

    Dr Bawumia will also deliver a lecture at the Simon Fraser University, British Columbia, and interact with the Ghanaian community in Vancouver.

    Prior to the business meeting, Dr Bawumia will be the special guest of honour at the graduation ceremony of 232 Ghanaian doctors trained at the University of Medical Sciences in Cuba.

    He will also hold talks with the President of Cuba, Miguel Díaz-Canel; the Vice President of Cuba, Salvador Valdes Mesa; other senior Cuban government officials.

    The Vice President will lay a commemorative wreath at the African Heroes Park.

    Source: Myjoyonline.com

  • Public universities not deviated from core mandate Prof Yankah

    Professor Kwesi Yankah, Minister of State-in-Charge of Tertiary Education has asserted that public universities in Ghana have not deviated from its core mandate that established them.

    According to him, though some universities had allowed differentiation in programmes, however, they had not departed much from their core areas.

    “KNUST, predominantly a science and Technology University, in spite of the apparent deviations, still remains dominantly science and technology between 60-70 per cent. University of Ghana predominantly humanities university, in spite of the addition of a science and health-related departments, is still a predominant humanity university.”

    Prof Yankah made the observation when he moved the motion in Parliament for the second reading of the University of Business and Integrated Development Studies Bill, 2018, that seeks to give legal backing to the conversion of the Wa Campus of the UDS into an autonomous University.

    When it becomes autonomous, the institution is expected to meet the tertiary education needs of the people in the Upper West Region and beyond.
    The Upper West Region is the poorest, least developed and under-resourced of all the regions in the country- a situation that tends to affect access to education, training and ultimately, the development of the region.

    The view is that proximity to a university in the region would stimulate the pursuit of tertiary education and enhance the human resource capacities in the region.

    Prof Yankah also recognized that some areas were ignored and missed in terms relevance and focus such as the technical universities, which originally should have maintained the mandate of 70 per cent science and technology-related and 30 per cent humanities. But this was revered to 28 per cent technology and 68 per cent humanities.

    He insisted that the new technical Universities had been given the mandate to ensure that at least 70 percent of their programmes ought to be dedicated to the niche area and 30 per cent for the rest.

    “I can imagine how boring the universities would be if it is only humanities and there are no areas where you can look for interfaces between humanities and the other disciplines. So we always allow that margin of differentiation to allow for non-niche areas that are important. Similarly, science-related universities also need the humanities,” he said.

    Prof Yankah also called for closer link between the university and its community so that the students can spend months applying themselves to issues that are useful to the people.

    He called for the equitable distribution of assets among the three autonomous campuses of the University for Development Studies (UDS).
    Mr Haruna Iddrisu, Minority Leader in his remark, said challenges of higher education in Ghana are in three levels including access, quality and relevance.
    He said the establishment of the UDS and its affiliate campuses had changed the economy of the entire Northern Ghana of Wa, Navrongo and Tamale.

    He expressed concern over the public universities departing from their core mandate, mission and value, adding that, the universities should redefine their mandate and stay consistent within their requirement.

    Mr Iddrisu also called for a national dialogue on the future of higher education in the country, saying “As a country, we have probably not bequeathed to ourselves what we call our immediate manpower needs. What does Ghana needs between 2020 and 2030 in terms of our manpower requirement,” he added.
    He said “we must compel the universities to produce the manpower the country would require and not what they would produce or deemed as desirable.

    There is disconnect, between the people the universities are training and the manpower needs of the country,” adding that, there is the need to train more people in the gas and oil sector.

    Mr William Agyepong Quaittoo, Chairman of the Educational Committee in his comments stated that, the bill seeks to establish the University of Business and Integrated Development Studies, as a public tertiary institution in Wa in the Upper West Region, and it should be an outstanding internationally acclaimed applied research and practical-oriented educational institution, dedicated to the development of business and integrated development studies.

    He said the objective is to provide higher education, disseminate knowledge related development in business and integrated development studies, and undertake research and nurture relationships with persons outside the institution in accordance with laid down principles.

    He stressed the need to employ the use of critical tools that include information and communication technology for teaching, research, dissemination of knowledge and administration.

    He urged the National Council for Tertiary Education (NCTE) to ensure that the university abides by its principles in the conduct of teaching and learning, and in the governance off the university.

    Source: Ghananewsagency.org

  • Barber remanded for defilement

    A 39-year-old barber who lured a 14-year-old primary four pupil into his room and forcibly had sexual intercourse with her, has been remanded into prison custody by the Tepa circuit court in the Ahafo Ano North Municipality.

    Solomon Addo is said to have locked the victim in his room, gave her some drinks and forcibly had intercourse and later gave her Ghc 10.00 with a warning not to tell anyone.

    His plea was not taken and he will reappear before the court presided over by Mr Michael Johnson Abbey on July 30, this year.

    Police Inspector Jonas Newlove Agyei, told the court that the victim was a primary four pupil of the Tepa Methodist basic school and resided with her grandmother, who was the complainant in the case, at Tepa.

    Read: Barber jailed 10 years for sexually molesting mentally retarded minor

    He said in May this year, Addo lured the victim into his room, locked it up, took some drinks together with the girl and forcibly had sex with her.

    Inspector Agyei said after the act, the victim experienced series of health problems and informed the suspect but he began to play some hide and seek with the victim.

    He said when the victim realized that her illness was getting serious, she reported the incident to her grandmother, who caused the arrest of the accused.

    The prosecution said a medical examination confirmed that the victim had been defiled and the suspect was therefore charged and brought before the court.

    Source: ghananewsagency.org

  • Exploding gas cylinder kills one Chinese, 2 others in critical condition

    One Chinese national was killed Wednesday while two others left in critical condition have been hospitalized after the LPG-cylinder they were using to weld exploded at Wassa Akropong in the Amenfi East District of the Western Region.

    Such was the force of the explosion that it exposed the entrails of the dead man and splashed blood all around.

    The thunderous sound and plumes of smoke accompanying the explosion sent residents running for dear life, while the rented building the Chinese have converted into an all-purpose workshop from where they undertook welding of machines and metal fabrication also suffered extensive damage.

    Read: Another gas explosion scare at GHUMCO as workers are evacuated

    The police are investigating the cause of the explosion said to have occurred shortly before 11am.

    An eyewitness and elder of the community, Mr. George Cobbinah made a report of the accident to the police and said at about 10:30, the two critically injured Chinese nationals, Liung Xan Xen, 52 and Li Fa Ning 43, together with the deceased whose name was not readily available were in the building welding when “unfortunately, the gas cylinder exploded killing one instantly and causing serious injuries to the two.”

    The two critically injured are on admission at the Wassa-Akropong Government Hospital while the body of deceased has also been deposited at the mortuary of the same hospital for autopsy.

    Source: Graphic.com.gh

  • Ghana and Ivory Coast lift threat to suspend cocoa supplies

    Ivory Coast and Ghana, the world’s two largest cocoa producers, have ended a threat to stop selling their production in what was a push for higher prices.

