Tag: United Kingdom

  • GSS begins interviews for 2025/2026 Commonwealth Applicants tomorrow

    GSS begins interviews for 2025/2026 Commonwealth Applicants tomorrow

    The Ghana Scholarships Secretariat (GSS) has announced that  Interviews for 2025/2026 Commonwealth Applicants will take place tomorrow Monday, 8 December 2025 as well as Tuesday, 9 December 2025.

    According to a letter signed by the registrar of scholarships, Alex Kwaku Asafo-Agyei, the interview starts at 9:30 a.m. at the Conference Room of the Ghana Scholarships Secretariat.

    “The Ghana Scholarship’s Secretariat (GSS) wishes to inform all applicants of the review of applications for the Commonwealth Scholarship tenable in the United Kingdom for 2025/2026 Academic year and is in the process of inviting applicants to attend an interview which will be a crucial step in assessing the suitability of applicants for the scholarship. The interview is scheduled for Monday 8th & Tuesday 9th December, 2025 at 9.30 a.m. at the Conference Room of the Secretariat,” the letter read.

    The letter also urged applicants who applied online but failed to submit hard copies of their applications to the secretariat to come along with the documents and other relevant academic certificates as indicated in “our earlier advertisement in the national daily (Ghanaian Times).”

    It added that all services offered by the Secretariat are free, urging applicants to beware of fraudsters.

    A public disagreement has emerged between the former and current leadership of the Scholarships Secretariat over the true state of debts owed to foreign universities, with each side presenting conflicting accounts of what was inherited, accumulated, and settled.

    Ghana’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Sabah Zita Benson, challenged statements made by former Registrar of the Scholarships Secretariat, Kingsley Agyemang, who denied ever leaving students stranded during his tenure despite acknowledging that he inherited debt.

    Mr Agyemang dismissed claims that he created a £32 million liability as misleading and politically motivated. He argued that he inherited GH¢230 million (about $54 million) in outstanding payments but managed the situation without any student being sent home.

    “Scholarship debt is continual and moves according to the academic year… This is not new,” he stated.

    Responding in a Facebook post on December 4, 2025, Ghana’s UK High Commissioner insisted that the Abuakwa South MP left behind a £35 million debt, adding that the current administration has already cleared £3 million of that amount. She said some institutions have been awaiting payments since 2021.

    She further challenged Agyemang to provide proof that all fees were paid and that the students he sponsored were never stranded.

    Sabah Zita Benson cited Loughborough University as one of the affected institutions, noting that nearly £500,000 is owed for 17 students.

    “We owe Loughborough University almost half a million pounds from 2022 for just 17 students. He should explain to them why they have not been paid since 2022, even as he continued sending students there,” she said, stressing that students were directly affected by these delays.

    She vowed not to stay silent on the issue, adding that accountability must be ensured so students do not bear the consequences of administrative lapses.

    “We will not keep quiet while students suffer because you were reckless with your job,” she added.

    Madam Benson deleted the Facebook post shortly after it gained traction, and it remains unclear why it was taken down.

    In January this year, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that it had secured scholarships for Ghanaians interested in pursuing short training courses and university education in different fields through a collaboration with some partner countries.

    The Ministry, in a statement shared on its official platform X (formerly Twitter) on Tuesday, September 30, noted that all interested applicants could access the scholarships via the Ministry’s official website. Other opportunities shall also be shared on the Ghana Scholarships Secretariat’s platform for access.

    “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs wishes to inform the general public that, through its diplomatic engagements, scholarships for short-term capacity-building training programmes and for tertiary education covering various fields of study are available to the Republic of Ghana for the benefit of its citizenry.”

    “The links for these capacity-building training programmes were uploaded on the Ministry’s website to make them more accessible to interested individuals. The Ministry also transmitted scholarships received from partner countries to the Ghana Scholarships Secretariat, to be awarded to qualified candidates,” the statement read.

    It added that “Interested persons are encouraged to either visit the Ministry’s website to apply for the available training programmes in accordance with published guidelines or contact the Ghana Scholarships Secretariat for available scholarships. Inquiries can also be sent by email to ipa@mfa.gov.gh”

    The Ablakwa-led Ministry warned the public against engaging people that shall pose as middlemen to grant access to the said programmes. The statement highlighted the Ministry’s commitment to ensuring equal and quality education for the public.

    Ghana was owing one billion cedis in scholarship commitments to the United Kingdom, according to the Registrar of the Scholarship Secretariat, Kwaku Asafo Agyei.

    He made this known in an exclusive interview with Nana Kwadwo Jantuah on Nhyira FM’s Morning show, stating that deep concerns are being raised over the disappearance of Crown Agency in the UK, which previously managed short courses for Ghanaian beneficiaries.

    “Ghana currently owes over one billion cedis in scholarships in the UK. This has to be paid to allow beneficiaries to access their tuition,” he stated. “The Crown Agency in the UK, which was responsible for organising short courses for beneficiaries, has disappeared.”

    Mr Safo said that, according to an audit report, the previous government administration prioritised funding for short courses while neglecting regular academic programs, a practice that undermined the Secretariat’s core mandate.

    “I called for an audit into suspected scandals at the Secretariat. The report shows that the previous administration prioritised paying for short courses while avoiding regular academic programs,” he indicated.

    He stressed that the Secretariat had no responsibility to cover expenses for dependents who travel with beneficiaries. Yet, he claimed his predecessor unlawfully extended sponsorship to these dependents and even provided them with monthly stipends, calling it a clear misuse of office.

    “The National Scholarship Secretariat is not responsible for the cost of any dependent who accompanies a beneficiary. However, my predecessors paid billions of cedis to sponsor beneficiaries, which is an unnecessary cost to the state,” he said.

    Mr Asafo Agyei further revealed that certain appointees in President Akufo-Addo’s administration were granted authority letters for 10-year visas, even though the short courses they were attending lasted barely two weeks.

  • ‘I feel shame as a mother of an 8 year-old, I’m sorry’ – Hajia4Reall weeps during sentencing

    ‘I feel shame as a mother of an 8 year-old, I’m sorry’ – Hajia4Reall weeps during sentencing

    Musician, Mona Faiz Montrage, also known as Hajia4Reall, received a sentence of one year and one day in an American court on June 28, 2024, following her extradition from the United Kingdom for involvement in a romance fraud case that began in 2023.

    During the sentencing, Montrage’s lawyers sought a three-month jail term, citing her status as a mother with no prior criminal record.

    In contrast, prosecutors argued for a longer sentence to deter similar crimes, pointing out that she had operated the scheme for six years, leading to losses totaling $1.4 million for 32 victims.

    The court proceedings revealed that Montrage’s defense mentioned her history of abuse by a former boyfriend as a mitigating factor, while the prosecution highlighted her role in setting up multiple bank accounts to facilitate the fraud.

    Ultimately, the judge decided on a sentence of one year and one day, with the extra day potentially allowing for early release based on good behavior.

    According to Inner City Press, an American outfit that has followed the case since its inception, Hajia4Reall shed tears at a point during sentencing expressing that she was ashamed of being a mother of an 8-year-old.

    “I want to pay them back. I feel shame as a mother of an 8 year-old daughter. [Sobs] Please have mercy on me,” she is quoted to have said when he lawyer sought a lower jail term.

    Read an excerpt from proceedings on the final day:

    Judge: The guideline is 37 to 46 months.

    Assistant US Attorney (AUSA): The victims were vulnerable senior citizens. Some were promised marriage; they sent and lost money. Middlemen received 10%. AUSA: Defendant participated in this scheme fir six years. 32 victims lost $1.4 million. Meanwhile Ms. Montrage reinvented herself in Ghana.

    Judge: She blames an abusive former boyfriend.

    AUSA: He was arrested and deported. She continued. One victim confronted her…

    Judge: She will be deported.

    Defense lawyer: 3 months incarceration would be enough. She didn’t know the money going into her account was from romance fraud.

    Judge: She created multiple bank accounts.

    Defense: She’s never before disclosed her abuse by her ex boyfriend.

