Tag: coronavirus in Ghana

  • Video of a young man operating an ATM with a long stick amid coronavirus goes viral

    Gradually the coronavirus which has been declared by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a global pandemic is now dictating what we should do currently in an effort not to be infected.

    As the saying goes “necessity is the mother of invention”, a young man has invented a new style by which one can use an ATM without catching the deadly coronavirus.

    Not risking anything, the young man refused to use his hands to touch the ATM. While many would have used a pair of gloves the guy had none and thus had to operate the machine without touching.

    In a video sighted, the guy who wore a t-shirt and cap could be seen punching the keypad with the stick as others stood back in a queue waiting for their turn.

    A lady who likely took the video could be heard laughing at the sight of the guy using the stick to operate the machine.

    It is not known exactly where the video is from as they were speaking English but the video has gained traction on social media.

    Watch the video below:

     

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    Coronavirus is making us see things oooo

    A post shared by Ghpage TV (@ghpage_tv) on

    We are still thinking why the young man opted for a stick rather than a glove.

    SOURCE: GHPAGE.COM
  • WVG provides PPEs to support covid-19 fight in Sekyere East

    The Sekyere East Cluster Office of World Vision Ghana (WVG) has donated a number of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) to support the fight against CONVID- 19 in the Sekyere East District.

    The items included boxes of N95 respirators, goggles, face masks, hand gloves, hand sanitizers, Veronica buckets, detergents as well as information and communication materials on the disease to help create public awareness.

    Mr. Francis Gumah, Cluster Manager speaking at the presentation ceremony, said the gesture was to help strengthen the district health directorate to ensure safety of health workers and other front line staff working to control the spread of the disease.

    It was also to assure the health workers and all the people in the area, that WVG was with them in the promotion and delivery of quality health care, especially in rural communities.

    “This gesture by our outfit is to augment the efforts of the government and the Ghana Health Services in ensuring the protection of health workers themselves as well as the prevention of the transmission of the COVID-19 in the healthcare setting,” Mr Gumah said.

    Madam Mary Boatemaa Marfo, District Chief Executive (DCE) for Sekyere East, who received the items on behalf of the health directorate, praised WVG for the timely intervention to support the covid-19 fight.

    She said the enormous and continuous support by WVG especially in the areas of health, agriculture and food security, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), child protection among others, had help promoted socio-economic development among the people in the District.

    Madam Marfo urged the people to continuously pray for the nation and observe all the preventive measures outlined by the government and the Ministry of Health in order not to contract the virus.

    Mr. Justice Ofori Amoah, District Health Director, said the gesture was a great motivation to health workers and other frontline staff in the fight against the spread of the disease.

    He assured of the judicious use of the items and said training programme was already underway to equip health workers in the District to properly educate the people on the dangers of the disease and how they could protect themselves from contracting it.

    The training would also help them identify symptoms and provide quick response measures to prevent further spread in the country.

    Mr. Patrick Adam, Health Project Officer of the WVG Cluster, urged the health workers to always take precaution in the handling of suspected patients to help protect themselves and others who came in contact with them.

    Source: GNA

  • Government engages political parties to combat coronavirus

    Government, through the Risk Communications and Social Mobilisation Group of the Ghana Health Service, on Thursday organised a sensitisation workshop for political parties to rally them towards fighting the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Representatives of political parties present at the meeting included the New Patriotic Party (NPP), National Democratic Congress (NDC), Convention People’s Party (CPP), National Democratic Party (NDP) and Liberal Party of Ghana (LPG).

    It formed part of government’s objectives of engaging with faith-based organizations, trade union associations, market queens and education institutions to curb the spread of the virus in the country.

    The virus has so far affected 132 people in the country with three deaths, according to the Ghana Health Service portal for updating the public.

    The event was organised by the Information Ministry in collaboration with the Ministry of Health and the Ghana Health Service.

    Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, in his welcome remarks, said political parties had large followings, therefore, they could play a crucial role in disseminating information to the populace and sometimes offer alternative ideas on how to combat the virus.

    “We’re in the midst of a global challenge, with a national dimension, therefore, it’s not time to score a political capital out of the situation.
    “We must all rally together to battle this pandemic on a common front,” the Minister advised.

    Mr Oppong Nkrumah said health experts would educate members of the political parties on the deadly virus and solicit their ideas and alternative suggestions to end the scourge.

    Mr Alexander K.K. Abban, a Deputy Minister of Health, for his part, underscored the need to work in unity to fight a common enemy, devoid of any bickering and mudslinging.

    He said the situation is precarious, hence the need for everybody put his shoulders to the wheel to fight the deadly virus.

    “We need ideas and those ideas must not be shaped in political partisanship but work together as Ghanaians on a common mission,” the Deputy Minister advised.

    Source: GNA

  • Kumasi markets to be fumigated today

    Markets in the Ashanti Region will be fumigated on today, March 27, 2020.

    A similar exercise was done in Accra on Monday and this is part of government’s measures to battle the deadly coronavirus.

    In a release signed by the Ashanti Regional Minister Simon Osei-Mensah, it urged traders at the various markets to co-operate and comply with the ban on activities in all the markets in the region.

    It also informed the general public to note that markets will not operate on Friday.

    Ghana has now recorded 132 cases of the deadly Covid-19 with 3 deaths and one recovery.

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Coronavirus: KMA takes action to phase out non-unionized drivers

    The Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly has directed all non-unionized drivers(Waawaa) to join existing unions of their choice or risk being sanctioned by authorities.

    A Press release by the KMA said such operators will have a month period of moratorium to comply with the directive.

    “Drivers who fail to comply and be regulated will have themselves to be blamed” the statement said.

    This is part of measures instituted by the Public Health Emergency Committee of KMA in collaboration with the 24 unions in Kumasi to curb the spread of covid-19 in the metropolis.

    Source: kasapafmonline.com

  • Afram Plains: Residents search for hair in Bible to prevent coronavirus

    Residents of Afram Plains are frantically searching for hair purported to be hidden in the Bible which has the potency to prevent Coronavirus.

    The claim is reported to have been made by a Prophet who said he got the vision during the National Day of Fasting and Prayer.

    The widely circulated belief has forced many residents to search for the so-called hair in the Bible to perform spiritual direction according to the Prophet.

    “A Prophet called someone in this community yesterday that there is a hair in the Bible so we should search and that anyone who sees it should read the exact scripture where the hair was, then after that put the hair in water then you and your family will drink some and use some to bath for protection against coronavirus disease that has come.

    “Some people say they have seen the hair others too have not so those that have seen the hair are sharing the water with friends and families,” a resident of Ekye Amanfrom where the disinformation has gone viral told Kasapa News.

    Ghana has recorded 132 confirmed cases of coronavirus including 3 fatalities as of March 26, 2020.

    However, many residents in rural communities are ill-informed about the disease due to lack of awareness and therefore continue to depend on the diluted information though majority depend on the media for information on covid-19.

    Many rural dwellers in Afram Plains South believe the disease is confined in cities therefore not much perturbed.

    The Afram Plains South District Assembly has meanwhile supplied handwashing buckets to fishmongers, traders, taxi drivers, positioned two on the Ferry to encourage frequent handwashing.

    Source: Kasapafmonline.com

  • Otumfuo’s Chief of Staff calls for lockdown of Accra but not Kumasi

    Authorities of the Manhyia Palace are backing calls of a lockdown of the nation to curb the spread of Covid-19.

    Chief of Staff Kofi Badu says Ghana has a choice to make between taking a timely decision by dealing with the public risk or having to do so late.

    He made this known to Luv FM after receiving protective equipment from some corporate institutions.

    “It seems to me that this the appropriate moment for us to respond to that in other for us to contain the spread of the virus. I will have no problem at all to introduce any measure including a lockdown, the point is that you have a choice to take an action now, or you will be confronted with the worse situation later, I think this is something the country must act immediately”.

    The Ghana Medical Association on Wednesday called on the government to immediately announce a nationwide lockdown.

    The GMA in a statement showed concerns about the spread of Covid-19 and asked the government to immediately consider a lockdown to curb the situation.

    Ghana has now recorded 132 cases of the deadly Covid-19 with 3 deaths and one recovery.

    President Akufo-Addo commented on the lockdown debate when he met members of the TUC at the Jubilee House.

    He said, a responsible government is required to look at the implications of the decision to lockdown a country in such a time, before it takes a firm decision.

    “it is important for us to take into account the circumstances and conditions. When we lockdown Accra, what are the consequences?” he quizzed.

    President Akufo-Addo indicated that currently, his administration is looking at all the possible options available before he communicates it to Ghanaians.

    “I am hoping that much sooner than later, we will come to an agreement on what those measures are and the Ghanaian people will be informed,” he stressed.