    In what they called a “historic” move, the two West African neighbours on June 12 vowed to suspend the sale of their 2020/2021 production to buyers unwilling to meet a minimum price of $2,600 per tonne, a move that shook the cocoa market.

    The two African nations — which together account for 60 percent of the world’s production — are campaigning to end a situation where cocoa producers make only $6 billion in a global chocolate market worth around $100 billion.

    Read: Tarkwa-Nsuaem farmers benefits from 525,000 cocoa seedling under PERD

    “The two countries decided to lift the suspension of sales of the 2020/2021 crop from today July 16,” the chief of Ivory Coast’s coffee and cocoa council, Yves Kone-Brahima, and Joseph Boahen Aidoo, chief executive of the Ghana Cocoa Board, said in a joint statement Tuesday.

    At a meeting in Ivory Coast’s commercial capital Adidjan on July 3, the two countries introduced a so-called Living Income Differential of $400 per tonne.

    The differential would kick in for export contracts for the 2020/2021 crop if market prices fell below $2,600 a tonne.

    A World Bank report released last week said Ivory Coast, the world’s largest producer, earns just a fraction of the crop’s potential value, and that 55 percent of cocoa producers live on about 757 CFA francs ($1.3 / 1.15 euros) a day, which is below the poverty line.

    Read: Cocoa beans to attract additional $400 from 2020/21 season

    Cocoa accounts for 40 percent of the nation’s exports but the country only earns about eight percent of total profits in the cocoa-chocolate sector.

    Almost 80 percent of the sector’s profits are concentrated in the processing of chocolate paste and in the distribution of finished products to consumers, “two phases in which Ivory Coast does not yet play a major role”, the report said.

    Source: France24

  • Sudan military and civilians sign deal to end deadly turmoil

    Sudan’s ruling military council and opposition leaders have signed a power-sharing accord after all-night talks.

    It is a “historic moment” for the country, the deputy head of Sudan’s ruling military council, Mohamed Hamdan “Hemeti” Dagolo, is quoted as saying by AFP news agency.

    Sudan has been in turmoil since the military ousted President Omar al-Bashir in April.

    Protesters have been demanding the military hand power to civilians.

    Those protests turned deadly in a crackdown on 3 June which left dozens of protesters dead.

    They have agreed to rotate control of the sovereign council – the top tier of power – for just over three years.

    That council will be made of five civilians, five military figures, and an 11th civilian, to be chosen by the 10 members.

    A military general will be in charge of that council for the first 21 months, then a civilian will lead for the following 18 months, followed by elections.

    A second agreement on constitutional issues is expected to be finalised on Friday.
    How significant is this deal?

    By Tomi Oladipo, BBC Africa security correspondent

    After months of on-and-off talk, the two sides have finally signed a deal. That is notable in itself.

    The agreement means that after 30 years of military rule, Sudan is now three years away from a fully civilian administration – in theory.

    The finer details of the deal and its constitutional elements have not been agreed upon. There is still a “sovereign council” to be appointed to lead the country through its transition.

    However some among the protesting masses might feel that they’ve got the short end of the stick.

    The very military they challenged – and under whom they suffered pain and death on the streets – remains in power for now and will lead the interim government initially. The generals could possibly secure immunity from prosecution.

    Justice in the eyes of the protesters will not have been served yet, but their chants for the fall of the regime have ushered in this new phase.

    Just before protest leaders and ruling generals sat down to fine-tune the deal on Tuesday night, a protest leader told reporters that they refused to accept the military’s request for immunity for violence against demonstrators.

    The agreement they signed does not mention immunity. It does, however, promise an investigation into the violence.

    Protesters accuse government forces of killing more than 100 protesters during a sit-in against the transitional military council on 3 June.

    Source: bbc.com

  • LVMH boss Bernard Arnault overtakes Bill Gates as world’s second-richest person

    Bill Gates is no longer the world’s second-richest person. That title now belongs to French billionaire Bernard Arnault.

    Arnault, the CEO of luxury goods maker LVMH (LVMHF), overtook Gates Tuesday on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. It’s the first time since the index was created seven years ago that Gates has dropped out of the top two.

    Arnault has a net worth of around $108 billion, according to the index, having added $39 billion to his fortune in the past year. Microsoft (MSFT) founder Gates is worth $107 billion.

    The two men have also traded spots on another billionaires’ list published by Forbes.

    Arnault has built LVMH into a global luxury powerhouse that controls brands such as Louis Vuitton, Christian Dior and Givenchy. It’s also the home of Champagne brand Dom Pérignon and beauty retailer Sephora.

    The 70-year-old made headlines earlier this year when he committed €200 million ($224 million) to the rebuilding of Paris’ Notre Dame cathedral.

    According to Bloomberg, Gates would still rank first if not for his philanthropic giving. The software guru has so far donated over $35 billion to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

    Amazon (AMZN) CEO Jeff Bezos holds the top spot on the Bloomberg list with an estimated net worth of $125 billion.

    Source: cnn.com

  • Zimbabwe drought leaves more than two million people without clean water

    A recent drought in Zimbabwe has left more than two million people unable to access clean water, according to officials.

    Last month, the country’s two major cities, Harare and Bulawayo, announced they had started a water rationing program which would see residents accessing tap water only once a week. The two cities combined have a population of more than two million people.

    In recent years, Harare municipality has been battling against low water quality due to a critical shortage of purifying chemicals, which cost in excess of USD$3 million per month, water engineers said.

    Harare Acting Water Director Mabhena Moyo Tuesday blamed the current economic crisis for hampering water service delivery.

    “We are using more chemicals and we have not been able to procure enough safe chemicals as a result, we are targeting to provide water to our residents with a minimum of once a week’ supply of the precious liquid,” he said.

    Residents in Harare told CNN they have been experiencing water shortages since January, but the situation has worsened as many homes have gone without water for weeks as the crisis lingers.

    “It was bad when they started rationing it, we could store water but it is dire now, because we may have no water for days and there is nothing to store,” Nyasha Chingo, who lives in Kuwadzana, a township near the Harare business district told CNN.

    “We will continue with the water rationing exercise for a certain period into the foreseeable future because of the drought and chemicals,” Moyo told reporters.

    Zimbabwe faced severe droughts between last October and May that have depleted water sources in its cities.

    The Community Water Alliance of Zimbabwe, a campaign group that has been monitoring cases, says the worst affected areas are Chitungwiza, Epworth, Ruwa and Norton Town Councils, where residents have not had water for more than three months.

    The water crisis has also sparked fears of cholera outbreak in areas where residents have gone without water for as long as three months, the NGO said.

    “We are looking at hygiene standards, service delivery and ablution system which requires water. Citizens have been greatly affected and the cholera hotspots are what we fear the most,” Hardlife Mudzingwa of the Community Water Alliance told CNN.