    Montrage: I want to pay them back. I feel shame as a mother of an 8 year-old daughter. [Sobs] Please have mercy on me.

    AUSA: She started opening these accounts at different banks at an earlier time. Many in Ghana are following this case. General deterrence is needed

    Defense: Victim-1 tracked her from her instagram photos – her video had a voice dubbed over, Victim-1 was catfished

    Judge: I sentence Ms Montrage to one year and one day in prison, the extra day to allow “good time.”

    Defense: We propose she be allowed to fly back to Ghana as soon as she is released, with no ICE detention.

  • Key details in Hajia4Reall’s jail term

    Key details in Hajia4Reall’s jail term

    Musician, Mona Faiz Montrage, also known as Hajia4Reall, was sentenced to one year and one day in prison by an American court on June 28, 2024.

    The case, stemming from a romance fraud scheme dating back to 2023, saw her extradited from the United Kingdom.

    During sentencing, Montrage’s lawyers argued for a shorter term of three months, citing her status as a mother and lack of prior criminal record.

    However, the prosecution pushed for a longer sentence to deter similar schemes, highlighting that 32 victims lost a total of $1.4 million over six years.

    The court proceedings revealed that Montrage’s defense cited abuse by a former boyfriend as a mitigating factor, while the prosecution emphasized her active participation in opening multiple bank accounts to facilitate the fraud.

    Ultimately, the judge sentenced her to one year and one day, with the additional day allowing for potential early release based on good behavior.

    Montrage, who expressed remorse during the sentencing, will face deportation upon completion of her sentence.

    Jail term

    Inner City Press, an American outfit that has followed the case since its inception shared an excerpt from proceedings on the final day:

    Judge: The guideline is 37 to 46 months.

    Assistant US Attorney (AUSA): The victims were vulnerable senior citizens. Some were promised marriage; they sent and lost money. Middlemen received 10%. AUSA: Defendant participated in this scheme fir six years. 32 victims lost $1.4 million. Meanwhile Ms. Montrage reinvented herself in Ghana.

    Judge: She blames an abusive former boyfriend.

    AUSA: He was arrested and deported. She continued. One victim confronted her…

    Judge: She will be deported.

    Defense lawyer: 3 months incarceration would be enough. She didn’t know the money going into her account was from romance fraud.

    Judge: She created multiple bank accounts.

    Defense: She’s never before disclosed her abuse by her ex boyfriend.

    Montrage: I want to pay them back. I feel shame as a mother of an 8 year-old daughter. [Sobs] Please have mercy on me.

    AUSA: She started opening these accounts at different banks at an earlier time. Many in Ghana are following this case. General deterrence is needed.

    Defense: Victim-1 tracked her from her instagram photos – her video had a voice dubbed over, Victim-1 was catfished.

    Judge: I sentence Ms Montrage to one year and one day in prison, the extra day to allow “good time.”

    Defense: We propose she be allowed to fly back to Ghana as soon as she is released, with no ICE detention.

    AUSA: We consent.

    What is ICE?

    ICE stands for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement. It essentially is the agency that makes a custody determination.

  • Hajia4Reall to be sentenced today over internet scam

    Hajia4Reall to be sentenced today over internet scam

    Ghanaian musician and socialite Mona Faiz Montrage, popularly known as Hajia4Reall, is set to be sentenced today, June 28, 2024, in a US court for internet fraud charges to which she has pleaded guilty.

    Her legal team has requested a three-month sentence, emphasizing her role as a single mother and the critical need for her presence in her child’s life.

    However, the US Attorney’s Office has argued for the full 37-month term, stating that a reduced sentence would be unfair and insufficient as a deterrent.

    Hajia4Reall revealed that she was introduced to internet fraud by the father of her daughter, Loveman Allison, whom she met and fell in love with in 2015 in the United States.

    She claimed that Allison involved her in fraudulent activities and has since been an irresponsible father.

    Hajia4Reall has been charged with involvement in a $2 million romance scam, including wire fraud, money laundering conspiracy, and receipt of stolen money.

    Reports indicate she was extradited from the United Kingdom to the United States for these charges.

    One of her victims allegedly sent her $89,000, which she claimed was to help fund her father’s farm.

    The charges carry significant prison terms, including up to 10 years for receipt of stolen money and five years for conspiracy to receive stolen cash.

  • I believe no Ghanaian musician can single-handedly fill the 02 arena – Alordia

    I believe no Ghanaian musician can single-handedly fill the 02 arena – Alordia

    Prominent Ghanaian event and music promoter, Nii Ofori Tackie popularly known as Alordia based in the United Kingdom, has firmly stated that no Ghanaian musician can singlehandedly fill the O2 Arena.

    In an interview with Amansan Krakye, reported by MyNewsGh.com, Alordia noted that even Nigerian artists, who manage to fill the O2 Arena in London, do so through collaborative efforts rather than alone.

    “When Nigerian artists fill the O2 Arena, it’s not solely the effort of one artist but rather a collective endeavor,” he explained.

    “Even when someone like Davido fills the O2 Arena, you’ll see Ghanaian artists like Stonebwoy and King Promise supporting him.”

    Alordia emphasized the importance of recognizing the collaborative nature of these achievements: “We often focus on the headline artist, but they receive support from other artists as well. So, if we aim to fill the O2 Arena, it cannot be the endeavor of just one artist.”

    He also commented on Medikal’s recent performance at the O2 Indigo, highlighting the collective effort of Ghanaian musicians in making the event a success.

    “Shatta Wale, Sarkodie, Efya, and other Ghanaian musicians traveled to London to support Medikal at the O2 Indigo, making the show incredibly dynamic and exciting,” he concluded.

  • ‘I love Ayra Starr, I’m obsessed with her authenticity’- Tiwa Savage

    ‘I love Ayra Starr, I’m obsessed with her authenticity’- Tiwa Savage

    Nigerian singer Tiwa Savage in a recent interview with Kiss FM in the United Kingdom (UK) , expressed her deep admiration for fellow artiste Ayra Starr, particularly applauding Starr’s fearless approach to fashion.

    Savage didn’t hold back in her praise, calling herself “obsessed” with the young Afrobeats sensation and commending her talent and authenticity.

    She also addressed the criticism Starr has faced for her fashion choices, encouraging her to embrace her style even more.

    Reflecting on her own experiences with criticism early in her career, Savage empathized with Starr’s journey, noting, “It makes me emotional because when I started, I got criticized a lot for dressing too sexy and my lyrics being too risky.”

    Despite the backlash, Savage firmly stood in support of Starr, suggesting that she should ignore the critics and even daring her to make her skirts even shorter.

    She emphasized Starr’s resilience and exceptional talent, affirming, “She looks amazing, she’s extremely talented. Yeah, she’s a star.”

    The story highlights the camaraderie and support within the Nigerian music industry and celebrates Ayra Starr’s unwavering confidence and success on the global stage.

  • UK authorities order Jamaican gov’t to cover Vybz Kartel’s legal fees after successful murder conviction appeal

    UK authorities order Jamaican gov’t to cover Vybz Kartel’s legal fees after successful murder conviction appeal

    Renowned dancehall star Vybz Kartel, real name Adidja Azim Palmer, has won a significant legal battle as the United Kingdom authorities have directed the Jamaican government to cover his legal expenses.

    Kartel, known as the “Worl’ Boss,” had been serving a life sentence since his 2014 conviction for the murder of Clive “Lizard” Williams, a former associate.

    In 2021, Kartel’s lawyer filed an appeal at the Privy Council in the United Kingdom (UK), presenting new evidence.

    This appeal led to a recent order dated April 10, 2024, signed by a clerk of the Privy Council.

    “His Majesty was pleased by and with the advice of His Privy Council to approve the report and to order that those charged with administering the Government of Jamaica and all others whom it may concern are to ensure that it is punctually observed and obeyed,” the order, dated April 10, 2024, and signed by a clerk of the Privy Council, stated.

    The order mandates the Jamaican government to pay not only Kartel’s legal costs but also those of three other defendants convicted in the same murder case.