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Bia West NPP Parliamentary candidate donates furniture to school

    Mr. Bernard Blay, the New Patriotic Party (NPP) Parliamentary candidate for Bia West Constituency of the Western North Region, has donated 20 dual desks to Kwame Tawiah Krom (KTK) D/A Primary School in the Bia West District.

    Mr. Blay also donated sports equipment to the Bia West District Education Sports Committee to support the basic school sports.

    The items include, footballs, volleyball, javelin poles among others.

    He said the donation of the furniture followed an appeal made by the Headmaster of the School, to help address the furniture challenges facing the smooth running of the School, especially for primary one.

    According to him, inadequate furniture have been one of the major problems in the District, which had resulted in school pupils sitting on the floor during class periods.

    Mr. Blay said the donation was the first batch of furniture to be supplied in his effort to stem the furniture problem in the Bia District and also to improve upon education.

    He in this regard urged the pupils to reciprocate the gesture by studying hard to enable them reach the highest level of education.

    Mr Blay also used the opportunity to advise his constituents to follow the directives and measures of the government, to protect the public from contracting the coronavirus.

    Mr. Gyan Andrews, Headmaster of the School, on behalf of the staff and pupils, expressed his profound gratitude to the aspirant for the timely intervention to solve the furniture challenges facing the School.

    Source: GNA

  • West Gonja Assembly intensifies public education on coronavirus

    The West Gonja Municipal Assembly in collaboration with the Municipal Health Directorate has begun a campaign to educate residents of the area on the deadly COVID-19 to prevent its spread.

    The communities sensitised so far included Larabanga and Busunu where religious leaders and chiefs were educated on the disease.

    Hajia Fuseina Sulemana, West Gonja Municipal Director of Health, who spoke during the sensitisation exercise in the two communities, took the leaders through the symptoms and preventive measures of the virus.

    She advised them to report any suspected case to the nearest health facility without delay.

    Mr Saeed Muhazu Jibril, West Gonja Municipal Chief Executive, advised them to adhere to the President’s directives and also educate their members to avoid the spread of the disease in their areas.

    Mr Jibril, earlier, met with stakeholders including religious leaders, traditional rulers and managers of public transport in the area to discuss with them the President’s directives to combat the disease and the need for them to abide by them.

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: Security Council enforces Presidential directives

    The Sunyani East Municipal Security Council (MISEC)is undertaking rigid enforcement exercise in the Municipality to push residents to comply with the Presidential directives on the COVID-19.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has directed that all public gatherings such as religious activities, conferences, workshops and funerals be suspended for four weeks, a move to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 in the country.

    The MISEC at a meeting on Wednesday said it had received information that some churches and drinking bars in the Municipality were defying the Presidential orders.

    The Council said it would from Thursday, March 26, intensify monitoring to apprehend and prosecute offenders.

    Madam Justina Owusu-Banahene, the Sunyani Municipal Chief Executive, disclosed when she interacted with Managers of radio stations and some selected Journalists at a meeting in Sunyani to rally the support of the media in controlling the spread of the COVID-19 in the Municipality.

    She said the MISEC had formed a taskforce made up of personnel from the Police, Military, Fire and Immigration Services, which would go round the Municipality to enforce the ban.

    Mad. Owusu-Banahene indicated that the Presidential directive was taken as a measure to protect the general public and in the supreme interest of the nation and therefore advised residents to comply or face the full rigours of the law.

    She emphasised the vital role of the media in the fight against the COVID 19 spread, and appealed to practitioners to support the Assembly in that direction.

    Dr. Paulina Appiah, the Sunyani Municipal Director of Health, appealed to the media and the general public to desist from stigmatizing and discriminating against people suspected or infected by the COVID-19.

    She said public stigma had the potential to spread the COVID-19, because people who showed symptoms would hide and fail to report to health facilities for fear of stigmatization.

    Dr. Appiah explained that if a person was self-quarantined, it did not mean that he or she had the disease, until tested and proved positive and called on the media to help educate and dispel the wrong perception the public had about the COVID-19.

    She said the Ghana Health Service and the World Health Organisation were the reliable sources of information on the COVID-19, and advised the media to always endeavour to crosscheck their facts from the two organisations.

    Mr. Benjamin Kyere, the Sunyani Municipal Director of the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) indicated that the COVID-19 was a huge national health burden, and required concerted and decisive efforts to tackle.

    He entreated the media to allocate airtime and sensitize their listeners, viewers and readers on the COVID-19 to avert its spread.

    “As part of your social responsibility, we are pleading with you to take the lead and champion the advocacy on the COVID-19 to curtail the spread of the disease,” Mr. Kyere added.

    Source: GNA

  • Mandatory quarantine: Im vindicated – Akufo-Addo

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo says he feels vindicated by the decision to mandatorily quarantine travellers who flew into the country when he issued a directive to shutdown Ghana’s borders.

    According to him, the overwhelming number of coronavirus cases that Ghana has recorded are all imported into the country by people who are returning from abroad.

    “An extreme number, have been found to carry the virus. So, focusing on the importation of the virus and infection have proof to be absolutely spot on.

    “We are now seeing the benefits of these measures,” the President told members of the TUC at the Jubilee House.

    He added that the country will continue to look at an additional strong measure that will help deal with combating the dreaded novel Coronavirus pandemic.

    Issues of lockdown

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo noted that when the country is locked down, the majority of the ordinary citizens of the country will be greatly affected.

    He said, a responsible government is required to look at the implications of the decision to lockdown a country in such a time, before it takes a firm decision.

    “it is important for us to take into account the circumstances and conditions. When we lockdown Accra, what are the consequences?” he quizzed.

    President Akufo-Addo indicated that currently, his administration is looking at all the possible options available before he communicates it to Ghanaians.

    “I am hoping that much sooner than later, we will come to an agreement on what those measures are and the Ghanaian people will be informed,” he stressed.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • West Gonja Assembly intensifies public education on coronavirus

    The West Gonja Municipal Assembly in collaboration with the Municipal Health Directorate has begun a campaign to educate residents of the area on the deadly COVID-19 to prevent its spread.

    The communities sensitised so far included Larabanga and Busunu where religious leaders and chiefs were educated on the disease.

    Hajia Fuseina Sulemana, West Gonja Municipal Director of Health, who spoke during the sensitisation exercise in the two communities, took the leaders through the symptoms and preventive measures of the virus.

    She advised them to report any suspected case to the nearest health facility without delay.

    Mr Saeed Muhazu Jibril, West Gonja Municipal Chief Executive, advised them to adhere to the President’s directives and also educate their members to avoid the spread of the disease in their areas.

    Mr Jibril, earlier, met with stakeholders including religious leaders, traditional rulers and managers of public transport in the area to discuss with them the President’s directives to combat the disease and the need for them to abide by them.

    Source: GNA

  • Business returns to normal after disinfection exercise

    Two days after the closure of all markets within the Greater Accra Region for a disinfection exercise, business in and around the Central Business District has returned to normal.

    A visit by the Ghana News Agency (GNA) to some major markets within and around the business district on Thursday showed a rigorous business activity among traders and prospective buyers.

    The usual vehicular and human traffic that had characterised the area for years now also returned as it took people and vehicles several minutes to maneuver their way through the masses.

    Some traders who spoke to the GNA in an interview expressed delight at the return to business, adding that there has been improvement in sales since the reopening of the markets.

    “Business has been great today, people are really buying and this I think is because people are afraid Government will lockdown the country. Everybody wants to stock their homes with all the food they can afford in case this happens,” Madam Gladys Cudjoe, a corn and cassava dough seller.

    She said even though she was aware of the danger she was exposed to due to the COVID-19 outbreak, she had no other choice than to make ends meet.

    “I am very much aware of the virus and I try to take the necessary precautions as we have been told by the Government. So I regularly wash my hands and sanitise them. In the morning I put on the face mask but I take it off because it becomes unbearable in the afternoon due to the sun,” Madam Gladys added.

    Madam Maly Ibrahim, another trader, said business has been good since the reopening of the market.

    She also expressed worry over being exposed to the virus, adding that there is little they could do to protect themselves.

    On Monday, the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development in collaboration with the various Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies embarked on a disinfection exercise of 137 markets in the Greater Accra Region.

    The exercise which is expected to be replicated across all markets in the 15 remaining regions was to enhance hygiene in the markets.

    It also formed part of measures put in place by the Government to curtail the spread of the COVID-19 outbreak.

    Ghana has so far recorded 132 cases of the COVID-19 with three deaths.

    Already, some social commentators, policy analysts and associations, including the Ghana Medical Association have called on the President to initiate a total lockdown to avert any further escalation of the outbreak among the citizens.

    Source: GNA
  • Coronavirus: NABCO trainees ready to join the fight

    Nation Builders Corps (NABco) trainees in the Ashanti Region have indicated their readiness to join hands in the fight against COVID-19.