    Source: cnn.com

  • Sudan protesters, army rulers ink power sharing deal

    Sudan’s protesters and ruling generals Wednesday inked a power sharing deal, paving the way for a civilian administration, a key demand of demonstrators since president Omar al-Bashir was deposed in April.

    The two sides initialled a document called the “Political Declaration”, an AFP correspondent reported, after intense talks through the night over fine details of the agreement.

    The deputy chief of the ruling miliary council Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo — who initialled the deal on behalf of the generals — told AFP the agreement was a “historic moment” for Sudan.

    Ibrahim al-Amin, a key protest leader, said “today, we completed the political declaration.”

    “For the constitutional document we will resume talks on Friday,” he told AFP.

    The landmark power sharing deal, which was agreed on July 5, has been brokered by African Union and Ethiopian mediators after intense negotiations between the protest umbrella group and ruling generals.

    The overall accord stipulates that a new transitional civilian-military ruling body be established, in a bid to end the country’s months-long political crisis.

    The governing body will have a total of six civilians and five military representatives.

    The six civilians will include five from the umbrella protest movement, the Alliance for Freedom and Change.

    A general will head the ruling body during the first 21 months of the transition, followed by a civilian for the remaining 18 months, according to the framework agreement.

    That body is to oversee the formation of a transitional civilian administration that will govern for just over three years, after which elections would be held.

    The breakthrough accord came after a political deadlock that gripped Sudan since the generals ousted Bashir in a palace coup in April, on the back of months of nationwide mass protests against his iron-fisted three-decade rule.

    Tensions climaxed on June 3 when armed men in military fatigues stormed a longstanding protest camp in Khartoum, shooting and beating crowds of demonstrators in a pre-dawn raid.

    Dozens were killed and hundreds wounded, triggering international outrage, although the generals insisted they did not order the violent dispersal of protesters.

    Talks to fine tune the details of the deal since July 5 had been postponed several times at the request of protest leaders.

    © 2019 AFP

    Source: France24

  • French lawmakers approve controversial bill to rebuild Notre-Dame

    French MPs on Tuesday approved a law on the reconstruction of Notre-Dame, three months after flames ravaged the great Paris cathedral, but with the rebuilding process still mired in controversy.

    The cathedral, part of a UNESCO world heritage site covering the banks of the River Seine in Paris, lost its gothic spire, roof and precious artefacts in the April 15 blaze.

    Tourists in Paris are still heading to Notre-Dame to take photos and selfies, with the horrific fire only increasing its global fame, although they cannot access the esplanade in front of the building let alone the edifice itself.

    But the passing of the reconstruction bill in the National Assembly after months of squabbles marked only the start of the hugely controversial and sensitive rebuilding process.

    “The hardest thing is now ahead of us. We need to strengthen the cathedral forever and then restore it,” said Culture Minister Franck Riester as the bill was passed.

    President Emmanuel Macron has said the reconstruction should be completed within five years, a deadline some experts see as too ambitious.

    And he created an even greater furore by suggesting the toppled spire could be replaced by a steeple with a contemporary touch.

    ‘In the hearts of the French’

    The “aim is to give Notre-Dame a restoration appropriate for the place it has in the hearts of the French people and in the entire world,” said Riester.

    The bill aims to organise the 850 million euros ($954 million) in donations which were pledged from individual, corporate and private donors after the blaze and to coordinate the painstaking restoration work.

    French luxury goods rivals, the billionaires Bernard Arnault and Francois-Henri Pinault, pledged 200 and 100 million euros apiece and they are likely to disburse the funds gradually to ensure they are spent well.

    But the bill’s passage through parliament was held up by objections from the opposition, who complained the process was being rushed simply to ensure reconstruction was finished for the 2024 Olympic Games hosted by Paris.

    Brigitte Kuster of the opposition Republicans said: “Imposing a deadline of five years from on high makes no sense.”

    But Riester insisted: “We are not confusing speed with hurry,” adding that the cathedral was “not entirely saved” and that there was “still a risk” of collapse in some areas.

    ‘Contemporary gesture’

    The upper house Senate and lower chamber National Assembly failed to agree on a common text and the draft then went back to the National Assembly where Macron’s party has a majority in a slightly modified form.

    Ninety-one MPs voted for the bill with eight votes against and 33 abstentions.

    Riester also urged against complacency despite the high amounts pledged, saying that only 10 percent of these promises have been realised as actual donations.

    The architectural form of the reconstruction is not directly addressed in the text although it was discussed in parliament, where some deputies expressed concern over Macron’s interest in a “contemporary architectural gesture”.

    Meanwhile, the Paris authorities remain concerned about above average amounts of lead from the roof present in the area around the cathedral, meaning its immediate vicinity is still closed.

    The scaffolding around the cathedral and white canopy serving as a temporary roof mean Notre-Dame is a shadow of its pre-fire self, even if the two great mediaeval towers were preserved in all their glory.

    Dozens of workers are at the site every day but they are focusing on securing the site and clearing debris rather than restoration.

    The vault in particular is at risk of collapse and the process of securing it will last until the autumn, according to the culture ministry. Only then can an architect carry out a thorough check of the edifice before restoration work begins.

    Paris prosecutors said in June a poorly stubbed-out cigarette or an electrical fault could have started the fire and opened an investigation into criminal negligence without targeting any individual.

    On June 15, two months after the fire, clerics conducted the first mass inside the cathedral since the blaze, donning hard hats along with their robes for their safety.

    Source: France24

  • Merkel heir apparent joins cabinet in risky bid for power

    German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s heir apparent joined her cabinet Wednesday as defence minister, a high-profile job often called a poisoned chalice in Berlin’s fraught political landscape.

    The surprise appointment of Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer late Tuesday came just hours after the current head of the German military, Ursula von der Leyen, was elected as the first woman to lead the European Commission.

    The decision by AKK, as she is commonly known, to take charge of a sprawling administration widely seen as unwieldy and scandal-prone was described as a risky gambit to shore up political support.

    At a naming ceremony at the presidential palace in Berlin in Merkel’s presence, the 56-year-old formally accepted the portfolio from von der Leyen.

    “The men and women of the Bundeswehr (armed forces) deserve the highest political priority and my full commitment,” she said.

    “I am aware of my great responsibility and want to live up to it.”

    Shakuntala Banerjee of ZDF public television said AKK was “stepping up and taking over the most difficult ministry”.

    Read: Angela Merkel to step down as German chancellor in 2021

    “The chances to win big are there ?- but the risk of failure is also greater.”

    News weekly Der Spiegel said the defence ministry, rocked by a series of mismanagement allegations on von der Leyen’s watch, could prove to be a “minefield” for AKK.

    “But because that’s the case, the ministry also offers a chance for her to sharpen her profile, in an area where she lacks it: in foreign and security policy — an area where a chancellor needs some experience,” said its commentator Philipp Wittrock.

    “The chancellery remains the big goal and the defence ministry can serve as a stage for her to prove herself.”