    The order outlines key points: the appeal is allowed, convictions are to be quashed due to juror misconduct, the case should return to the Court of Appeal for a decision on a potential retrial, and the Jamaican government must cover the appellants’ costs.

    “The case should be remitted to the Court of Appeal to decide whether to order a re-trial as soon as reasonably practicable,” the third point stated. “The Respondent should pay the Appellants’ costs, the amount of those costs to be assessed if not agreed,” the fourth point stated.

    This development sets the stage for a crucial Court of Appeal session on June 10, where the fate of Kartel and his co-defendants will be decided – whether they will face a retrial or be released.

  • Scholarships bonanza Part 3: How some are struggling while others received double double

    Scholarships bonanza Part 3: How some are struggling while others received double double

    Roberta Nti (not her real name) thought she had it all figured out financially when she was awarded a scholarship to study for a Master’s Degree in the United Kingdom (UK).

    She arrived at the university in London full of hope. The receipt of her first stipend of about 2,000 pounds from the Scholarship Secretariat helped her to settle in a bit. She was told she would be receiving more of such stipends every quarter. But that was it. The first was the last.

    “I thought I was going to focus only on my studies, have my stipend regularly to take care of my needs, but now it’s hell,” Roberta said.

    “The stress I had to endure before my fees were paid, it took the school shutting me out of their system and sending threatening messages to report me to the Home Office before the Scholarship Secretariat paid [my fees].”

    Having paid her fees, the Scholarship Secretariat stopped providing for her living expenses in a city as expensive as London.  With no stipends to cater for her needs, she started working as a cleaner, under what she described as “difficult conditions.”

    She earned about 800 pounds per month from the cleaning job. But she spent much of this (680 pounds) on rent. She had to fall on remittances from her parents back home and loans from her friends to survive.

    Now Roberta owes more than 5,000 pounds. As she struggles to pay off her debts, she is acutely aware that other government of Ghana scholarship beneficiaries in the UK have had it worse.

    “A girl was nearly raped because she went living with a male friend because she didn’t have money to rent because the stipend was not coming,” she told The Fourth Estate.

    “People are suffering. Students are depressed, some have been chased out of their accommodations and have been locked out of their school portals. But who is going to hear us?”

    While Roberta and her peers continue to bear the mental torture of unpaid fees and stipends, The Fourth Estate has found that some of their compatriots received multiple scholarships from the Scholarship Secretariat.

    After receiving numerous complaints from scholarship applicants, The Fourth Estate asked in March 2021 for data from the Scholarship Secretariat on those who had been awarded scholarships in 2019 and 2020.

    The Secretariat initially refused to grant the request, claiming the data was confidential. But the Right to Information (RTI) Commission ordered that personal information should be redacted and the data released. The Commission based its ruling on the premise that the scholarships were funded with public money.

    The Scholarship Secretariat’s response to the RTI request showed that it had spent GHS237.5 million and GHS200 million in 2019 and 2020, respectively, on both foreign and local scholarships.

    The Scholarship Secretariat, an agency under the Office of the President, was established in 1960 with the primary purpose of providing local and foreign scholarships to academically gifted but financially needy students. Following the country’s liberation from colonial rule, the Nkrumah administration set up scholarship programmes as a means to incentivise and attract top talents to bolster the nation’s workforce by assisting citizens who lacked the financial means to fund their education.

    A major source of funding for the Scholarship Secretariat is the Ghana Education Trust Fund (GETFund). Section 2.2(b) of the GETFund Act requires the Scholarship Secretariat to allocate funds to support “gifted but needy students for studies in second cycle and accredited tertiary institutions in Ghana.”

    In recent years, however, the secretariat has been criticised for allegedly perpetuating a system of patronage, often overlooking deserving applicants in favour of those with political and high society connections.

    For the underprivileged Ghanaians who do secure scholarships, many, like Roberta , are left stranded and frustrated in foreign lands. Unable to fend for themselves, they are often compelled to take on low-paying jobs to be able to fend for themselves as they abandon the courses they travelled abroad for.

    The situation is, however, different for the privileged and well-connected. Their fees get paid on time and some even go on to secure more government of Ghana scholarships, while their underprivileged compatriots struggle – either for a first scholarship or for their tuition and stipends to be paid on time to enable them focus on their studies.

    Multiple scholarships

    The data we received from the Scholarship Secretariat showed that at least 17 people received multiple scholarships which allowed them to pursue different programmes in two consecutive years or in a single year.

    At least 10 individuals received multiple scholarships in consecutive years (2019 and 2020), with amounts ranging from GBP13,250 to GBP55,000 per school to cover tuition and living expenses. Seven others were granted two different scholarships within the same year, either in different countries or in the same country.

    The Fourth Estate confirmed that a beneficiary, Sidney Osei-Owusu, for instance, received GBP28,330 in 2019 to cover his living expenses and tuition for an MSc degree in Management at the Brunel University in London. In 2020, the secretariat again paid GBP15,750 for his MBA in Business Administration at the University of the West of England.

    Another beneficiary, Kieve Kuuku Kittoe, received USD38,475 for an MA in Design Management at Savanna College in the United States in 2019. The following year, Mr Kittoe also received GBP14,500 for an MA in Visual Communication at the University of Derby in the UK.

    When The Fourth Estate pointed out concerns about double scholarships to some beneficiaries while other deserving applicants were denied, Dr Kingsley Agyemang, the Registrar of the Scholarship Secretariat, claimed that those who received the double scholarships pursued complementary courses. He insisted that the number of such double beneficiaries was insignificant.

    Dr Agyemang also attributed some of the multiple scholarships to “administrative error” on the part of some staff of the secretariat who are accustomed to manual record-keeping.

    However, Prof Peter Quartey, the Director of the Institute of Statistical Social and Economic Research (ISSER) noted that such multiple awards could only be justified if they were for courses that could not be undertaken in Ghana or for specialties in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, with stringent requirements for beneficiaries to return to the country to pass on their knowledge and skills.

    Scholarship beneficiaries are not returning

    Roberta Nti, who went to study in the UK on a government of Ghana scholarship, ended up fending for herself in the last one year. She remains in the UK, broke and in debt. She told The Fourth Estate that she cannot afford a plane ticket and so she has no immediate plans of returning to Ghana after graduating in January.

    She hopes to get a post-study permit which would allow her to work and pay off debts before she thinks about what next to do with her life.

    “It is difficult for my parents. They have to change money from cedis to pounds in these difficult times. My mum is complaining about how difficult things are back home,” she said.

    There are many Ghana government scholarship beneficiaries in several western nations like Roberta. It is hard to tell how many of them are refusing to return because of financial difficulties and how many have just decided that after using government support to gain some foothold in a developed country, Ghana is no longer good for them.

    But from our data analysis, there are at least 104 government scholarship beneficiaries (from 2019 and 2020) who have not returned to Ghana after their studies abroad, although they had signed bonds to do so. Some of these beneficiaries have drifted from their fields of study into other areas of work.

    Andrew Asafo-Agyei graduated from the University of Brunel in 2020 with an MA in International Relations. His education cost the Ghanaian taxpayer GBP29,030 in government scholarship funding.  But he is now working in the United Kingdom as mental health officer.

    With a GBP28,000 scholarship from the Scholarship Secretariat, Barima Kwame Adu Gyimah graduated from the University of Buckingham with a BA in Communications, Media, and Journalism in 2022. He currently serves as a retention sales executive in the UK.

    Similarly, Michael Yiadom Adarkwa, who received GBP13,260 in state sponsorship and completed his studies at the Solent University in the UK in 2021, now works as an assistant residence manager. He has an MA in Public Relations and Multimedia Communications.

    We also found that the Scholarship Secretariat does not have systems in place to ensure that beneficiaries return to Ghana.

    Dr Agyemang told The Fourth Estate that while some of the beneficiaries had the blessings of the Secretariat because they had secured jobs which could give them valuable work experience, others simply have refused to return.

    He admitted that enforcement is a major challenge but was quick to add that even those beneficiaries who have failed to return are contributing to the Ghanaian economy with their remittances.