    According to them, it was time all able-bodied men and women took part in the national fight to stop the further spread of the virus in the country.

    Mr Dennis Kwakwa, Ashanti Regional NABco Coordinator told the Ghana News Agency in an interview in Kumasi that, some of the trainees have mobilized themselves and ready to offer their services to the nation.

    He said they were ready to sacrifice to undertake community sensitization and education on the dangers of the disease, its prevention and control protocols as directed by the government and the Ministry of Health.

    Mr Kwakwa said the trainees who were always working in the communities would be very effective in community education and provide the needed support services to front line health workers to help combat the further spread of the disease in communities.

    Mr Abubakar Sidique, a trainee, who also spoke to the GNA stressed the need for all to abide by the precautionary measures outlined by the government to stay safe from the virus.

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: Foundation supports Prison Service with Veronica buckets and sanitizers

    As part of efforts to prevent the Coronavirus (COVID-19), from entering the prisons, Management of Crime Check Foundation (CCF), a Prisons NGO has presented items worth GH 9000 to Ghana Prisons Service.

    The items include 50 boxes of Carbolic soaps, 20 boxes of sanitizers and 20 pieces of Veronica buckets.

    This is to promote the washing of hands as directed by the World Health Organization and Ghana Health Service to prevent the spread of the deadly COVID-19 pandemic in the country.

    Mr Ibrahim Oppong Kwarteng, the Executive Director of CCF, said the donation is to support the Prisons Service in their fight against the coronavirus and the prevention of the pandemic in the prisons.

    He said when prisoners and prison wardens get infected, it trickles down to other citizens, hence the need for government to pay attention to the Prisons.

    “The fight against the virus is a collective responsibility,” he said.
    Mr Kwarteng, who is also the Ambassador Extraordinaire to Prisons, appealed to other civil society organizations, philanthropist, to come to the aid of the Services, because conditions in the prisons were bad.

    “We call on all to join us support the prisons at this crucial time,” the Executive Director said.

    He expressed the hope that the donation would go a long away to help Prison officers and inmates to protect themselves against the coronavirus.

    He also expressed gratitude to the Foundation’s partners and donors for their continuous support to their activities.

    Madam Josephine Fredua-Agyemang, the Deputy Director-General in Charge of Finance and Administration, said the donation was timely to support the prisons.

    She said the prison situation was serious of its congestion nature, adding that “We have 46 Prisons complex, over 15,000 inmates and 8,000 officers to man these inmates.”

    She said the situation was difficult because the Service does not have adequate resources to manage the situation at hand.

    She appealed to the public to come to the aid of the Service by donating issues like infrared thermometers, Vitamin C supplements and other protective items.

    The Deputy Director-General commended the donors and partners of CCF for their support.

    Source: GNA

  • NSS personnel to go on mandatory leave

    The National Service Scheme has directed all National Service personnel to take their mandatory one month paid leave effective Thursday 26 March, till the end of April 2020.

    Western Regional Director of the National Service scheme, Mr. Okatakyie Amankwa Afrifa, said the mandatory leave was in compliance with the President’s precautionary measures to curb the spread of the CoVID-19 in the country.

    Mr Afrifa said all newly posted nurses who were to start their National Service in April 2020 this year, were also to take the month of April as their terminal leave, explaining that the arrangement replaces the annual terminal leave given to all National Service Personnel under the NSS Act 426, which is the last month of their service period.

    He indicated that, service personnel would, therefore, be at the post in the last month of their national service.

    Mr. Afrifa explained that with the exception of those working in essential institutions and organizations in the fight against the Coronavirus who are to continue reporting to work, the rest were to take their mandatory leave.

    He commended the government for taking such a bold decision, which he noted would help stem the spread of COVID 19.

    Source: GNA

  • Our common enemy is coronavirus Oppong Nkrumah

    Information Minister, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, has observed that the common enemy Ghanaians are fighting at the moment is the deadly Coronavirus (COVID-19).

    “We are clear in our minds that this is a national battle; the common enemy we are fighting is COVID-19 and not even amongst ourselves or interest groups that may exist,” he stated.

    The Minister made this known in his opening remarks at a sensitization workshop organized by government for political parties on covid-19.

    He expressed the belief that it is important to have all stakeholders together to focus on the common enemy.

    He pointed out the crucial role of political parties in mobilizing people and educating them.

    He bemoaned that Ghana was in a midst of a national challenge that it was dealing with.

    According to him, the covid-19 is a global challenge which has a Ghanaian dynamic.

    One of the key pillars of global pandemics like covid-19 is risk communications and social mobilization, he said.

    Parties

    The parties attending the workshop are NPP, NDC, CPP, NDP and LPG.

     

    Source: dailyguidenetwork.com

  • Mahama Ayariga among 8 MPs to go into mandatory quarantine

    Speaker of Parliament Prof. Mike Ocquaye has directed Bawku Central MP Mahama Ayariga to stay home over the Coronavirus spread.

    He is one of 10 MPs and 5 staff the clerk has written to that they stay away from work after returning abroad.

    In a letter to him from the acting clerk of parliament, Cyril Nsiah urged him to keep away from the precincts of parliament until 27th March.

    The letter urged him to report to the medical director in parliament for review before he resumes duty in the house.

    “I am instructed by the Rt. Hon. Speaker of Parliament Prof. Mike Ocquaye to inform you that in view of your recent return to Ghana from a foreign trip on March 12, and in conformity with the World Health Organization protocols aimed at preventing the spread of Coronavirus, you are required to observe the minimum two week period of self-isolation in your residence,” the letter said.

    Below is the full letter.

     

    Source: myjoyonline 

  • All travellers from abroad on or after March 3 to be identified, tested Akufo-Addo directs

    Government has directed that all individuals who came into the country from abroad on or after March 3, should be identified and tested for the Covid-19.

    Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, the Information Minister said President Akufo-Addo wants all those individuals to be tested as has been done with those who arrived on Saturday night.

    “The Ghana Immigration Service, working with the Ministry of Communication, and their agencies has a whole data base of all those who came in,” he said, adding initially, officials were looking to start the tracing from those who came into the country from March 15 but the president directed they start from March 12.

    Government as part of measures to contain the coronavirus outbreak in the country, last Saturday night began quarantining all passengers disembarking at the Kotoka International Airport (KIA).

    Passengers were surprised to see the Arrival Hall swarmed with senior government officials as well as health officers.

    After airport and health authorities finished their checks, all the passengers were made to board buses to begin a 14-day quarantine in different hotels.

    Their samples were taken and upon testing some of them were positive.

     

    Source: myjoyonline

  • Coronavirus: Africa must look at it’s past for solution – Ezeigbo of Ghana

    As the Coronavirus scare is shutting down large and small economies around the world, drastic measures are being sought for to bring some relief to the pandemic that has claimed several lives and affected several others in different ways.

    Africa as a continent has begun to record imported cases of Corona Virus, prompting various African leaders to come out with homegrown remedies to halt the spread of the virus in Africa.

    One such leader who have added his voice to the call is the EzeIgbo of Ghana HRM King Dr Chukwudi J. Ihenetu. Speaking to bloggers from the Ghana Chamber of Content Producers, the King reiterated the need for Africans to begin looking into their past for solution to such pandemics.

    “This is the point I have always made, we trivialize everything God has given to us, we allowed the west to condemn our God-given resources and we embraced their judgement without asking questions”. He stated.

    Speaking on the situation in Nigeria, He said “You can imagine that security agencies in Nigeria arrest people for trading or transporting ogogoro while across our seaports foreign alcohol of the same components are being imported with our foreign reserves being depleted. While components of cocaine is used for drug production our marijuana was prohibited. And now marijuana that was largely an African wide vegetable has now become a big business plant in America because of its various uses, including drug production. ”

    The King further spoke on how our history has been sidelined at our own detriment ” Before the coming of the west, our forefathers had a solution for almost all their needs based on what is available to us. But today we have become so brainwashed and unable to think of what to do with our natural resources. Drugs produced from Chinese herbs which is available to them and in tune with their DNA are being imported here while those of our continent are being abandoned and are going extinct.

    Unfortunately, this primitive thinking is enforced by our security agencies who inadvertently are serving western interest while undermining Africa’s development.

    Africans must as a matter of fact begin to look inwards for solution. There should be a concerted effort towards backward integration. Before some of our finest medicinal herbs go extinct we must return to our rural communities and begin to document them. Our universities and research institutions must begin to focus on how to utilize what is available to us because it is very strategic to building our economy and our technological advancement.”

    In conclusion, he admonished Africans to use this period of isolation to Rediscover themselves and develop homemade solutions to Africa’s problems.

     

    Source: Ghana Chamber of Content Producers

  • Tarkwa-Nsuaem MP donates disinfectants to constituents to fight Coronavirus

    The Member of Parliament (MP) for Tarkwa-Nsuaem Constituency of the Western Region, Mr. George Mireku-Duker has distributed disinfectants to his Constituents to fight against the deadly Coronavirus pandemic.