    – ‘Abusing the Bundeswehr’ –

    However opposition politicians seized on AKK’s lack of expertise in military affairs at a time when the Bundeswehr has suffered chronic equipment problems and accusations of underfunding, not least from US President Donald Trump.

    “The chancellor and the CDU have shown once again that the needs of the Bundeswehr don’t interest them at all,” Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann of the Free Democrats told the daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.

    Read: Merkel travels to West Africa for talks on migration, trade and investment

    “They are abusing the stricken Bundeswehr for their little personnel games.”

    AKK has had a rocky tenure since December as Merkel’s handpicked successor as head of the centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), with her poll ratings in freefall.

    She had said as recently as this month that she was not interested in a cabinet post, preferring to focus her energy on strengthening the CDU.

    Merkel, who turned 65 on Wednesday, is the EU’s longest-serving leader and often called the most powerful woman in the world.

    She has said she will leave politics at the end of her fourth term, in 2021.

    After a series of shaking spells at public ceremonies in the last month, Merkel remained seated for most of the naming ceremony, along with von der Leyen and AKK.

    Source: France24

  • Mother buries newly born baby alive

     

    The Eastern Regional Police has arrested Jenifer Badu, 18 for allegedly burying her newly born baby boy alive in a bush at Owodokum near Suhum in the Eastern Region right after delivery.

    The suspect is currently recovering at the Suhum Government Hospital under Police guard.

    The body of the baby has since been exhumed and deposited at the Suhum Government Hospital morgue for autopsy.

    According to the Deputy Eastern Regional Police Public Relations Officer, Sergeant Francis Gomado, the deceased baby was found by the Police in a small hole in a bush with its placenta beside it.

    He said the police have initiated investigations into the act.

    Source: Ghananewsagency.org

  • 56-year-old farmer granted bail for fraudulent transaction

    A 56-year-old farmer has been granted a GH?30,000.00 bail by the Kumasi Metropolitan Court for fraudulent transaction.

    Opanin Kwaku Agyei pleaded not guilty to the charge and will reappear before the court presided over by Mrs. Mary Nsenkyire on August, 01 this year.

    Presenting the facts of the case to the court, Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Felix Akowuah said the complainant, Mina Adamu was a worker a National Health Insurance Office, and resides at Abuakwa Maakro, whilst the accused was a farmer at Tanoso in Kumasi.

    He said on June 29 this year, the complainant and her brother Derrick Lamin purchased plot of land known as No.64, from the accused at Bonkanye, near Nkawie, at the cost of GH?32,000.00 and made a part payment of GH?27,000.00 of which the accused issued a receipt to that effect.

    ASP Akowuah further told the court that the complainant and her brother went to the land and they were driven away by another person who claimed ownership to the same plot of land.

    Read: Amidu to drag AG to court over frustration from Heads of Public institutions

    He said the complainant reported the matter to the police who arrested the accused person.

    The prosecution said Police investigations revealed that the accused person had no title to the land.

    The accused according to ASP Akowuah in his cautioned statement admitted having sold the said plot of land to the complainant and pleaded to the police to give him a period of two weeks to refund the amount involved after which, he was granted police enquiry bail.

    ASP Akowuah said the accused failed to report himself to the police and went ahead to petition the Attorney General for unlawful arrest by the police.

    He said the docket was sent to the Attorney General for advice after which the Attorney General directed that the accused be charged with the offence of fraudulent transaction.

    ASP Akowuah said that on receipt of the report from the AG, the Police invited the accused person on several occasions but he failed to turn up.

    He said on July 08 this year, at about 1230 hours, police received information that the accused was hiding at Adum in Kumasi and quickly proceeded to arrested him.

    The accused was formally charged and arraigned.

    Source: ghananewsagency.org

  • Punishment for #DropThatChamber Soldier too harsh Amnesty International

    Amnesty International has described as harsh the punishment meted to the soldier who took to soldier media to condemned plans by parliament to construct a new chamber.

    The officer has been sentenced to 90 days imprisonment with hard labour at the guardroom.

    Lance Corporal Lincoln Isaac Wassah of 2 Recce Squadron in Sunyani has also been stripped of his rank.

    Speaking to Francis Abban on the Morning Starr Wednesday, the country director for Amnesty International Robert Akoto Amoafo said a warning could have been enough punishment for the offense since it is not a regular occurrence within the security agencies in Ghana

    “The extent to which this punishment has gone is too far. A warning could have be given but to punish the person to this extent puts fear in officers to express themselves. The fact that one joins security agency does not take their citizenship rights from them. A warning would have been the best”.

    Lance Corporal Wassah was seen in a military uniform in the viral video supporting the social media campaign that eventually led to Parliament shelving plans to construct a new Chamber.

    L/Cpl Wassah in the viral video warned President Akufo-Addo the Commander-in-Chief of the Ghana Armed Forces not to support the construction of the new Parliamentary chamber expected to cost 200 million dollars.

    According to him, there were more pressing issues that needed to be addressed instead of building a fanciful new Parliamentary Chamber.

    Following the release of the video, L/Cpl Wassah was arrested by the Military High Command for interrogation.

    #DropThatChamber Campaign

    The “#DropThatChamber” campaign was initiated on social media with the aim of mounting pressure on Parliament to discontinue a proposal to build a new 450-seater chamber.

    The House after sustained social media pressure dropped the plans to construct the new Chamber indefinitely.

    Source: starrfm.com.gh

  • 1,252 perish in accidents between January to June 2019

    Data compiled by the Motor Traffic and Transport Department (MMTD) of the Ghana Police Service shows a 3.3% increase in the number of commuters killed in road accidents between January and June 2019 compared to the same period in 2018.

    According to the data, the number of commuters killed rose from 1,212 in the first half of 2018 to 1,252 during the first six months of 2019.

    It revealed that males 18 years and below killed were 126 while males above 18 years killed hit 808, bringing the total to 934.

    On the other hand, females below 18 years who lost their lives were 86 while females above 18 years killed in road traffic crashes totalled 232.

    This brings the total number of females who were killed to 318.

    On the other hand, the number of pedestrians killed recorded a 7.16% decline from 397 in the first quarter of 2018 to 378 in the same period of 2019.

    1,503 Pedestrians knocked down The number of pedestrians knocked down also dropped from 1,619 in the same period last year to 1,503 this year.

    The data indicates that the number of persons injured recorded a 15.5% jump, increasing from 6,689 in the first half of last year to 7,043 in the same period in 2019.

    According to the records, the total number of vehicles involved in accidents increased from 11,053 to 11,167, representing a 1.03% rise.

    364 Killed in motorcycle accidents Of the 1,585 victims of motorcycle accidents, 364 were killed and the number of motorcycles involved in accidents was 2,284, an increase of 16.6% from the 1,937 motorcycle accidents in the first half of 2018.

    4,786 Private vehicles involved in accidents According to the data, the number of private vehicles involved in road traffic crashes rose from 4,774 to 4,786 in 2019, representing a 0.25% increase.