    However, Prof Quartey insists that there’s a way to compel beneficiaries to return as the rationale for awarding government scholarships is to train people to pass on their knowledge and skills to other Ghanaians.
    He said the University of Ghana has a system which makes guarantors pay financial penalties for scholarship beneficiaries who fail to return home.

    Source: The Fourth Estate

    DISCLAIMER: TIGPost.co will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana.

  • Scholarships bonanza: The powerful grab as double scholarships flow

    Scholarships bonanza: The powerful grab as double scholarships flow

    She was born to a farmer and a petty trader. Money was always hard to come by. However, her disadvantaged background was no hindrance to her quest for academic excellence. After obtaining an undergraduate degree with First-Class honours, Franklina Mensah (not her real name) knew better than to rest on her laurels.

    The next step on her academic journey required funding she was well aware her parents could not afford. But with her stellar academic achievements, she was hopeful that support would not be difficult to come by. At least that was what Franklina thought when she submitted her application to the government-run Scholarship Secretariat, seeking funding for a master’s degree programme in the United Kingdom (UK).

    If the scholarship was going to be awarded on merit, she felt she stood a very good chance. Her sense of optimism soared higher when she received plaudits from the interview panel, who were full of praise for her excellent proposal and academic credentials.

    But optimism gradually fizzled into heartbreak.

    Several weeks had gone by since the interview. She should be preparing to travel to the UK to start her new academic journey. But she hadn’t heard from the Scholarship Secretariat. She was getting anxious and the only way to ease her anxiety was to go to the Secretariat to find out what could be causing the delay. Maybe some clerical or administrative error was to blame. At the offices of the Scholarship Secretariat, Franklina met an official whose name she couldn’t recall. What ensued left her stunned.

    “I mentioned my name, and he said, ‘Your name was on the list but there is so much protocol they had to take people out.’”

    The official claimed requests come from highly influential offices including that of the President, Parliament and ministers “for this same scholarship.”

    “You should understand that people will have to go off the list,” he told Frankina.

    In other words, she had been shortlisted for the scholarship but a protocol list from some higher office or authority had forced her name to be taken off the shortlist.

    “I was dumbfounded,” Franklina told The Fourth Estate.

    As luck would have it, however, or perhaps as a testament to her perseverance and the quality of her graduate proposal, she obtained a different scholarship which enabled her to pursue her studies that same year – and in the UK as planned.

    Franklina’s story is just an example of how what is supposed to be a merit-based scholarship scheme to help brilliant but needy Ghanaians achieve their academic dreams has gradually and cruelly been rigged in favour of those who are connected to the political elite.

    Request for scholarship data

    After hearing numerous complaints from people like Franklina, The Fourth Estate asked in March 2021 for data from the Scholarship Secretariat on those who have been awarded scholarships in 2019 and 2020.

    The secretariat initially refused to grant the request, claiming the data was confidential. But the Right to Information (RTI) Commission ordered that personal information should be redacted and the data released. The Commission based its ruling on the premise that the scholarships were funded with public money.

    The Scholarship Secretariat’s response to the RTI request showed that it had spent GHS237.5 million and GHS200 million in 2019 and 2020, respectively, covering both foreign and local scholarships.

    The Scholarship Secretariat, an agency under the Office of the President, was established in 1960 with the primary purpose of providing local and foreign scholarships to academically gifted but financially needy students. Following the country’s liberation from colonial rule, the Nkrumah administration set up scholarship programmes as a means to incentivise and attract top talents to bolster the nation’s workforce by assisting citizens who lacked the financial means to fund their education.

    In recent years, however, the secretariat has faced criticism for allegedly perpetuating patronage, often overlooking deserving applicants in favour of those with political and high society connections.

    A major source of funding for the Scholarship Secretariat is GETFund. Section 2.2(b) of the GETFund Act requires the Scholarship Secretariat to allocate funds to support “gifted but needy students for studies in second cycle and accredited tertiary institutions in Ghana.”

    The Secretariat administers bilateral scholarships, funded by foreign countries, and non-bilateral scholarships, which are financed by the Ghanaian taxpayer. Non-bilateral scholarships include funding for both local and foreign categories.

    Scholarship for the well-connected and not-so needy

     The Fourth Estate asked for data covering 2019-2020 because the Auditor-General had released a report (covering 2009-2018) in which it highlighted how deserving but financially disadvantaged students were sidelined, while scholarships were granted to the well-connected.

    Our investigations revealed a similar trend—the funneling of scholarship funds to influential people as well as children, relatives and associates of powerful figures.

    The Fourth Estate conducted an analysis of the data specifically focusing on scholarships funded by the government of Ghana. This analysis included a breakdown of the expenditures on scholarship recipients in various countries, details of the programmes pursued by the beneficiaries and their backgrounds.

    From our analysis, in 2019-2020, the Scholarship Secretariat spent at least 291,480 pounds sterling (GBP), 146,502 US dollars (USD) and 7,685 Canadian dollars (CAD) respectively on influential individuals and the associates of the political elite.

    Notably, the founder and chief executive of a private hospital in Accra who recently contested and lost in the NPP parliamentary primaries in the Ashanti Region received USD50,031 for his master’s in public administration at Harvard University in the United States.

    An NPP constituency executive from the Eastern Region was awarded multiple scholarships for master’s programmes, totaling GBP57,210.

    An NPP youth activists and a management member of the National Service Scheme (NSS) funded her Master’s degree studies with a scholarship award worth GBP18,450.

    One of the most worrying details from the information we received concerned a special assistant to Second Lady, Samira Bawumia. GBP17,355 was paid for the special assistant to attend a university in the United Kingdom but he never stepped on campus and dropped out of the programme after attending only a few online classes from Ghana.

    There is also the case of the family member of President Nana Akufo-Addo and former Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta whose path to law school in the United Kingdom was cleared with a GBP16,740 scholarship.

    A UK branch executive of the NPP, who has been living in that country since 2008, also received GBP28,380 for a Master’s Programme in Law.

    Two top diplomats are also on the list of beneficiaries of a scholarship meant to empower the underprivileged, according to information on the Scholarship Secretariat’s own website.

    Children of the political & social elite

    The data revealed that it wasn’t just the politically connected who obtain government scholarships. Children of Ghana’s political and social elite also received scholarships, leveraging influence and privilege to access educational opportunities intended for brilliant but needy Ghanaians.

    For example, the daughter of a former Inspector General of Police received GBP27,480 for a first-degree programme in the United Kingdom.

    In that same year, the daughter of prominent actress received USD41,026 for a pre-medicine programme in the United States.

    The children of two former Members of Parliament received GBP19,130 and USD36,675 for a first degree in law and a pre-medicine programme respectively.

    The daughter of a former national chairman of the NPP, who is a lawyer, got funding of almost GBP6,000 to qualify to practice as a lawyer in England and Wales.

    The identities of these beneficiaries would be revealed in subsequent publications.

    Multiple scholarships

     Data from the Scholarship Secretariat showed that at least 27 people received multiple scholarships which allowed them to pursue different programmes in two consecutive years or different programmes in a single year. This means while some needy students were struggling to secure a scholarship to fund one programme, others received funding for two different programmes.

    At least 13 individuals received multiple scholarships in consecutive years (2019 and 2020), with amounts ranging from GBP13,250 to GBP55,000 per school to cover tuition and living expenses. 14 others were granted two different scholarships within the same year, either in different countries or in the same country.

    The Fourth Estate confirmed that one beneficiary received GBP28,330 in 2019 to cover his living expenses and tuition for an MSc degree Management at the Brunel University in London. In 2020, the state again paid GBP15,750 for his MBA in Business Administration at the University of the West of England.

    Another beneficiary received USD38,475 for an MA in Design Management at Savanna College in the United States in 2019. In the following year, the same person received GBP14,500 for an MA in Visual Communication at the University of Derby in the UK.