    The disinfectants include; alcoholic-based hand sanitizers, Veronica baskets, liquid soaps and tissue papers.

    As part of the efforts to sensitize the Constituents about the globally fast-spread Coronavirus, the MP took the opportunity to visit some market places and some institutions to share the disinfectants.

    The beneficiary market places and the institutions are; Tarkwa Central Market, New Atuabo, Tamso, Cyanide, Brenakyim markets, Tarkwa Prisons, Immigration Service and Tarkwa-Nsuaem Municipal Health Insurance Office.

    Speaking to some residents, the MP urged them to ensure the laid down precautionary measures given by the Ghana Health Service and World Health Organization (WHO) to avoid contracting and spreading the virus.

    He also urged them to strictly adhere to President Akufo-Addo’s directives and other directives that would come later.

    The MP seized the opportunity to observe the National Day of Fasting and Prayers and prayed to God to have mercy on the world and destroy the Coronavirus for good.

    He was optimistic that the Coronavirus would vanish like how the Egyptians were destroyed in the Red Sea when chasing the Israelites.

    He advised against false publications about the virus to create fear and panic.

    Demonstrating how to wash their hands, the MP said the palm, in between the fingers, the thumbs, the nails and the back of the hands should be washed thoroughly, adding that it should be same way sanitizers were also applied.

    The MP is expected to continue his sensitisation exercise to other communities including lorry stations in the Constituency in the coming days.

    About COVID-19

    COVID-19 is an infectious disease caused by the most recently discovered coronavirus.

    The virus and disease were unknown before the outbreak began in Wuhan, China, in December 2019.

    Essential information on the COVID-19 pandemic can be found in a dedicated WHO site.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • WRA recommends total lockdown of major cities in the country

    Water for Rural Africa (WRA) has followed closely with grave apprehension the continuous increase of confirmed Covid-19 cases in the country and the approach being adopted by the national response team to combat a pandemic that has brought the world economies to their knees.

    There is no denying the fact that the future of this great nation is at risk judging from what the coronavirus has done to a country like Italy which has better resources and a more robust healthcare system. Italy probably undermined the threat posed by this pandemic. The devastating effect on Italy as a result of an initial lukewarm attitude of Leaders in Italy should serve as a lesson for the government of the day. Ghana will not be in position to handle the pandemic if we allow the situation to get out hand.

    The worrying trend of horizontal spread otherwise known as community spread is on the ascendency and this is the point where complexities arise and contact tracing loses its potency.

    WRA wishes to recommend to the government of the day, to Lockdown major cities in the country in order to save the nation from total collapse. This will certainly not be a popular decision for the leadership and a section of the populace, but we have reached that point where a draconian approach backed by proven results in other countries hit by the pandemic remains the last resort and the earlier, the better. India did not record as much as we currently have, before issuing a directive for a lockdown.

    However, WRA recommends a minimum of 48 hour grace period for citizens, to prepare adequately for survival during the period. It is also crucial for government to set aside funds for relief items and programmed delivery channels devoid of politics and discrimination in order to protect the less privileged in the catchment areas.

    Let us ensure water reaches rural communities that have no access to clean water.

    www.waterforruralafrica.org Email: info@ waterforruralafrica.org +223 0242802661

    Source: Water for Rural Africa

  • 40 new COVID-19 patients part of travellers under mandatory quarantine

    The number of confirmed cases among travellers under mandatory quarantine and were tested for COVID-19 currently stands at 78.

    As of 24th March 2020, persons put under mandatory quarantine were 1,030.

    “In respect of contact tracing, a total of 970 contacts have been identified and are being tracked. Out of these, two hundred and four (204) have completed the 14 days mandatory follow up,” the health service noted on its COVID-19 dedicated page.

    “The great majority of the confirmed cases are Ghanaians, who returned home from affected countries. Seven (7) are of other nationals namely: Norway, Lebanon, China, Netherlands, and the United Kingdom (UK). The number of confirmed cases among travellers under mandatory quarantine who have been tested is seventy-eight (78),” it added.

    A total of fifty-four cases including three have been confirmed from the regular surveillance systems of the state with three deaths.

    GHS explained that “All the three (3) cases that unfortunately succumbed to the disease were aged and had underlying chronic medical conditions”.

    The service said the remaining 51 cases are doing well.

    “Fourteen (14) are being managed at home and the rest are responding well to treatment on admission in isolation. They are awaiting their test results and will be discharged when the results are negative,” it said.

    SOURCE: citinewsroom.com
  • Coronavirus: Dont visit or leave Kwahu Traditional Council declares ‘lockdown’

    The Chiefs and Elders of the Kwahu Traditional Area have cautioned natives of the land to restrict movements in and out of the area in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

    According to the Chiefs, the instruction for natives staying out of the area to keep out is because Kwahu has an appreciable population of old people who stand a higher risk should there be an outbreak in the area.

    The statement further instructed that people residing in the traditional area should desist from moving out of the place during these distressing times.

    The statement indicated that all social gathering during this period should be halted till further notice.

    As at midday of 26 March 2020, one hundred and thirty-two cases of COVID-19 including three (3) deaths had been confirmed in Ghana. All the three (3) cases that unfortunately succumbed to the disease were aged and had underlying chronic medical conditions.

     

    Source: mynewsgh.com

  • Police on high alert for persons trying to sneak through border post at Afadzato South

    Security personnel in the Afadzato South district of the Volta Region are on high alert as some persons are suspected of trying to enter the country from Togo through the unofficial Togo-Ghana border crossing in the district.

    According to the public relations officer of the district assembly who spoke to GhanaWeb Volta regional correspondent, the police officers are always at the border post to ensure that no one crosses into the country either through the normal route or illegal routes created in the bushes.

    This, according to the PRO of the assembly is to ensure that the border closure directives given by the President of the Republic is adhered to strictly in order to curb or prevent the spread of the deadly covid-19 pandemic which has since claimed the lives of four persons and infected more than 90 persons who are all in quarantine in the country.

    Speaking on the district’s preparedness for the coronavirus, the PRO said all health centers in the district are well positioned to deal with any case of the coronavirus in the district. However he failed to come clear on whether there is an isolation room in any of the health facilities for the purpose of quarantine or not.

    All calls made to the DCE and the director of health in the district for comments on the security situation at the border and the preparedness of the health facilities in the district respectively yielded no results.

     

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

     

     

  • U.S. weekly jobless claims surge to 3.28 million as coronavirus spurs mass layoffs

    The number of Americans filing claims for unemployment benefits shot to record of more than 3 million last week as strict measures to contain the coronavirus pandemic ground the country to a sudden halt, unleashing a wave of layoffs that likely brought an end to the longest employment boom in U.S. history.

    Initial claims for unemployment benefits rose to 3.28 million in the latest week from a revised 282,000 the previous week, eclipsing the previous record of 695,000 set in 1982, the U.S.

    Labor Department said on Thursday.

    Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims would rise to 1 million, but estimates had ranged to as high as 4 million.

    Source: Reuters
  • Coronavirus: Trotros to carry fewer passengers to comply with social distancing directive

    The Greater Regional Branch of the Ghana Private Road Transport Union (GPRTU) says it may reduce the number of passengers who board its commercial buses.

    GPRTU said the move is part of precautionary measures the union is considering to reduce the spread of COVID-19 in Ghana which also falls in line with directives by President Nana Akufo-Addo for the public to observe social distancing.

    Explaining how it will be implemented, the Industrial Relations Officer of the Greater Regional Branch of GPRTU, Abass Ibrahim Moro said the number of passengers per seat will be reduced to avoid crowding in the trotros.

    “We, GPRTU Greater Accra, thought it wise to show concern about how to protect ourselves from the Coronavirus. We suggested the reduction of the number of passengers. For instance, in the cars which take three passengers per row, we will reduce it to two, while the Sprinter buses which take four passengers per row would be reduced to three,” he said.

    He, however, suggested that passengers may be paying more to make up for the losses as a result of the fewer numbers, adding that the government could come up with other suggestions as to how to ensure that they are not adversely affected by such a move.

    “…We can do that if the government will agree that the number of passengers that we are going to reduce, they will calculate the cost and defray that cost…or if the government can come up with coupon travel or any other thing they will decide which will cater for the reduced number of passengers we may be conveying,” he said.

    Some Ghanaians have been calling for adequate precautionary measures by transport owners to protect them since the majority still depend on public transport for their commute in the country.

    Among the suggestions was the reduction in the number of passengers to comply with the social distancing directive given by President Nana Akufo-Addo.