    Private vehicles killed 348 commuters and injured 1,670 victims.

    4,133 Commercial vehicles involved in accidents It came to light that commercial vehicles involved in accidents declined by 4.81% from 4,342 in the first half of last year to 4,133 in the same period this year.

    Commercial vehicles killed 540 commuters and injured 3,788 victims in the first six months of this year.

    There was 1.47% increase in the number of cases reported from 6,745 in the first half of last year to 6,844 during the same period this year.

    Ghana witnessed a reduction in fatality rate from 27 per every 10,000 vehicles in 1999 to about eight per 10,000 vehicles in 2017, with the use of motorcycles threatening gains made in the other road user categories in recent times.

    Source: thefinderonline.com

  • You cant teach at SHS with Distance degree – GES directs

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Source: 3news.com

  • CLOGSAG honours members in Kassena-Nankana Municipal

    The Kassena-Nankana Municipal branch of the Civil and Local Government Staff Association of Ghana (CLOGSAG) in the Upper East Region has honoured some dedicated and hardworking members.

    The first Maiden Annual Excellence Awards Ceremony held in Navrongo was aimed at celebrating outstanding contributions of workers in the course of their work.

    The event, which attracted various stakeholders including Mr Alhassan Ziblim Alhassan, the Municipal Coordinating Director, Regional and Municipal CLOGSAG Executives, was also to motivate and encourage other civil servants to join the Association.

    Addressing the function on behalf of Mr Williams Adum, the Municipal Chief Executive, Mr Al-hassan Ziblim Alhassan, the Municipal Coordinating Director, applauded the workers for their outstanding achievements.

    Whilst urging CLOGSAG members to continue to work hard towards the growth of the Municipality, the nation and the world at large, the Municipal Coordinating Director, also called on corporate bodies to come on board to help push development in the area.

    Mr Alhassan, however, tasked the members to keep abreast with the code of conduct governing the Civil and Local Government Services and gave the assurance that government has put in place measures to ensure that the general working conditions were improved for workers.

    Mr Paul Apam, the Regional Chairman of CLOGSAG, who commended the awardees for their great work, urged them to be good ambassadors of the Association and thanked the MCE for supporting the event.

    Mr Abdul-Baqi Alhassan, the Municipal Chairman of CLOGSAG, appealed to Management of the Assembly to address pertinent concerns, such as the delays and frustrations in promotion, upgrading and conversions of staff, poor and inadequate working tools.

    The overall hardworking activist award was presented to Madam Awineboya Apoya. Other hardworking activists awards were presented to Mr James Brown Fankey, Mr Aaron Dijera Adiga, Madam Juliana Anaba and Mr Lucas Amikiya Aligire.

    Source: ghananewsagency.org

  • ‘Dropthatchamber’ soldier demoted, sentenced to 90 days in hard labour

    201766 L/Cpl Wassah Lincoln Isaac, the soldier who was captured on video campaigning against the construction of the 450-seat chamber for parliament estimated at $200 million has been stripped of his rank and sentenced to 90 days imprisonment with hard labour at the guardroom.

    L/Cpl Wassah of the 2 Recce squadron unit in Sunyani had called on authorities to drop the idea of building a chamber and channel those resources into eradicating under-tree schools, among others.

    Read: #DropThatChamber: Newsfile panelists praise Economic Fighters League leader

    The soldier was sentenced after the board that was set up to probe the matter found him guilty of misconduct contrary to the code of ethics of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF)

    The board, chaired by the commanding officer of the unit, Lt Col WAK Ackah (GH/2927), delivered the ruling after questions and answers on actions of the soldier.

    Earlier, the Economic Fighters League (Fighters) had called on the leadership of GAF to free the soldier after he was initially arrested and detained in a guard room for weeks.

    Source: classfmonline.com

  • Rawlings riders alleged assassins identified

    Security sources in Tema have concluded that the occupants of a Toyota Corolla, who shot the dispatch rider of former president Flt-Lt Jerry John Rawlings, were the same people who robbed the Tema Motorway Roundabout Shell Station.

    The outrider, Sgt Atsu Sekeh of the Central Motor Traffic and Transport Department (MTTD) in Accra, who is assigned to the former president, was on Saturday, at about 11pm, shot by unknown gunmen using a blue Toyota Corolla at Tema Community 22.

    Exactly 12 hours later, the same vehicle became the getaway car during a robbery expedition at the Motorway Roundabout in broad daylight.

    Intelligence sources are investigating the authenticity of the registration number of the getaway vehicle, if it was hijacked from the owner for the robbery.

    Meanwhile, the Tema Regional police have issued a statement in connection with the robbery at the Shell fuel station at the Tema Motorway Roundabout.

    The following is the full statement:

    The Tema Regional Police Command is on a manhunt for three robbers who robbed a shell filling station at the Tema Motorway Roundabout on Sunday, July 14, 2019.
    The three men arrived at the filling station on board a black Toyota Corolla saloon car with registration number GG 991-18 at about 11.50am, held seven workers and two customers hostage at gunpoint, and robbed them of their valuables.
    Police investigations revealed that items stolen included an Apple MacBook Pro laptop, a Dell laptop, one Motorola Z2 mobile phone and an MTN router.

    The rest are GH¢3,000 worth of MTN recharge cards, a system unit, and an unspecified amount of money. Nobody was injured during the robbery.
    Police have, however, visited the crime scene, and have in their custody the CCTV footages, which are currently being examined.
    We assure the public that the police are working assiduously to make sure the perpetrators of this crime are brought to book.

    We are appealing to the general public that anyone with relevant information that will help crack this case should not hesitate to contact the nearest police station, or contact police on the following numbers;

    18555 MTN Toll Free
    0542719093 MTN
    0571017996 AirtelTigo

    Source: thechronicle.com.gh

  • Tema Police hunt for fuel station robbers

    The Tema Regional Police Command is on a manhunt for three robbers who attacked a Shell fuel filling station at the Tema Motorway Roundabout on Sunday, July 14, 2019.

    According a press statement issued by the Tema Regional Police Command and signed by its PRO, DSP Joseph Benefo Darkwah, “the three men arrived at the filling station onboard a black Toyota Corolla saloon car with registration number GG 991-18 at about 11.50am, held seven workers and two customers hostage at gunpoint and robbed them of their valuables”.

    The statement said: “police investigations revealed that items stolen included an Apple MacBook Pro laptop, a Dell laptop, one Motorola Z2 mobile phone and an MTN router.”

    The rest are GHC 3,000 worth of MTN recharge cards, a system unit and an unspecified amount of money.

    The statement noted that nobody was injured during the robbery.

    The statement said the Police has since visited the crime scene and has in their custody, the CCTV footages which are currently being examined to possibly aide them in the arrest of the robbers.

    “We assure the public [that] the police are working assiduously to make sure the perpetrators of this crime are brought to book. We are appealing to the general public that anyone with relevant information that will help crack this case should not hesitate to contact the nearest police station or contact police on the following numbers;18555 MTN Toll Free 0542719093 MTN, 0571017996 AirtelTigo,” the statement added.