    Discrepancies in criteria and guidelines

     The GETFund Act, which makes funding available to the Scholarship Secretariat, explicitly stipulates that government scholarships are meant to support brilliant but needy Ghanaian students.

    The Registrar of the Scholarship Secretariat, Dr Kingsley Agyemang, insists that this provision merely means that the primary criteria for receiving a scholarship are for the applicant to have a Ghanaian citizenship and an admission offer to a local or foreign university. The award of the scholarship has nothing to do with need, he claims.

    While rejecting suggestions that scholarships are being wantonly awarded to those who are well-connected to the political and social elite, Dr Agyeman implied that recommendations from powerful persons and offices sometimes influence the award of scholarships.

    I have journalists and the media making recommendations for people. I also do know that we have chiefs and the clergy making recommendations for people. I also do know that I have politicians on both sides also making recommendations for people they believe deserve an award,” he said.

    “We live in a society where we are somehow connected in so many ways and it becomes difficult when we want to separate these little interactions.”

    Despite Mr Agyeman’s insistence on the existence of selection guidelines, the Scholarship Secretariat failed to provide any document with such guidelines to The Fourth Estate. Repeated calls and Whatsapp messages requesting for the guidelines went unanswered.

    Dr Clement Apaak, the deputy minority spokesperson on education, insists that using any criteria other than “brilliant but needy” to award scholarships, defeats the purpose of setting up the Scholarship Secretariat.

    “When we bring in exclusive groups as being conduits through which scholarships can be given, then we are subjecting the process to abuse,” he said.

    Prof Peter Quartey, the Director of Institute of Statistical Social and Economic Research (ISSER), agreed with Dr Apaak and noted that relying on recommendations to assess need is not good enough.

    “For the politically-exposed people, they are Ghanaians. They pay taxes. They should meet the minimum standards that are set and they should all be part of the process,” he said.

    “If we have an independent committee or board that assesses every application, they will all be given equal opportunity. When politically-exposed persons want to apply, they can apply – except when there is influence and they are the ones who benefit most.”

    Dr Apaak, however, insists that influential or politically exposed persons and their close relatives should not be eligible to apply for government scholarships.

    He asserted that it was not for nothing that tax laws are designed to positively discriminate in favour of the poor and added that the needy also deserve their fair share of opportunities offered by the state.

    He described the offering of scholarship to influential people, children of the affluent and their associates as a form of greed. This, he said, has the tendency to widen the inequality gap between the rich and the poor in society.

    “It is in their own interest not to continue to be greedy and selfish, where they can afford to educate their wards and yet they choose to let their wards benefit from scholarship that should be going to the wards of the less fortunate in society,” Dr Apaak said.

    “Society ought to be designed in a way that [we] would always sacrifice collectively to bring up those who are down.”

     Multiple scholarships

    When The Fourth Estate pointed out concerns about double scholarships to some beneficiaries while other deserving applicants were rejected, Dr Agyemang claimed that those who received the double scholarships pursued complementary courses. He insisted that the number of such double beneficiaries was insignificant.

    Dr Agyemang also attributed some of the multiple scholarships to “administrative error” on the part of some staff of the secretariat who are accustomed to manual record-keeping.

    However, Prof Quartey of ISSER noted that such multiple awards could only be justified if they were for courses that could not be undertaken in Ghana or for specialties in science, technology, engineering and technology, with stringent requirements for beneficiaries to return to the country to pass on their knowledge and skills.

    Dr Apaak, on the other hand, described the multiple scholarship awards as unfortunate as they showed the insensitivity of the Scholarship Secretariat.

    DISCLAIMER: TIGPost.co will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana.



  • I have struggled in life; I was homeless, stole food items – Sonnie Badu

    I have struggled in life; I was homeless, stole food items – Sonnie Badu

    Renowned gospel musician Sonnie Badu has opened up about the challenges he faced during his initial visit to the United Kingdom, revealing a harrowing tale of homelessness and despair.

    Badu recounted how he travelled to the UK at the invitation of a pastor to support God’s work, only to find himself abandoned and destitute after being thrown out of the pastor’s home.

    Speaking to a church congregation, Badu described the hardships he endured, including hunger and sleeping in a car or on the streets of London in freezing weather conditions.

    “I have struggled in life. I was homeless in London. I slept in one car for a while. Sometimes I have to walk in the cold for five hours at night. At some point, I would wait for people to leave home then I would steal some food items from their fridge. I was finding it difficult to feed,” Badu shared.

    Despite his suffering, Badu maintained his faith in God, questioning his circumstances but never losing hope.

    He emphasised that these trials served as inspiration for many of his songs.

    “So, I told God is this how he is going to watch me suffer. Can he not bless me with just a song to change my fortunes? Is this how I am going to sing for pastors to use me anyhow? But if God remembers you, he as remembered you. I never lost faith in him,” Badu stated in a video posted by an Instagram account with username @ thosecalledcelebss.

    Sonnie Badu indicated that all these life struggles are the inspirations behind most of his songs.

    The ‘Baba’ hitmaker’s story serves as a testament to resilience and perseverance in the face of adversity, resonating with those who have faced similar struggles.

  • Prince William “very worried” about rising discrimination in United Kingdom

    Prince William “very worried” about rising discrimination in United Kingdom

    The Duke of Cambridge, Prince William, expressed his concern about the rise in antisemitism during his visit to a London synagogue.This was his first public appearance after missing a big royal event.

    A week after a royal prince asked for the fighting to stop in Gaza, saying too many people had been killed, William met with young ambassadors from the Holocaust Educational Trust. They are working to stop hate and attacks on the Jewish community in Britain.

    “We are both very worried about the increase in antisemitism that you mentioned this morning. I am sorry if any of you have had to deal with that,” the prince said. “I’m here today to tell you that there are people who care and are willing to listen. ”

    The prince visited a synagogue and met Holocaust survivors and Jewish students. He listened to them talk about how there was a lot of hatred towards Jewish people, including death threats and attacks. The prince was wearing a traditional Jewish cap called a kippah during his visit.

    On Wednesday, the British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said that he will give 54 million pounds (US$68 million) to help keep Jewish communities safe. This is because there were a lot of antisemitic incidents in Britain last year, more than ever before.

    Last week, Prince William made a rare speech about the Gaza conflict, asking for peace and for Hamas to release all hostages. This was surprising because usually, royal family members do not get involved in political issues. It was in the news all over the world.

    But after being the first senior British royal to visit Israel and Palestinian territory in 2018, he has been interested in the region and wanted to talk about the suffering it has caused. His office said that.

    Rumors about a missing prince.

    He didn’t go to a memorial service for his godfather because of a personal issue. People on social media are talking a lot about it. His wife Catherine was with him when he made a public appearance afterwards.

    The 41-year-old just started working again after his wife had surgery last month. His father, King Charles, is also getting treatment for cancer.

    Sources from the palace said that William wasn’t at the memorial service because of his father’s illness. Catherine, who hasn’t been seen in public since Christmas, is still doing well.

    The British royals usually keep their health problems private, but some experts say their issues are making people worried.

    “Bad things always happen in groups of three, like the saying goes. ” “A king with cancer, a princess with a serious illness, and a missing prince have all made people worried and afraid,” Richard Kay wrote in the Daily Mail newspaper. “A quick look at all the rumors on social media should convince even the most stubborn royal assistants that when there’s no information about a public figure, people will make up rumors. ”

    In the absence of important people, Charles’ wife, Queen Camilla, has been in charge of the family. She met with Ukraine’s first lady, Olena Zelenska, to thank her for King’s message of support during the conflict with Russia.

  • Efya set to hold first solo concert in UK

    Efya set to hold first solo concert in UK

    Award-winning singer Jane Fara Fauzzier Afia Boafowaa Yahaya Awindor known popularly as Efya is gearing up for her inaugural solo concert in the United Kingdom, marking her triumphant return to the music scene.

    Hosted by Sleeky Promotions, the concert is scheduled to take place on March 16, 2024, at the renowned venue, The Brickhouse.