    Source: citinewsroom.com

  • Coronavirus: Why Ghana has gone into mourning after mass funeral ban

    In our series of letters from African writers, journalist and former Ghana government minister Elizabeth Ohene writes about the dramatic impact coronavirus is having on life in her country and beyond.

    If anyone had any doubt about just how serious the Covid-19 outbreak is, we now have proof positive, we are in the midst of a huge crisis.

    This is a crisis not measured yet by how many people have been taken ill, or are in hospital or have died.

    Here in Ghana, there are some things that are sacred in our lives and nobody touches them under any circumstance: religion, handshakes and funerals.

    These are subjects that are not up for discussion and many people believe they define our very existence.

    For weeks, government and health officials here have been warning everybody to improve personal hygiene and avoid crowds.

    Many people preferred to think that the coronavirus would not make it into sub-Saharan Africa and therefore they believed the warnings by the health experts could be ignored.

    ‘Only enemies refuse to shake hands’

    Whoever heard of a Ghanaian, indeed, an African greeting another person and not shaking hands?

    To refuse or ignore to shake hands with someone means that person is an enemy. Now we can’t shake hands with anybody, friend or foe.

    President Nana Akufo-Addo set the tone for the new rules at the celebrations of Ghana’s 63rd independence anniversary on 6 March, when he ostentatiously kept both his hands resolutely behind his back when he arrived at the ceremony to greet those seated on the dais.

    And as though the prohibition on handshaking was not traumatic enough, a ban has been put on the holding of funerals. The official announcement says there can be private burials, but no mass gatherings of mourners.

    I am not sure I can convey the enormity of this on the Ghanaian psyche.

    There is no such thing as a private burial in our thinking and funerals are huge, dramatic and regular ceremonies.

    Our lives revolve around funerals.

    The catering industry relies on funerals to survive, the textile industry needs orders for funeral cloths to stay in business, the tailors and dressmakers are busy mostly because they make clothes for funerals; choral groups, events organisers, transportation and manufacturers and sellers of alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks would disappear without funerals.

    But there will be no more funerals.

    Come to think of it, what with the handshaking ban, it’s probably just as well that a ban has been placed on funerals.

    We can’t have funerals and not shake hands, the entire funeral ceremony consists of shaking hands, shaking hands and shaking hands.

    The ban on religious gatherings here, and in some countries elsewhere on the continent, is having a big impact on people for whom communal prayer and the discipline of the religious calendar are central to their lives.

    But there is silence in the mosques and in the churches here in Ghana.

    When the announcement was first made by the president, the Christian leaders were stunned and the charismatic churches, in particular, were in total disbelief.

    Miracle prayers
    It was unthinkable that anything or anybody could close church services. The all-night services, the miracle services, the anointing services have taken over all our lives.

    Some had hoped that the promise of miracle prayers to save Ghana from the scourge of coronavirus would convince the president to keep the churches and mosques open, but he was not moved to change his mind.

    And they will stay closed throughout Easter, the most sacred festival on the Christian calendar.

    The order to close the churches is turning out to be the most difficult one for people to obey.

     

    The mainstream churches are complying and many are offering online services, which include provisions for offertory to be made through mobile money donations.

    But some of the charismatic churches seem to think they are allowed to flout the order not to hold church services by claiming they are offering special prayers against Covid-19.

    Going to church multiple times a week is normal for many people and the news is usually full of the antics of some of the so-called men of God.

    The president asked the nation to fast and pray on Wednesday this week and doubtless, some people would have had difficulty accepting that they could fast and pray by themselves at home without going to church.

    From here, we keenly follow all the news about how the rest of the continent is doing with the role of religion in the march of the deadly coronavirus.

    I have no doubt that the approach of Tanzanian President John Magufuli would be cited by some people here as worth following.

    He has banned public gatherings and closed schools as we have, but he said he did not ban church or mosque worship because these were places where “true healing” took place.

    Coronavirus is a devil, it can not live in the body of Christ, it will burn instantly. This is a time to build our faith,” President Magufuli, who has a PhD in chemistry and is a devout Catholic, said at a church service last Sunday.

    President Akufo-Addo has urged us to seek the face of God and pray for Ghana but he is sticking to the science and emphasising the washing of hands, social distancing and the churches and mosques remain closed.

    It is now getting through to many people that we are in deadly uncharted territory when the Zion Christian Church (ZCC), probably the biggest church in southern Africa, announced it had postponed all gatherings including their Easter service.

    This service normally draws millions of pilgrims, who congregate at the foothills of the Moria Mountain in Limpopo during the Easter weekend, and there surely cannot be a more dramatic spectacle.

    Never, in the history of the ZCC, since its inception in 1910, has the church postponed or cancelled its pilgrimage.

    We can’t shake hands, we can’t have funerals, we can’t go to worship at the mosque or the church, the ZCC has postponed its Easter pilgrimage; we are in the midst of an emergency alright.

     

    Source: BBC.com

  • Coronavirus: Government actively discussing possible lockdown Akufo-Addo assures TUC

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has said his administration is currently discussing and giving consideration to the issue of a nationwide lockdown as proposed by the Trade Unions Congress (TUC) in a recent letter to him.

    President Akufo-Addo gave the hint when he addressed a five-member top hierarchy delegation of the Trade Unions Congress (TUC) at the Jubilee House.

    The TUC members present were the Secretary-General of the TUC, Dr Yaw Baah; Deputy Secretary-General of the TUC, Joshua Ansah; Chairman of the TUC, Richard Yeboah; Vice-Chairman of the TUC, Alex Nyarko-Opoku; and the Head of Research and Chief Economist of the TUC, Dr Kwabena Nyarko-Otoo.

    “People are talking now in Ghana about a lockdown. Majority of the people who will be affected by decisions of that nature are the working people of our country, the ordinary people of Ghana, they are the ones that will be most affected and it is important for us when we are taking these decisions to take into account their circumstances and conditions to lockdown Accra”, President Akufo-Addo said.

    “What are the consequences when we lockdown the country? A responsible government is required to look at all the implications before decisions are made and that is the exercise on which we are currently engaged and I am hoping that much sooner than later, we will come to an agreement within government as to what these measures are and then the Ghanaian people will be informed”, President Akufo-Addo added.

    Secretary-General of the TUC

    Secretary-General of the TUC, Dr.Yaw Baah, in a brief remark, noted that their letter to the President asking for a total lockdown of the country was to express support for all that government has done so far and not to undermine same.

    He added that calls from their members about what the government intends to do about the working population necessitated the communication sent to the Presidency. He pledged the TUC’s support for the government throughout the difficult season of fighting to contain and stop the coronavirus, Covid-19, in Ghana.

    Attendees of the Meeting

    As part of the meeting with the TUC Executive, the Chief of Staff at the Office of the President Akosua Frema Osei Opare, Minister of Trade and Industry Alan Kyerematen, Minister of Health Kwaku Agyeman-Manu, and National Security Minister Albert Kan-Dapaah and the Minister of Employment and Labour Relations Ignatius Baffour-Awuah were in attendance.

     

    Source: classfmonline.com

  • Coronavirus: Ghana is always reactive, we don’t plan – Nana Osei-Bonsu

    Chief Executive Officer of Private Enterprises Federation (PEF), Nana Osei-Bonsu says Ghana is always reactive and we do not plan for future situations.

    According to him, due to this reactiveness that is why most companies are now producing hand sanitizers of which most used to be imported.

    In a television interview, Mr Osei-Bonsu said the moment the issue of the Covid-19 is gone we will move back to our old ways without planning on how to solve the areas of vulnerability in the economy.

    “Our problem is that we are a reactive country we do not plan. so we react, this coronavirus, ones it moves away we will go back to game one without planning on which areas to move into that are vulnerable, what can we do to meet this vulnerability, how do we position our businesses to compete.”

    “We don’t have that kind of planning, it always an ad-hoc kind of measures that we put together to salvage the situation and say goodbye and go back to our own ways,” he added.

    Mr Osei-Bonsu explained that for us to be able to play a key part in the global economy and providing adequately for our people we will need proper planning.

    “We need thorough planning to be able to withstand this kind of things even without the crisis.”

    He proposed that African countries should make use of their economic strengths and trade among themselves. For example, Kenya producing the meat needs of some of the countries and Ghana also helping with pharmaceuticals in this regard and this will help the development of the African economy.

    Mr Osei-Bonsu also said during a situation like this, countries that we import from will only export if they finish feeding their people and without that, we won’t stand the chance of survival.

    He also laments the government’s inability to engage the private sector in their works, according to him they get to know about most policies when they are being undertaken by the foreigner counterparts.

    But if the government includes the private sector in the policy framework formations it will help achieve more mileage.

     

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Ghana’s Coronavirus cases hit 132

    Ghana’s coronavirus case has jumped from 68 to 132.