    Source: citinewsroom.com

  • Heads of institutions hindering fight against corruption Martin Amidu

    The work of the Special Prosecutor is allegedly being hampered greatly by heads of some government institutions in the country.

    If such hindrances are not checked, the fight against corruption may not be won by the Akufo-Addo government and the purpose for which the Office of the Special Prosecutor was set up will be defeated as the office may make little or no impact.

    This complaint was made by the Special Prosecutor, Martin Amidu, in a write-up in which he made known a litany of challenges the office was facing in its quest to fight corruption in the country.

    According to him, some heads of institutions are simply refusing to comply with the laid down regulations of good governance and the protection of the national purse.

    “The biggest challenge facing the Office of the Special Prosecutor as an anti-corruption investigatory and prosecutorial body in spite of all the powers conferred upon it is not the President who promised the people of Ghana to establish the Office but the heads of institutions who simply refuse to comply with laws designed to ensure good governance and to protect the national purse by fighting corruption.”

    Mr. Amidu wrote in his piece that the “heads of institutions wantonly disregard statutory requests made by the Office for information and production of documents to assist in the investigation of corruption and corruption-related offences, in spite of the fact that the President has on a number of occasions admonished them on such misconduct.”

    The Special Prosecutor said he has the right to sue such institutions through the Attorney if they refuse to release documents to help in investigations.

    “The Office of the Special Prosecutor Act empowers the Office to enforce the production of information and documents in the Courts against any public institution that fails or refuses to honour the lawful request of the Office. This Office can also go to the High Court to compel heads of institutions to obey the laws that support the fight against corruption. The consequence will be that in accordance with the civil procedure rules this Office will have to sue the Attorney General as the representative of the State.”

    Read: Lead fight against procurement related corruption Minority Leader charges parliament

    He also complained about interferences from some of these agencies, whose names he did not mention in the write-up.

    “There have also been cases where some heads of institutions have made it their habit to interfere with and undermine the independence of this Office by deliberately running concurrent investigations falling within the jurisdiction of this Office with on-going investigations in this Office for the sole purpose of aborting investigations into corruption and corruption-related offences.”

    The Office of the Special Prosecutor has been chastised by Ghanaians for being ineffective in its fight against corruption over a year since it was established.

    But Amidu complained that, although his outfit is doing everything possible to fight corruption, such hindrances are making things difficult.

    “Some of the foregoing malfeasance has seriously affected the ability of this Office to deliver on its mandate, particularly when it must depend on some of these very institutions for seconded staff until it employs its own. The questions of anti-corruption work values and culture, and condoning indiscipline by some seconded staff by their parent institutions have surfaced and become public in some instances.”

    “What is worrying to this Office as an anti-corruption investigation and prosecutorial agency is the refusal of heads of institutions to take steps to enforce basic rules of discipline governing their institutions even when they know that their officers are under investigation, have been cautioned, bailed, and eventually even charged with corruption and corruption-related offences.”

    Read: Amidu using Special Prosecutor office to settle personal scores Edudzi Tamakloe

    He stated that per law, when a public officer is under investigation, he or she has to be interdicted but the heads of such agencies deliberately refuse to do that.

    “Unfortunately, the experience of the Office of the Special Prosecutor is that when it comes to fighting corruptions and corruption-related offences, heads of institutions think that the rules on interdiction and/or indefinite leave of public officers do not apply to corruption and corruption-related offences.”

    Mr. Amidu in his piece urged the public and civil society organizations to support his work.

    “The Office of the Special Prosecutor cannot fight corruption unless the public and civil society give it their fullest support and put pressure on the political elite to obey the laws that enable the Office to achieve its mandate.”

    “The President, the Minister of Finance, the Chief of Staff, the Auditor General, the Commission for Human Rights and Administrative Justice, and the Financial Intelligence Center have been very supportive of the Office thus far. But the response by other heads of institutions to the instructions from the Executive Branch appears to have been treated with impunity as far as the records show. Corruption cannot be fought on the so-called reputation of a few people. Every citizen needs to get involved now before the canker consumes the whole body politic,” he added.

    Source: citinewsroom.com

  • Scores killed, millions displaced as monsoon batters South Asia

    More than 100 people have been killed and millions of others forced from their homes across Nepal, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh as rain-triggered floods and landslides left a trail of destruction in parts of South Asia.

    The death toll was the highest in Nepal, where torrential rains unleashed mudslides and caused rivers to overflow, killing at least 67 people and leaving 30 others missing, officials said on Monday.

    The annual deluge, which hit the country on Thursday and has impacted around a third of all districts, has so far displaced at least 10,000 people there.

    The downpours have eased but authorities still fear the death toll could rise, according to police spokesman Bishwaraj Pokharel.

    “There are the challenges of resettlement of the displaced as many houses … have been swept away. We are also cautious about the risk of epidemics due to polluted water,” Pokharel told AFP news agency.

    Building collapse in India

    The June to September monsoon causes widespread death and destruction across South Asia each year.

    In the latest monsoon-related tragedy in India, a four-storey building on a hillside in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh collapsed due to heavy downpours, trapping those who had gathered for a party inside.

    At least 14 people were killed, including 13 soldiers, according to a statement from the chief minister’s office.

    Rescue workers used heavy machinery to remove heaps of mangled steel and wires from the muddied debris, pulling 28 survivors from the rubble.

    Floods have also devastated much of the northeastern state of Assam, where some 4.3 million people have been forced from their homes in the last 10 days due to rising waters across the mostly rural region, according to a government release on Monday.

    “The flood situation has turned very critical with 31 of the 32 districts affected,” Assam Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal told reporters. “We are working on a war footing to deal with the flood situation.”

    The state’s Kaziranga National Park, a UNESCO-recognised reserve and home to two-thirds of the world’s one-horned rhinos, has also been seriously affected by the weather.

    Nearly 80 percent of the park was flooded by the mighty Brahmaputra river, which flows along the sanctuary, forest officer Jutika Borah told The Associated Press news agency.

    In the eastern state of Bihar, five rivers were flowing over the danger levels with more rain forecast for the next few days. A state government release cited by Reuters news agency said some 1.9 million people had fled their homes, with tens of thousands taking shelter in more than 150 state-run relief camps.

    In Pakistan-administered Kashmir, officials said at least 18 people were killed after heavy rain triggered flash floods and damaged more than 50 houses.

    ‘Miserable’

    Bangladesh, a low-lying delta nation of 160 million people with more than 130 rivers, is prone to monsoon floods because of overflowing rivers and the heavy onrush of water from upstream India.

    At least 29 people have died in the last week, including two Rohingya refugees, 18 people who were hit by lightning in different parts of the country and seven who drowned after their boat capsized in choppy waters in the Bay of Bengal.

    Another 500,000 people have been forced to leave their homes in Bangladesh’s southern Chittagong district after the flooding of some 200 villages.