    Known for her chart-topping hits such as “Best In Me,” “Little Things,” “Jorley,” “Forgetting Me,” “Super Super,” “Mamee,” and “Ankwadobi,” Efya promises to deliver an unforgettable musical experience for concert-goers.

    Sharing the exciting news on her Instagram page, Efya expressed her anticipation,asserting, “A comeback of another great experience in the UK.”

    The Brickhouse, praised for its spacious and vibrant atmosphere, is expected to provide the perfect backdrop for an evening filled with soulful melodies and infectious rhythms.

    Don’t miss out on this extraordinary event as Efya takes centre stage for a night of musical enchantment.

    See post below:

  • Camido, King Promise woo crowd at MOBO awards (video)

    Camido, King Promise woo crowd at MOBO awards (video)

    Ghanaian music sensations Camidoh and King Promise left an indelible mark on the prestigious MOBO Awards in the United Kingdom on February 7, 2024, captivating the audience with their sensational joint performance.

    The dynamic duo, celebrated as top Afrobeat exports from Ghana, stole the spotlight with a mesmerizing showcase, featuring hit collaborations like ‘Sugarcane’ and ‘Terminator.’

    The electrifying stage presence of Camidoh and King Promise, marked by infectious smiles, dynamic dance energy, and seamless chemistry, had the crowd in awe.

    Their stellar vocals, combined with the irresistible beats of their songs, kept the audience dancing and singing along throughout the unforgettable set.

    As ambassadors of Ghanaian Afrobeat music, Camidoh and King Promise not only wowed the MOBO Awards audience but also showcased the rich musical heritage of their country to the world, solidifying their status as prominent figures in the global music scene.

    Watch video here:

  • UK to return Asante King’s gold crown they stole 150 years ago to Ghana

    UK to return Asante King’s gold crown they stole 150 years ago to Ghana

    The UK is preparing to repatriate notable Asante artifacts, known as the “Crown Jewels,” to Ghana, marking a significant move 150 years after their looting from the Asante king’s court during 19th-Century conflicts, as reported by the BBC.

    Under long-term agreements, the Victoria & Albert Museum (V&A) and the British Museum will lend 32 items, including a gold peace pipe.

    While some hail this as a positive stride in cultural collaboration, concerns linger regarding the consequences of such loans and the acknowledgment of UK ownership.

    These artifacts, symbolic of the essence of the Asante nation, will find a new home at the Manhyia Palace Museum, commemorating a pivotal moment on the anniversary of their initial plundering.

    Though the return is not permanent, it signifies a starting point for reconciliation and remembrance. The loans seek to navigate legal constraints while addressing the delicate matter of contested cultural heritage.

  • More than 16k Ghanaian teachers applied to UK Department of Education for jobs

    More than 16k Ghanaian teachers applied to UK Department of Education for jobs

    It appears the exodus of workers in pursuit of better opportunities in other countries is no longer confined to the health sector as it has now permeated into the education sector.

    According to the Registrar, National Teaching Council, Dr Christian Addai-Poku, over 16,000 Ghanaian teachers applied for positions with the Department of Education in the United Kingdom (UK) in 2023. 

    The Registrar reported that as of June 13, 2023, around 10,000 applicants possessing Ghana Teacher Licences were certified to work in the UK, eliminating the need for additional assessment by the UK government.

    Speaking on the alarming trend, Director of the Institute for Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER),  Professor Peter Quartey, urged the Ghanaian government to create more job opportunities for teachers to reduce the attrition rate.

    He said most teachers who sought greener pastures did so because of unemployment, low wages, and poor working conditions, and he called on the authorities to address the issues and ensure improvement in learning outcomes.

    Speaking in an interview, the Professor said that though the country could not stop migration, there was a need to manage the situation.

    “If the country has excess teachers, then it can export, but in a coordinated manner to maximise the benefits for the country,” he said.

    Prof Quartey said the government could institute measures and set a quota for teachers to migrate and pay remittances to the country as part of an agreement to defray the training cost.

    He said a country like the Philippines had done that not only in the teaching space but the health sector and had received foreign inflows.

  • UAE to host world’s largest annual climate summit

    UAE to host world’s largest annual climate summit

    In September, the environment minister of Zimbabwe gave control of a huge amount of land – almost 20% of the country – to a foreign company that is not well known. Blue Carbon was a recently started company that was small and led by a chief who was not new to running businesses. He was a royal from Dubai with a wealthy family known for ruling the city for a long time and having a lot of money from oil.

    The company Blue Carbon from Dubai has gotten a lot of land in Africa to protect forests from being cut down. This will stop a lot of CO2 from going into the air and causing global warming. The land they got is as big as the United Kingdom.

    Blue Carbon can use the conservation to make carbon credits. They can sell these credits to companies and governments. This helps to balance out the pollution caused by burning fossil fuels.

    Several agreements to protect forests in Zimbabwe, Zambia, Kenya, Liberia, and Tanzania were announced before the United Nations’ COP28 climate summit in December. The summit will be hosted by the United Arab Emirates.

    The UAE wants to use up all its oil in 50 years, even though scientists say we should stop using fossil fuels long before that.

    A person speaking for the company did not tell CNN if the company will sell the credits to the UAE. However, because the chairman of Blue Carbon is related to Dubai’s ruler, it is assumed by many experts that the credits will be sold to the UAE to help reduce its carbon footprint. They could also be sold to other countries and companies that rely on oil in the Gulf and other places. CNN asked the UAE government to comment.

    Blue Carbon did not tell CNN how big its projects are, how much money it has given out, or how many credits it wants to make. The deals are still in the early stages and have not been finished yet.

    The company said it will show its deals at a big meeting in Dubai as an example of how to trade carbon. The yearly climate summit is a meeting where leaders from almost 200 countries will gather to figure out how and when to reduce the use of fossil fuels. The UAE will use its COP28 presidency to work hard to make sure that carbon removal is included as a major solution to the climate crisis. This means taking carbon out of the air, not just from forests, but also from burning oil and gas, and then storing it underground.

    Climate supporters don’t like carbon removal and scientists don’t think it works well. They think it lets companies keep using fossil fuels and making money.

    The UAE stands to lose a lot of money. Last year, oil and gas made up about 30% of the country’s total economic output and 13% of the products it sells to other countries, as stated by the US Department of Commerce. More than 80 countries want to stop using fossil fuels, and renewable energy like wind and solar is becoming cheaper than oil and gas in many places. So, eventually, market forces will make oil and gas go away.

    If fossil fuel companies and lobbyists can persuade the world at COP28 to not depend too much on wind and solar power, and to keep extracting oil and gas.

    The UAE is getting a lot of criticism because Sultan Al Jaber, who is in charge of the country’s oil and gas company and is their international climate envoy, is leading the negotiations. Over 100 US Congress members and European Parliament members in May asked for Al Jaber to be removed as COP28 president.

    Al Jaber doesn’t think it’s a problem to have many jobs at once, he said in several interviews. ADNOC also said to CNN in an email that no one is better qualified to lead the talks. They mentioned his experience leading the nation’s renewable energy and oil and gas companies.

    Al Jaber believes that companies that produce gas, oil, or coal should be involved in talks about climate change to make sure that the shift to renewable energy really happens.

    Climate advocates don’t believe the argument because they think the fossil fuel industry has had enough time to take action on the issue, but hasn’t. Some companies that sell oil and gas were among the first to realize that their products were causing the Earth’s climate to change. About 40 years ago, they still made money from coal, oil, and gas.

    “I believe that ADNOC is using the UN climate negotiations to make people think they care about the environment, even though they are one of the biggest oil companies in the world,” said Jamie Henn, who runs a non-profit group called Fossil Free Media that wants to stop using fossil fuels. “From the beginning, the UAE wanted to host this COP to show that they and their oil and gas industry are working to be part of the solution to climate change. ”

    In 2020, the UAE produced about 0. 53% of the world’s CO2 emissions. Even though it has a small population of around 10 million people, it is the sixth-biggest polluter for every person. Even though the UAE has a small number of people, it was the seventh largest oil producer in the world in 2022.

    Henn thought it was silly that the talks were being controlled by fossil fuel companies.