    According to the Ghana Health Service, ” As at the morning of 26 March 2020, a total of fifty-four (54) cases including three (3) deaths have been confirmed from the regular surveillance systems. All the three (3) cases that unfortunately succumbed to the disease were aged and had underlying chronic medical conditions. All the other fifty-one (51) cases are well; fourteen (14) are being managed at home and the rest are responding well to treatment on admission in isolation. They are awaiting their test results and will be discharged when the results are negative.

    The great majority of the confirmed cases are Ghanaians, who returned home from affected countries. Seven (7) are of other nationals namely: Norway, Lebanon, China, Netherlands, and the United Kingdom (UK). The number of confirmed cases among travelers under mandatory quarantine who have been tested is seventy-eight (78).

    In respect of contact tracing, a total of 970 contacts have been identified and are being tracked. Out of these, two hundred and four (204) have completed the 14 days mandatory follow up.

    Image content source: GHANA HEATH SERVICE (https://ghanahealthservice.org/covid19/)

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • COVID-19: Government may announce restrictions in some parts of the country Oppong-Nkrumah

    Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, Minister for Information says government may resort to restrictions in some parts of Ghana, all in the bid to halt the spread of the deadly coronavirus.

    He disclosed that the government is open to all measures to help curb the spread of the pandemic and restrictions in some parts of the country could be part of those measures.

    Parliament last week passed the Imposition of Restrictions law and that could give the government a new way of ensuring the spread of the disease is halted.

    “So far, every step of the way, the government has been very proactive with coming up with measures to contain the situation. Those final rafts of measures now that the law has been put in place may include some restrictions in some parts of the country but whatever will be done will be with the objective of ensuring that we totally negate the potential for community spread,” he said on Citi News.

    Ghana has so far recorded 68 cases of COVID-19 including three deaths.

    The GMA in a statement released yesterday showed concerns about the spread of Covid-19 and asked the government to immediately consider a lockdown of the entire nation.

    According to the Association, the lockdown though not a comfortable decision for leadership of the country and citizens is a proven alternative that will be in the best interest of the populace.

     

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Rwanda confirms one new case of coronavirus

    Rwanda on Wednesday recorded one new coronavirus case, taking the total number of those infected to 41 in the country.

    According to a statement released by the Ministry of Health on Wednesday evening, the new case is a traveller who arrived from Dubai, on a date that the officials did not specify.

    On an optimistic note, the ministry yet again provided an update on all the patients, saying they “are under treatment in stable condition” and none of them is in critical situation.

    The health officials also said that the tracing of the contacts of the infected have been conducted for further management.

    The Ministry called upon the public to observe heightened vigilance and respect for the enhanced prevention measures announced by the government.

    Among the preventive measures in place, the government last week announced a 2 week country wide lockdown, in which non-essential movements of people outside their residences is prohibited, as well as travels between cities and districts.

    The lockdown also saw businesses suspended, except for those selling essential commodities like foodstuffs, fuel, and medicine.

    The COVID19 pandemic has continued to menace nations, and as of Wednesday, statistics showed that a total of 454,000 people had been diagnosed with the disease globally, and of these, more than 113,000 have recovered, and about 20,500 people had died, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University.

    Source: newtimes.co.rw

  • I command coronavirus to vanish from Ghana – Bishop Tackie Yarboi

    The Presiding Bishop of Victory Bible Church International (VBCI), Bishop N. A Tackie-Yarboi has prayed to command coronavirus to vanish from Ghana.

    Bishop N. A Tackie-Yarboi praying for the country as part of national day for fasting and prayer asked for forgiveness for Ghana and other nations.

    “We stand on behalf on the people of the world and ask for forgiveness for the sins of Ghana and the world at large, Lord remember us and have mercy upon us” he pleaded.

    Ghanaians observed a national day of fasting and praying as part of efforts to fight the coronavirus outbreak.

    The national day for fasting and prayer was declared by President Nana Akufo-Addo on Saturday, March 21.

    “I urge all of us, also, to seek the face of the Almighty. So, on Wednesday, March 25th 2020, I appeal to all Ghanaians, Christians and Muslims, to observe a national day of fasting and prayer…Let us pray to God to protect our nation and save us from this pandemic,” the President said in an address to the nation.

    Ghana has so far recorded 68 cases of COVID-19 with three deaths.

    12 of the new cases were from the travellers who were put under mandatory quarantine and subjected to mandatory testing.

    Ghana has recorded 41 cases in the last two days.

    But most of these cases have been attributed to mandatory testing for the persons in quarantine.

    Bishop N. A Tackie-Yarboi paryed to God to remember little children, vulnerable and the aged and heal the land from coronavirus.

     

    Source: XYZ

  • Coronavirus: GPRTU provides Veronica buckets at Circle station

    As the deadly coronavirus is fast spreading, the Circle-Odawna branch of the Ghana Private Road Transport Union (GPRTU) has provided about 20 Veronica buckets in the new station yard.

    Positioned at vantage points, the hand washing equipment is to service both commercial vehicle (trotro) drivers and passengers.

    In an interview with GhanaWeb, one of the station masters said it was necessary to provide the buckets for people’s perusal by way of observing one of the precautionary measures outlined by both President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and the Ghana Health Service.

    This gesture which promotes frequent handwashing with soap will help contain the global pandemic, coronavirus that the country is currently battling with.

    Among other precautionary measures to be taken to protect yourself from contracting the disease are; frequent use of hand sanitizer, cough or sneeze into one’s elbow, observe social distancing of 1.5 meters away from affected persons and don’t touch your face.

    So far, Ghana has recorded 68 cases of the coronavirus with 3 deaths.

    According to the Ghana Health Service, the sudden spike in case incidence is as a result of the mandatory quarantine and compulsory testing for all travellers entering Ghana.

    “Overall, 30 of the 68 cases have been reported in the general population with the remaining 38 cases among persons currently under mandatory quarantine. As of 24 March, total of 1,030 persons are under mandatory quarantine; samples from 863 of them have been tested and 38 confirmed positive.”

     

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Government settles medical bills of Dompoase accident victims

     Government on Wednesday presented a cheque of nearly GH¢100, 000 to settle the medical bills of victims of the Dompoase accident that claimed 34 lives.

    On Tuesday, January 14, two buses collided head-on killing at least 34 persons and injuring about 54 others at Dompoase on the Cape Coast -Takoradi stretch.

    Minister for Roads and Highways, Kwesi Amoako Atta, who led a government delegation at the time, to visit victims of the accident, assured the medical bills of all the accident victims of the Dompoase car crash including mortuary bills would be settled by government.

    Consequently, the Chief Executive Officer of the Cape Coast Teaching Hospital directed that monies earlier paid by some of the victims be refunded once they provided their receipts while the hospital prepared a comprehensive report on patients including all those who would need surgical implants for onward submission for reimbursement.

    Central Regional Minister, Kwamena Duncan, on Wednesday, presented the cheque for GH¢97,450 to the management of the hospital on behalf of the president.

    “The monies were paid into the accounts of the Regional Coordinating Council and we are here to present the cheque to the hospital. This is a cheque of ninety-seven thousand, four hundred and fifty Ghana cedis,” the minister said and handed the checque to CEO of the Cape Coast Teaching Hospital, Dr. Eric Kofi Ngyedu.

    According to Kwamena Duncan, government appreciates the role the hospital played to save the lives of the survivors of the accident. He assured government would do more to cover any other costs that might have been incurred by the hospital if it was brought to their attention,

    “You marshalled the needed resources to take care of the victims of the accident. We realized how your facility was stretched in those times to support the victims.  That was commendable,” he praised.

    CEO of the Cape Coast Teaching Hospital, Dr. Eric Kofi Ngyedu, thanked the government for honouring its pledge to the hospital. According to him, the hospital finds the redemption of the pledge by government inspirational.

    “We thank the President for showing us such an inspirational leadership. We appreciate this gesture. On behalf of the victims of the accident, their relatives, we thank the president,” he said.

    Source: Myjoyonline.com | Richard Kwadwo Nyarko, Cape Coast

  • Coronavirus: Govt may announce restrictions in some parts of the country – Oppong Nkrumah

    Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, Minister for Information says government may resort to restrictions in some parts of Ghana, all in the bid to halt the spread of the deadly coronavirus.

    He disclosed that the government is open to all measures to help curb the spread of the pandemic and restrictions in some parts of the country could be part of those measures.

    Parliament last week passed the Imposition of Restrictions law and that could give the government a new way of ensuring the spread of the disease is halted.

    “So far, every step of the way, the government has been very proactive with coming up with measures to contain the situation. Those final rafts of measures now that the law has been put in place may include some restrictions in some parts of the country but whatever will be done will be with the objective of ensuring that we totally negate the potential for community spread,” he said on Citi News.

    Ghana has so far recorded 68 cases of COVID-19 including three deaths.

    The GMA in a statement released yesterday showed concerns about the spread of Covid-19 and asked the government to immediately consider a lockdown of the entire nation.