    In the overcrowded refugee camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar district – home to nearly one million Rohingya who have fled a military crackdown in Myanmar – nearly 5,000 tarpaulin and bamboo homes were destroyed after heavy rains triggered mudslides on the hill slopes, according to a spokeswoman for the International Organisation for Migration.

    Thousands of Rohingya have been left without shelter because of the heavy rains.

    Displaced refugees said they were suffering as rain disrupted logistics and daily activity in the camps.

    “It’s tough to go to food distribution centres by wading through a swamp of mud,” Nurun Jan, a Rohingya refugee, told AFP news agency. “Rains and gusty wind have made our life miserable.”

    Refugees also described a shortage of drinking water and a looming health crisis due to flooded toilets, which foster disease outbreaks.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • Gunmen kidnap mother of former Nigeria Super Eagles coach

    Gunmen have kidnapped Beauty Siasia, 75, the mother of former Nigeria national football coach, Samson Siasia.

    She was taken in her village in Bayelsa state, southern Nigeria, in the early hours of Monday.

    A family member who spoke to BBC Pidgin said the men broke in through the back door of the apartment to grab Mrs Siasia. He said they had not heard from her kidnappers and have reported the incident to the police.

    Read: AFCON 2019: NFF Boss Pinnick believes in Super Eagles to dump South Africa

    The police say they have launched a manhunt to catch the kidnappers and rescue the victim.

    Family members of Nigeria’s football stars have been targeted before by kidnappers demanding a ransom.

    Current Super Eagles captain Mikel Obi and forward Samuel Kalu have both had a parent abducted in the past.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Boy allegedly murdered to pacify gods at Mamponteng-Hemang

    A video of how a young boy was gruesomely murdered on the orders of the Chief of Mamponteng-Hemang in the Ashanti Region has gone viral.

    Kasapafmonline.com has gathered that the sacrifice of the boy was to appease the gods of the town, for which reason is yet to be established.

    In the video, the horrified inhabitants are heard pleading “the blood of Jesus Christ” on the murderers while they undertake the sacrifice of the boy, while others called for the head of the chief.

    The elders of the town are also seen standing heartlessly right at the spot of the sacrifice.

    Two Police vehicles are also parked at the crime scene. It is not immediately known what actions the police who are said to be in the pocket of the Chief took after the incident.

    This website has not been able to reach both the Mamponteng-Hemang Police and the Chief of the town to confirm the incident.

    Watch the video below.

    Source: kasapafmonline.com

  • Some locals are protecting illegal miners – Operation Vanguard

    Illegal mining task force Operation Vanguard says their undercover investigations have revealed that some locals are protecting illegal miners in the various communities.

    President Akufo Addo in 2017 set up Operation Vanguard which is a Military Police Joint Task Force (JTF) to combat the operation of galamsey,illegal mining in Ghana.

    On Saturday, 13 July 2019, Operation Vanguard personnel in the Western region arrested 16 suspected Chinese illegal miners in Enchi Kwahu in the Aowin District together with five excavators they have been using in their operations.

    Again, 34 other suspected illegal miners were arrested in the East Akim Municipality in the Eastern region on Friday.

    Read: Operation Vanguard arrests 1,687 illegal miners so far

    The suspects, who were made up of both locals and foreigners were apprehended in the general area of Asiakwa.Nine of the suspects who were locals were handed over to civil police at Kibi for prosecution while the others 16 Chinese, 22 Guinean and three Burkinabe nationals and the five excavators have been handed over to IMCIM for further action.

    Speaking on Starr FM, the PRO of Operation Vanguard Captain Andrew Sowatey said some locals have resorted to providing safe havens for some illegal miners.

    “Our Operations have uncovered that some of the locals have been providing safe haven for some of these illegal miners both local and foreign suspected illegal miners. The locals have rented out accommodation to them and sometimes protect them when we go out trying to gather information, confirm their whereabouts and apprehend them. Its something that has been happening and we have been trying to find a way around, its a challenge we have been facing”.

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Ghana urged to take advantage of drop in fertility rate

    The Acting Eastern Regional Population Officer, Mr Kwasi Owusu Obeng has called on the country to strategically take advantage of the drop in the fertility rate of the country.

    He argued that, with the drop of the fertility rate of the country from 6.2 in 1988 to 4.2 in 2014 and improvement in health has led to a large youthful population.

    Mr Obeng said if such a population is continuously trained to acquire the requisite skills and vocation and right environment to invest created, such large population could take advantage of the huge resource of the country to create wealth and jobs.

    Mr Obeng was speaking at the observation of the World Population Day in Eastern Region at Koforidua.

    He observed that the free Senior High School (SHS) policy was in the right direction but conscious efforts needed to be made to direct the training to the right areas to ensure that the youth acquired the right skills and vocations.

    Mrs Helen Asare, a Director of Nursing Service said due to rumours and myths, family planning practices has been low in the Region.

    Mrs Asare said because of the high attrition rate of midwives in the country, some health facilities in the rural areas have no midwives.

    Mrs Asare said the Ghana Health Service (GHS) has intensified public education to help improve upon family planning to help control population growth in the region.

    She said the GHS was also encouraging the promotion of pregnant women school where health official would have more time to educate the pregnant women about their pregnancy including family planning.

    She said now, as a policy, spousal concern is not required for a woman to adopt any family planning method.

    Source: ghananewsagency.org

  • ‘Your private parts will burn in hell’ – Prophet Oduro fires Mama Gee, customers

    Founder and leader of Alabaster International Ministry, Prophet Dr Kofi Oduro has lambasted Mama Gee and customers who patronize her products.

    According to the outspoken man of God, women who buy these products and use them will surely burn in hell.

    He added, they are going towards the direction of the devil and will surely be punished for that.

    “You and your vagina will burn in hell. We are determined to preach salvation and eternal life to the people of God not unnecessary products like pussy tightening drugs.Your vagina will burn in hell. All these are Jezebelic and witchcraft. Jezebel is in our country and they are after the men”, Prophet Oduro stated.

    This comes after Mama Gee is originally known as Elizabeth Torgbor was recently arrested by the Food and Drugs Authority and the police for selling unapproved herbal drugs.

    According to Mama Gee, these herbal products she sells makes the vagina sweeter and tighter during sex and also charm men.

    She stated that women who use her products can get whatever they want from men or their partners be it favours or the monetary aspects.

    However, some of the ladies who patronise these unapproved herbal mixtures claim that the drugs work perfectly for them.

    Well, Mama Gee is likely to face 16 to 25 years imprisonment if found guilty of selling unapproved drugs.

  • Rockstar Kuami Eugene thrilled thousand at Ghana party in the park

    Reigning best Highlife artiste of the year Kuami Eugene last Saturday treated the many patrons who attend the 2019 edition of the annual #GPIP to a great performance.

    Kuami Eugene put up an electrifying performance at the programme, with a rendition of his songs including ‘Adwenfi,’ ‘Confusion’ and ‘Wish Me Well and others.