    The international tobacco control negotiations are being controlled by Philip Morris, just like how they control things. Fortunately, the UN has rules that keep tobacco lobbyists out of the negotiations. “We need that at the COP. ” can be rewritten as “We need that at the conference of the parties. ”

    The COP, which meets in a different city every year, has never had so many obvious conflicts of interest. Al Jaber is leading efforts to address climate change and reduce use of fossil fuels. Blue Carbon is closely connected to the UAE’s leaders, making it hard to tell if they support carbon offsets or want to keep producing fossil fuels.

    In Dubai, at COP28, they will decide how to buy and sell carbon credits.

    When CNN asked Blue Carbon if they were planning to make more deals to reduce carbon in Africa, a company spokesperson said they would announce new initiatives at COP28. A source familiar with COP28’s agenda said the company plans to use the deals to encourage using carbon credits to help with climate change.

    Many countries have joined to work with Blue Carbon, and this is not a big surprise. The company that owns it, Global Carbon Investments, has promised to give $1. 5 billion to Zimbabwe as an advance payment for carbon credits. This is more money than the country spends on education and childcare put together, which are Zimbabwe’s largest national expenses.

    With not much money coming from rich to poor countries to deal with the climate crisis, carbon credit schemes offer a new way for countries with a lot of forests to make money.

    Destroying forests or letting them decay contributes to about 12% of the Earth’s temperature increase. They are important for the environment because they can take in carbon dioxide from the air.

    However, many people have criticized the idea of trading carbon credits for not cutting down forests. Some of the largest companies in the world that claim to reduce carbon emissions may be using methods that make their impact on fighting climate change seem bigger than it actually is.

    In November, Renat Heuberger, the CEO of South Pole, a company that trades carbon credits, resigned because it was found that they had exaggerated the environmental benefits of their Kariba forest project in Zimbabwe.

    We are happy when people spend money to save forests. “Conserving forests is not a quick fix solution,” said Julia Jones, a scientist at Bangor University in Wales.

    She said that we need to stop cutting down more forests and reduce emissions a lot. “Balancing the two without big investment in cutting emissions causes problems. ”

    Land ownership is also a problem. Sometimes, native people are forced to leave their land so that big companies can make money from it, even though the land used to be seen as worthless.

    According to the Forest Peoples Programme, more people are being forced to leave their homes in Kenya because the government is giving land for carbon credits.

    “Those who have power over Africa’s forests can make a lot of money, and it looks like big companies are trying to take over Africa’s forests,” said Justin Kenrick, a senior advisor at the Forest Peoples Programme, in an email to CNN. “At the same time, conservation efforts in Kenya continue to follow a flawed colonial strategy of removing the people who are most knowledgeable about how to protect their forests. ”

    No matter what happens at COP28, ADNOC, a company in the UAE that sells oil and gas, could benefit a lot. They might win big if they can show the world that they can provide the most energy. The “Minimum Emissions” slogan is a good way to help the environment, even as the earth gets hotter and scientists urge for quick cuts in using fossil fuels.

    A spokesperson from ADNOC did not say how many people would go to COP28 for the company, but said that the idea that the company would gain from the conference is wrong.

    ADNOC plans to increase the amount of oil they produce by 41% and the amount of gas they produce by 33% by the year 2030. This information comes from a study done by Global Witness, a non-profit organization that focuses on protecting the environment and human rights. This means that its greenhouse gas emissions have increased by 40%, according to Global Witness.

    Other oil companies like Shell and BP have different plans than ExxonMobil. Shell’s production is expected to stay the same, while BP plans to reduce their production by 25% by 2030. ADNOC wants to produce more than both companies by 2030.

    ADNOC is growing to become a big global oil company. It is buying oil and gas fields in other countries like Azerbaijan and partnering with BP to buy a part of Israel’s NewMed Energy to explore for gas in the eastern Mediterranean. It is also investing in projects related to things like solar and wind energy, as well as chemicals, the company told CNN.



    ADNOC can currently produce 800,000 metric tons of something each year. But it wants to make 3 more megatons each year from two new facilities that are not finished yet. Even if ADNOC builds the facilities, it will take them more than 340 years to capture all the planet-heating carbon they are expected to emit between 2023 and 2030. This includes emissions from their operations and the use of their oil and gas.

    ADNOC did not mention the calculation in its response to CNN. They only said their goal is to reach zero emissions by 2045 and they have put $15 billion towards this goal.

    Before this year, most people probably never heard of ADNOC. Patrick Galey from Global Witness told CNN that the company’s CEO is supposed to reduce emissions at COP28, but the more we learn about the company, the more different it seems.

    “ADNOC plans to keep making lots of oil for many years, and wants to become one of the top companies for making even more oil and gas. ”

    Surprisingly, COP28 could be where ADNOC becomes a big worldwide oil company.

  • 23-year-old Woman With Visual Impairment Becomes First Blind Lawyer in UK

    23-year-old Woman With Visual Impairment Becomes First Blind Lawyer in UK

    Jessika Inaba, a 23-year-old woman from Camden, North London, has become the first-ever blind lawyer of African descent in the United Kingdom. She has overcome obstacles and made history through her determination and resilience.

    Jessika started a 5-year law program at the University of London, despite people thinking her vision impairment would hold her back. She showed that her dreams weren’t limited by it.

    Jessika used Braille to read and understand everything. With the help of her friends and mentors, she successfully completed her entire course with a strong and steady determination.

    She began her journey to this important accomplishment in September 2017 when she started her fast-tracked law degree at the University of London. Two years later, she worked on getting a master’s degree and professional training at the same time. Eventually, she became qualified to practice law in the United Kingdom.

    Jessika is now part of a special group of pioneering women who are both blind and of African descent, and have become qualified barristers.

    This is even more incredible because Jessika fought against Bilateral Microphthalmia, which is a condition where the eyes are smaller than normal, and it made her unable to see at all.

    At different points along the way, she had times when she wasn’t sure, but her strong belief in herself pushed her to keep going.

    “I’ve always had faith in myself from the beginning. There’s nothing about me that makes this impossible,” Jessika stated. “I’m confident that I can excel in this job, and if more people like me receive training, it will become even easier,” she said.

    Unfortunately, Jessika faced prejudiced attitudes while she was studying. There were times when prison officials thought she was a family member visiting instead of a lawyer talking to a client.

    But Jessika is still determined and strong-willed, and she keeps motivating others by sharing her inspiring story of overcoming challenges.

  • King Charles III reflects on colonial history in Kenya to strengthen bilateral ties

    King Charles III reflects on colonial history in Kenya to strengthen bilateral ties

    King Charles III of the United Kingdom has articulated his intention to utilize his country’s colonial history in Kenya as a source of valuable lessons that could enhance bilateral ties.

    This move underscores how the historical context has played a significant role in shaping the relationship between the two nations.

    During a speech at a state banquet held in Nairobi in his and Queen Camilla’s honor, the British monarch refrained from issuing the apology demanded by activists and relatives of those who suffered injuries or fatalities during the colonial era.

    Nevertheless, he emphasized the importance of that historical period in guiding the future relationship between Kenya and the United Kingdom, expressing regret for some of the harsh incidents involving colonial governors.

    While contemporary Kenya-UK relations largely revolve around trade, investments, and security cooperation, King Charles acknowledged that learning from past mistakes can serve as a means to prevent future errors in forging “a partnership of equals.”

    “The wrongdoings of the past are a cause of the greatest sorrow and the deepest regret. There were abhorrent and unjustifiable acts of violence committed against Kenyans as they waged…a painful struggle for independence and sovereignty – and for that, there can be no excuse.

    “In coming back to Kenya, it matters greatly to me that I should deepen my own understanding of these wrongs, and that I meet some of those whose lives and communities were so grievously affected.”

    King Charles III, accompanied by his wife Queen Camilla, is currently on a state visit to Kenya. In the lead-up to the trip, he faced mounting pressure to issue an apology for the pre-independence actions of the British colonial government in suppressing Kenyan freedom fighters, which included instances of torture and killings. Additionally, there was pressure for him to acknowledge and commit to delivering justice to victims of misconduct by British soldiers still stationed in Kenya as part of a bilateral agreement.