    According to the Association, the lockdown though not a comfortable decision for leadership of the country and citizens is a proven alternative that will be in the best interest of the populace.

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • Coronavirus: One recovers in Agogo South hospital

    One person has fully recovered from coronavirus in Ghana, Health officials have confirmed to Starrfm.com.gh.

    The Chinese national who had tested positive for the virus at Kumasi Center for Collaborative Research ( KCCR) and was being treated at the Agogo South Government hospital in the Ashanti region was discharged Wednesday after doctors confirmed he had recovered.

    A highly placed health official who confirmed the recovery to Starrfm.com.gh Thursday said they have sent details of the incident to the health ministry.

    A source also said the hospital is still contact-tracing individuals the Chinese might have met before falling ill.

    Ghana has recorded 68 cases of coronavirus after 15 more persons who were mandatorily quarantined by the government tested positive.

    According to the Ghana Health Service, “The sudden spike in case incidence is as a result of the mandatory quarantine and compulsory testing for all travelers entering Ghana, as directed by the president”.

    “Overall, 30 of the 68 cases have been reported in the general population with the remaining 38 cases among persons currently under mandatory quarantine. As of 24 March, total of 1,030 persons are under mandatory quarantine; samples from 863 of them have been tested and 38 confirmed positive”.

    Source: starrfm.com.gh

  • ‘Please open UG Medical Center for coronavirus cases’ John Dumelo begs Akufo-Addo

    Actor cum politician John Dumelo has appealed to President Akufo-Addo to open the University of Ghana Medical Centre following the growing number of Coronavirus cases in the country.

    The 35-year-old is the parliamentary aspirant of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) for the Ayawaso West Wuogon Constituency.

    In a Twitter post, Dumelo said opening the facility has become necessary because the number of Covid-19 cases is bound to increase in the coming weeks.

    He suggested that a facility with over 600 beds should not be lying idle at a time when the nation is battling a pandemic.

    “The cases are now 68. We are not praying for it to increase but that looks inevitable now,” Dumelo wrote.

    “I would like to please beg His Excellency Nana Akufo-Addo to please open the 615 bed University of Ghana Medical Center for the purpose of managing the virus. Respectfully Sir.”

    Source: Pulse.com.gh

  • Rwandan police shoot 2 people defying Coronavirus lockdown orders

    Police in Rwandan are said to have shot and killed two people who defied lockdown orders imposed by the government to curb the spread of the Coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

    According to a report by Bloomberg, the two men in their twenties “attempted to tussle with officers.”

    A Rwanda National Police spokesman John Bosco Kabera told Bloomberg via phone on Wednesday, March 25, 2020.

    Rwanda began a two-week lockdown on March 22, 2020 restricting travel between towns and cities and asking people to stay indoors.

    Its measures are among the most stringent in Africa.

    The East African nation has 40 confirmed Covid-19 cases.

  • Coronavirus: UK-based Ghanaian quarantined after agitation by residents

    A UK based Ghanaian who arrived at Akyem Takyiman in the Kwaebibirem District of the Eastern region has been moved to Accra by Police for quarantine and tests for covid-19 after agitation by residents.

    The arrival of the 42-year-old native of the community triggered fear among residents.

    The District Chief Executive for Kwaebibirem, Antwi Bosiako whose office was informed about the development quickly informed the District Police commander who went to the house of the victim with other entourage.

    The victim told Police that, he returned from the UK and made a transit in Amsterdam through to Ghana barely two weeks ago. He was sent to Kade Government Hospital whereupon interrogation by Doctors it was recommended to the Police to send the victim to Ridge in Accra.

    Police with the suspect and his wife continued the journey to Accra Ridge Hospital where his sample has been taken to Noguchi for testing.

    He has been asked by the Director of the Unit Mr Prince Frimpong to quarantine himself until Friday, March 27, 2020, when the results would be out.

    The Public Relations Officer of the Eastern Regional Police Command, DSP Ebenezer Tetteh has meanwhile urged the residents to remain calm.

    As at the 25 March 2020, a total of sixty-eight (68) covid-19 cases including three (3) fatalities have been recorded in Ghana. All 65 victims of these confirmed cases are being managed in isolation”.

    It has been predicted that the situation may worsen in the next few weeks.

    Many individuals and groups including Ghana Medical Association(GMA) have called on President of Ghana, Akufo Addo to immediately declare a nationwide Lockdown to avert crises.

    source: starrfm.com.gh

  • Noguchi warns of a shutdown of its advance research laboratory

    The Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research has warned it could shut down its advance research laboratory as some of its equipment near expiration.

    The research centre has been at the forefront of the testing of samples of the deadly coronavirus cases recorded in the country.

    Director of Noguchi Prof. Abraham Annan says there is a need for steps to replace some vital equipment likely to go out of service next year.

    “Honestly the centre is in good standing but we also need resources. For example, you see our advance laboratory research is there and it was opened last year by next year there are so many things we have to replace there, some of them are highly advanced filter systems they are designed to contain any pathogens”.

    “It limits any potential of pollution of the environment so people and animals stay safe, these things run into hundreds and thousands of dollars, so we need resources, if we are not able to match up then we may have to close down the place”.

    Noguchi and Kumasi Centre for Collaborative Research have been the two centres to test for Covid-19.

    Ghana has so far recorded 68 cases of Covid-19 with 3 deaths so far. This has forced the Ghana Medical Association to call on the government to lock down the country as a matter of urgency.

    They believe that locking down the country is the best way to stop the spread of the virus.

    Source: primenewsghana.com

  • What Ghana must do to win coronavirus war – Prophet

    While topnotch medics are still struggling at the international levels to find a cure for the outbreak of the deadly coronavirus, a top Ghanaian prophet, known for the propagation, Prophet Francis Kwateng, has divulged the solution to end the pandemic.

    According to the founder and leader of the House of Power Ministry (HOP), headquartered at Ahofadiekrom in the Ashanti Region, the only solution to end the widespread occurrence of the infectious disease in Ghana and across the world is ‘righteousness’.

    The popular televangelist is on record to have made a prophetic declaration in 2019 about a dreadful disease which he said would swoop thousands of lives in the world.

    “The Lord has spoken with me. There’ll be a deadly disease in this coming year 2020. It will come in the form of a feather-liked animal to hang in the skies and the disease will kill thousands of people in the world”, Prophet Kwateng prophesied in a sermon at his church.

    Speaking exclusively to a local television station, Royal TV, on the back of the said prophesy, Prophet Kwateng said, God does not give out revelation without a solution, adding that it is only left to the nation to trust what the Lord Almighty has said.

    “There’s a solution to this pandemic. I know some won’t believe but I’ll say it. The solution is ‘righteousness’”, he disclosed.

    Prophet Kwateng, however, indicated that the solution comes with a condition. He chided: “the nation should genuinely repent from their sins and turn around to Jesus”, that he said will bring the outbreak to an unexpected end.

    Asked if the COVID-19 pandemic is a sign of the judgement time, he replied: “What I know is that the Lord says, in the end time, there will be diseases with no cure”.

    Meanwhile, Ghanaians observed a national day of fasting and prayer on Wednesday, March 25, 2020, to seek the face God to end the spread of the virus.

    Source: ghanaguardian.com

  • Oti Regional Health Directorate inaugurates committee to fight coronavirus

    The Oti Regional Health Directorate has inaugurated a Public Health Emergency Management Committee to help fight COVID-19 in the Region.

    The Committee is to ensure that the public adhere to health safety measures outlined by the World Health Organization.

    Mr Emmanuel Dzotsi, Oti Regional Director of Health Services said similar committees would be set up in the various Districts and Municipalities in the Region.

    He said the Directorate had made significant progress in putting the necessary measures in place to ensure that anyone tested positive for the novel coronavirus would be quickly quarantined.

    Mr Emmanuel Dzotsi said four main hospitals -Worawora Government Hospital, Nkwanta District Hospital, Krachi West District Hospital and St Mary Theresa Hospital at Papase in the Akan District in the Region had been designated for quarantining with District Response Teams also on standby.

    Daasebre Kwame Bonja II, Omanhene of Chonke Traditional Area in an exclusive interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) said it was important for traditional authorities to enforce the President’s directive in their various communities to stop the spread of the virus.

    He said they must also ensure persons who ignored the directives were made to face the full rigorous of the law.

    Meanwhile, the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development as part of Government’s effort to fight the novel coronavirus, also presented some items to the Region.

    The items include 40 dust bins((240 Ltrs), 40 boxes of wash basins, 40 veronica buckets, 40 hand paper towel, 40 boxes of liquid soap, 400 nose masks, 40 reflective jackets, 40 veronica stands, 50 hand sanitizers (500ml), 40 stickers for dust bins, veronica and buckets.