    The “Angela” hitmaker for the first time performed his talked about collaboration with his labelmate KiDi to the admiration of the over 10,000 people gathered at the Trent Park in London.

    Ghana Party in the park is an annual outdoor festival held in London for the Ghanaian Community in the diaspora. Hosted by Akwaaba Group since 2005.

    The festival attracts over 8000 people, making it the biggest Ghanaian event outside of Ghana. Attracting visitors from the UK, Europe, USA, Canada and Ghana.

    Watch the performance below:

  • Standard Chartered Bank organises seminar on ‘Demystifying the London Property Market’

    In the quest to continuously deliver excellent services to clients, Standard Chartered Bank organized a financial seminar to highlight and sensitize Priority clients on the offshore property market under the theme, Demystifying the London Property Market.

    This was done in partnership with Standard Chartered Private Bank, Jersey, which has assets approximating USD$6 billion and provides specialist offshore financial services on behalf of Standard Chartered Group. Specialists engaged clients on macro and micro market considerations in relation to Standard Chartered Bank suite of mortgage solutions in the United Kingdom, which are designed to assist clients in the financing of new purchases, equity release or re-mortgage.

    Present at the session were representatives from Knight Frank, providers of integrated residential and commercial real estate transactions, consultancy and management services.

    Standard Chartered Bank and Knight Frank work together to offer clients impartial, clear and considered, in-depth advice on all areas of property in all key markets, building long-term relationships as they believe that personal interaction is a crucial part of ensuring every client is matched to the property that best suits their needs.

    Source: Standard Chartered Bank Ghana

  • Global push to ban plastics good for Ghanaian Baskets

    As far away as Australia, the push to go plastic-free for shopping bags is driving sales of sustainable baskets, particularly the traditional Ghanaian Bolga Basket. This is having a significant impact on the demand for local woven items.

    Adinkra Designs, a homewards brand, aiming to promote fair trade and supporting educational charities in Ghana is one company leading the way in promoting eco-friendly baskets, and Ghanaian handcrafts.

    Sales Director, Kirsten Hayes, explains “ We are so proud to promote made in Ghana sustainable products that Australians love, it helps them reduce plastic bags, and also educate consumers on the beauty and craft skills of Ghana.”

    Adinkra Designs founded by Australian Ghanaian couple Kelly and Kelvin Boateng, has grown from strength to strength in Australia over the past two years. With a strong Instagram following the products are now being rolled out in stores across Australia and have been invited to present at the prestigious Life Instyle Interior Design Trade Fair in Melbourne, Australia, this August.

    “As part of our desire to further promote made in Ghana, we are actively looking to diversify our product offerings, so encourage upcoming indigenous brands to connect with us for brand promotion.

    Australians are very conscious of their environmental impact and actively looking for new authentic products”. Kirsten and her son Jonathan Kofi Hayes (pictured) were present as Adinkra Designs launched at an innovative recycled sewing studio in Melbourne where there was a presentation on the Bolgatanga baskets and kente fabric.

    “We want customers to really appreciate the artisans by explaining who makes the products and the process, materials, and importantly how the earnings are boosting economic development and supporting charity in Ghana.” They are looking forward to continued success in trade and making Ghanaian goods a household favorite.

    Source: Roger A. Agana

  • Middlemen in premix fuel distribution will be eliminated Bawumia

    Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia has announced that a new digitisation plan will soon be rolled out to help deal with the phenomenon of middlemen who hitherto have highjacked the distribution of premixed fuel to the fishing community in the country. The ultimate aim of the digitisation process, according to the Vice President, is to deal with corruption in the premix fuel sector.

    Delivering the Guest of Honour’s address at the Ghana International Petroleum Conference on the theme; “Regional Collaboration: A Catalyst for Transformation,” at the Movenpick Ambassador Hotel, Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia said dealing with the premix fuel supply and distribution has been a challenging issue because of the availability of subsidies to premix fuel.

    “Whenever there are subsidies, the distribution of the product tends to create rents and when it creates rents, all sorts of people come in the middle and the fishermen whom this is designed for ultimately don’t get the product because the product is smuggled to people who may not even be fishermen,” the Vice President said.

    He noted further that, “We have been looking at this issue and we have decided that the best way to deal with this is to digitize the process so that we can be able to direct the subsidy to each boat that is registered.”

    The Vice President pointed out that interest groups in the distribution of premixed fuel, after broad consultations, have been given four weeks to give final consideration to the road map for the introduction of the digital process after which same will be implemented by government.

    Deputy Minister for Energy

    The Deputy Minister for Energy, Mohammed Amin Adam, in an address on behalf of the Energy Minister, Peter Amewu, said the Energy Ministry, in collaboration with National Security, has initiated a process that will see the implementation of a policy that is aimed at safeguarding the country’s petroleum installations against all forms of attacks.

    “The security and safety of petroleum installations, workers of industry players, and the communities where we operate must be a priority in our risk management plans. The Ministry of Energy is, therefore, working with the national security secretariat to implement an energy security policy aimed at protecting critical infrastructure and the sustainability of the petroleum industry,” the Deputy Energy Minister said.

    GPCon

    GPCon is Ghana’s foremost Petroleum Downstream Conference organised under the auspices of the Ministry of Energy and the National Petroleum Authority (NPA) in partnership with the Ghana Chamber af Bulk Oil Distributors (CBOD) and the Association of Oil Marketing Companies (AOMCs). The conference is designed to actively bring to the fore the operating industry’s perspective and guidance on issues of governmental and regulatory policy as well as best practices for the advancement of the industry, not only in Ghana but across the West African sub-region and beyond.

    Thematic Areas of Focus

    The three-day conference will amongst others, tackle issues such as the challenges of regional distribution and the need to harmonize sub-regional petroleum product specifications (MARPOL) 2020. There will also be panel discussions that will focus on a global perspective on such topics as the Petroleum Downstream Industry; IMO 2020 and Fuel Specification Trends; Downstream Infrastructure, Financing and Investment; Impact of Price Deregulation on Petroleum Service Providers’ Operations, as well as Illicit Activities, Fuel Fraud and Supply Chain Security in the West African Sub-Region.

    Industry Players in Participation

    International industry players such as Anibor Kragha, Chief Operating Officer for the Refineries and Petrochemicals Directorate of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, (NNPC), Babajide Akinremi Soyode, Chairman of Petrodata Management Services Ltd and Technical Consultant to the Group President /CE of the Dangote Industries Limited for Refinery and Petrochemicals Projects, Kevin Dadzie, Head of Country for BP in Ghana, Chief Executive Officer of the Tema Oil Refinery, Isaac Osei, Alhassan Sulemana Tampuli, Chief Executive Officer of the National Petroleum Authority, Kevin Naidoo, General Manager for Oil tanking, the second-largest independent operator of ta k terminals for oils, chemicals and gases worldwide, WI be leading the deliberations at the conference.

    Source: classfmonline.com