    Nana Owusu Yeboa the Oti Regional Minister was grateful to the Ministry for the support and pledged to ensure that the items were properly maintained and also put to good use.

    Source: GNA

  • Coronavirus: Markets in Ashanti Region to close on March 27

    A mass spraying exercise is to be undertaken in all local markets in the Ashanti Region on Friday, March 27, to disinfect them for public safety.

    The exercise, under the auspices of the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development (MLGRD), is in line with proactive measures instituted by the government to manage the spread of the COVID-19 (coronavirus) disease.

    A statement signed by Mr. Simon Osei-Mensah, the Regional Minister, copied to the Ghana News Agency (GNA), Kumasi, said consequently, a temporary ban on all market-related activities would be enforced on the day of the exercise.

    “I wish to take this opportunity to passionately appeal to all traders to cooperate and comply with the ban on activities in the markets on Friday,” it said.

    The statement gave the assurance that chemicals to be used for the spraying exercise were not harmful. Therefore, there is no fear of negative effects.

    Ghana has recorded 68 confirmed cases and two deaths since the COVID-19 (coronavirus) outbreak about three months ago.

    Source: GNA

  • Bibiani Health Directorate sensitises market women on coronavirus

    The Public Health Emergency Committee under the Bibiani Municipal Health Directorate in conjunction with the Municipal Assembly have carried out public education on COVID-19 at markets.

    The team, made up of personnel from Health Institutions, NCCE, Environmental Health and Assembly Staff, moved through the market with information vans to educate people who turned at the market.

    The move, which was aimed at curbing the spread of the disease in the Municipality and the nation at large, also saw the team placing Veronica Buckets with soap, hand sanitizers and tissues at vantage locations in the market and areas around the central business district of the Municipality.

    Mr Samuel Ansah, Public Health Officer of the Municipal Health Directorate and Madam Martha Nneka Oparah, the NCCE Director and other members of the team, advised the traders to adhere to personal hygienic practices of regular handwashing, use of hand sanitizers and maintaining clean environment at all times, in order to save them and their communities from contracting the deadly disease.

    A cross-section of the traders interviewed by the GNA, appreciated the efforts of the team, but bemoaned the low turnout of buyers, due to the COVID-19 scare.

    Mrs. Deborah Mensah and Uncle Ebo, dealers in Plastic wares and mobile phone accessories respectively, and Araba Saah Awuah, an iced water seller, all expressed similar sentiments, and prayed for divine intervention to save the situation.

    Source: GNA

  • China urged to share coronavirus experience

    China has been urged to share its experience on how it managed to confront and subdue the coronavirus outbreak with Ghana, and the rest of the world, This is crucial to achieving the complete eradication of the virus, which has been declared by the World Health Organisation (WHO) as a global pandemic.

    Dr. Benjamin Anyagre, General Secretary of the Ghana China Friendship Association (GHACHIFA), told the Ghana News Agency in an interview on Wednesday, that while China was taken by surprise, by the virus and suffered greatly as a result, there were almost “zero” cases of new infections of the virus in China.

    He said this was the result of the accuracy and high sense of urgency with which the Chinese government tackled the outbreak.

    “Whilst China constructed 15 temporary hospitals with 8,000 health workers to combat the disease, they have all been closed and local authorities have announced that commerce and industrial activities would resume, with non-essential services to restart,” Dr. Anyagre said.

    He said it was worth noting that China achieved this through strong leadership, discipline and the dedication of a people towards achieving a national cause for the common good.

    Dr. Anyagre said it was also backed with the needed logistical and technical services, effective mass education among a number of measures.

    The GHACHIFA General Secretary said what Ghana and the world needed most at this moment, was a united and collaborative approach towards eradicating the virus, and not a blame game scenario that sought to make it appear as though a particular group of people were to be blamed for the pandemic.

    “The term Chinese virus indicates a xenophobic attack on a particular race and it is against the United Nation Charter on Human Rights,” he said.

    Dr. Angare said the World Health Organization (WHO) recently condemned such negative name tagging observing that throughout history, such outbreaks occurred with varied origins, but no country or people was ever tagged, adding that it was impossible to tell ahead of time, what negativity might originate from which territory.

    He urged Ghanaians to desist from such xenophobic behaviour and bear in mind, that it was a world of uncertainty, where it paid to be courteous and respectful towards each other.

    He commended all health workers in the country for risking their lives to contain and fight off the pandemic, and urged all members of the public to adhere to all the precautionary measures that were spelt out by the country’s authorities, in order to help fight off the pandemic.

    Source: GNA

  • Meridian Port Services outlines coronavirus work plan

    A statement signed by Mr Mohamed Samara, the Chief Executive Officer of Meridian Port Services and copied to the Ghana News Agency in Accra on Wednesday said the measures became necessary following the rise in cases of the COVID-19 in the country.

    The statement said it was committed to providing guidance, updates and other information to help stakeholders stay informed about the latest developments.

    It said its Crisis Management Team, had formulated a Business Continuity Plan that would enable the company provide uninterrupted service to customers and business partners.

    “All recommendations and guidelines provided by the Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority and other regulatory Authorities as well the below preventive actions apply to Terminal 3, Port of Tema,” the statement said.

    The measures includes the implementation of additional control at entry gates where officials Meridian Port Service and Port Health are stationed to check temperatures of port users daily.

    Again, the statement said World Health Organisation approved sanitisers had been installed at vantage points in the terminal while cleaning and disinfections had been intensified to minimise the risk of infections.

    Management has also put in place the widely recommended social distancing culture among employees, it said adding that employees were constantly educated on the necessary preventive measures to enable them stay up to date and take personal responsibility for their lives.

    All meetings, both internally and externally, the statement said have been brought to the barest minimum and that there was strict enforcement of rules to follow should there be a suspected case.

    The Company assured all customers and business partners of providing uninterrupted service saying: “We would like to assure you that we are committed to deploying our best endeavours to continue delivering first-class service during the evolving COVID-19 pandemic around the world”.

    Source: GNA

  • CWSA to support communities construct hand washing facilities

    The Community Water and Sanitation Agency (CWSA) says it is providing assistance to communities to construct simple local handwashing facilities, such as tippy taps, at the household levels.

    It will also support Community-Based Health Planning and Services (CHPS) Compounds and community clinics to construct such facilities and provide them with soap and hand sanitizers.

    These are among some of the initiatives being implemented by the Agency as part of its contribution to help combat the spread of coronavirus in the country.

    A statement signed by Mr. Worlanyo Kwadwo Siabi, Chief Executive of CWSA and made available to the Ghana News Agency in Kumasi, said the Agency was ready to make water easily available to all Ghanaians.

    “The Community Water and Sanitation Agency will ensure that water is available to facilitate proper handwashing with soap under running water in rural communities and small towns”, the statement emphasized.

    It said the Agency has put together a team which had developed an emergency response strategy to reach out to rural communities to help contain the global pandemic.

    The focus of the strategy, according to the statement, was the promotion of effective handwashing with soap, application of alcohol-based sanitizers and deployment of handwashing logistics through its regional offices and water system offices in communities.

    It said the Agency which was represented on the Public Health Emergency Committees of the various assemblies would make significant inputs to strategies of the assemblies to combat the coronavirus.

    The statement further said the offices of the Agency would engage communities through local radio stations and community information centers to provide the right information on proper handwashing with soap and how to avoid contracting the disease.

    Source: GNA

  • GNPC supplies market women in WR with Veronica buckets and others materials

    The GNPC Foundation has distributed 140 Veronica buckets, 1860 Sanitizers, soaps, tissues paper and dustbins to 10 market centres in the Western and Western North Regions.

    The distribution, forms part of the Foundation’s corporate social investment in these critical times of Coronavirus as the country, individuals and corporations were on board to end the spread of the virus.

    Dr Dominic Eduah, the Executive Secretary of the GNPC Foundation, during the distribution at the Takoradi market circle said improving hygiene in the wake of the virus was Paramount, hence the decision to support markets in particular, where interface and interaction on a daily basis were immeasurable.

    Ms Barbara Oteng-Gyasi, the Minister for Tourism, Arts and Culture lauded the Foundation for supporting government’s initiative and encouraged all and sundry to pay attention to proper Hand-washing, a key controlling measure of the spread or contraction of the virus.

    “Sanitizers are important, but use them only in the absence of soap and water and besides that, wash your hands after three or five times of applying Sanitizers”, the Minister added.

    Mr Anthony K.K. Sam, the Metropolitan Chief Executive of Sekondi/Takoradi tasked the market women to endeavour to allow their children to stay at home since they were most vulnerable.

    He said, “We may be attempted to arrest all parents who bring their children to the market to trade”.

    Nana Kobina Nketsia V, the Omanhene of Essikado Traditional area demonstrated how proper handwashing should be done.

    Source: GNA