    For instance, the Kenya Human Rights Commission had released an open letter on October 29, urging the King to “acknowledge its historical responsibilities and collaborate with Kenya” in addressing the calls for justice.

    However, during a dinner on Tuesday evening, King Charles adhered to London’s established position: expressing regret but not offering an apology.

    His host President William Ruto said the monarch had demonstrated “exemplary courage” even though he said a lot remains to be done to atone for the brutal era “in order to achieve full reparations.”

    Ruto said Kenya and the UK should not deny their checkered history but should not also be enslaved by it.

    “Neither can we go far into the future if we turn our backs on historical actions and omissions whose legacies encumber our present,” Ruto said.

    “I am optimistic that through the Kenya-UK partnership, we shall keep up our endeavour to inspire the change we hope for by making people and their well-being the fundamental consideration in our pursuit of trade and investment, defence and security, conservation and climate action, research, development and innovation as well as our work of designing a future that works for present generations and distant posterity.”

    Previously, in 2013, Britain expressed regret and provided approximately $24.3 million in compensation to a group of Mau Mau veterans who had endured brutality during the colonial Emergency period from 1952 to 1960.

    During his visit to Nairobi, King Charles emphasized that no amount of regret could alter the past. He stated, “But by addressing our history with honesty and openness, we can perhaps demonstrate the strength of our friendship today. And, in doing so, I hope we can continue to forge an ever-closer bond for the years to come.”

    Both parties have expressed their desire to move beyond historical dependencies and explore opportunities that benefit both sides.

    The monarch described the relationship as a “modern partnership of equals, confronting today’s challenges and exploring the many opportunities that we can jointly seize.” These challenges encompass issues like climate change and security.

    He also mentioned specific examples of cooperation, such as using the King’s Cross regeneration as a model for the development of Nairobi Railway City or learning from Kenya’s successful implementation of the Blue Economy for the benefit of local communities. King Charles expressed gratitude to those involved in the ongoing efforts to realize their shared aspirations.

    Earlier, King Charles and Queen Camilla visited Uhuru Gardens, where Kenya’s new museum of history was inaugurated. They had the opportunity to view statues of freedom fighters Dedan Kimathi and Mekatilili wa Menza.

    On Wednesday, they are scheduled to tour Karura Forest, an emblem of the environmental activism led by Kenya’s late hero, Wangari Maathai, who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004.

  • First Afghan flight from Pakistan lands in United Kingdom

    First Afghan flight from Pakistan lands in United Kingdom

    The first plane carrying Afghan refugees from Pakistan has arrived in the UK.

    The airplane departed from Pakistan with 132 individuals onboard, according to officials in the country who spoke to the BBC.

    Many people escaped from the Taliban in Afghanistan because they had worked with or for the UK government. These people are now in Pakistan and waiting to be moved to a new place.

    Some of them used to translate for the British Army and teach for the British Council.

    The UK government has arranged and hired 12 flights to bring people from Afghanistan to the UK by the end of December, as confirmed by the Civil Aviation Authority.

    All the refugees are either in the Afghan citizens resettlement scheme or Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy.

    They were told to go to Pakistan to get their visas, but charities say some people have been waiting there for over a year, and that many of their visas have now become invalid.

    Earlier this month, Pakistan announced that it intended to begin sending back people who are in the country illegally starting from 1 November.

    After the Taliban took over Afghanistan again in 2021, they said they would forgive and not punish people who helped the international forces. However, many Afghans still feel scared that they will get in trouble for what they did.

    Some people told the BBC that they are worried they have put themselves in more danger by following the UK’s instructions to leave Afghanistan.

    Qasim, a person using a fake name, was one of the people who helped the UK authorities.

    Before we left Afghanistan, our lives were in danger half of the time. “He said that they are in complete danger now. ”

    Pakistan has told 1. 7 million people from Afghanistan to leave the country.
    The UK is requesting assistance to relocate more Afghan people who had been employed by them.

    A document shared in court shows that the British authorities in Pakistan believe that people who are waiting for UK visas in Pakistan are likely to be sent back to their home country.

    According to information from the government, about 3,250 people, including men, women, and children, are currently staying in guest houses and hotels in the capital city of Pakistan, Islamabad.

    While they are there, they cannot work legally and their kids cannot go to school.

    A lot of people thought that when they first went to Pakistan, they would only have to wait there for a few weeks.

    Court documents revealed that many people had to wait longer to come to the UK and stay in hotels because Prime Minister Rishi Sunak stated that only in very rare situations could they be allowed to do so.

    Instead, they had to find a place to stay for a longer period of time before they could move to a new location. An email said that this plan should save the taxpayer money overall.

    The government has decided that people on relocation programmes will not have to find suitable housing before they move. The BBC has this information.

  • Royals from France and United Kingdom attend banquet at Versailles with  King Charles

    Royals from France and United Kingdom attend banquet at Versailles with King Charles

    The King and Queen were incredibly impressed and amazed by a grand feast to celebrate the conclusion of their first day visiting France.

    It has been half a year since we had to change our plans to visit Paris because there were big protests happening everywhere in the country.

    They arrived at Orly Airport today, and were welcomed by French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne and other diplomats.

    A special group of people were waiting to welcome them, and President Emmanuel Macron expressed his excitement online: “You came as a special person, and now you are returning as a very important and respected person. ” Hello, Your Majesty, welcome.

    Charles and Camilla met with Mr Macron, who is 45 years old, and his wife Brigitte, who is 70 years old, for a ceremony to remember something and lay a wreath at the Arc de Triomphe.

    The King gave Mr Macron a book with pictures of them together.

    Charles was asked to turn on a special flame that never goes out. It remembers the people who died in the First and Second World Wars.

    Then, everyone went to the Elysee Palace, which is where the president lives. Charles and Mr. Macron had a discussion there.

    King Charles mentioned the deceased Queen during his official visit speech given in French.

    The King also gave Mr Macron a whole set of Voltaire’s writings when he went to the Elysee Palace.

    In response, Mr. Macron gave the King a special golden coin with a picture of Charles on it, along with a book from France that had won a prize.

    Tonight, the royals are special guests at a fancy dinner in the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles.

    Charles and Mr Macron will speak to 160 guests, who are important people selected because they have helped improve the relationship between the UK and France.

    Tomorrow, Charles, who is the first British king, will speak in France’s senate chamber to senators and members of the national assembly.

    The king and queen will also meet famous athletes as France organizes the Rugby World Cup.
    In Bordeaux, both the UK and French military will come together to share how they are working together in defense.

    The royal couple’s tour was delayed until now because there were violent protests happening across the whole country last March.

    Protesters set Bordeaux’s town hall on fire shortly before the planned trip.

    They went to Germany instead.

  • Mary Moraa of Kenya wins world 800m gold

    Mary Moraa of Kenya wins world 800m gold

    On the final day of the World Athletics Championship in Budapest, Kenyan sprinter Mary Moraa won the gold in the women’s 800m final.

    As she leaped over the finish line, she punched the air.

    Keely Hodgkinson of the United Kingdom placed in second, just ahead of Moraa, and American athlete Athing Mu won bronze.

  • UK commits £210M to address Antimicrobial Resistance in Ghana, other nations

    UK commits £210M to address Antimicrobial Resistance in Ghana, other nations

    Ghana has been selected as one of the 25 nations to be granted £210 million in funding by the United Kingdom (UK) government. This funding is aimed at tackling the pressing challenge of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in the next three years.

    This substantial funding will be utilized through collaborative efforts between the UK Government and countries in Asia and Africa, aiming to combat AMR and mitigate the threat it poses both globally and to the UK.

    This landmark investment stands as the largest ever contribution to global AMR surveillance by any nation.

    The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office of the UK High Commission in Ghana released a statement confirming this initiative.

    The announcement coincides with the visit of the UK’s Health Secretary of State, Steve Barclay, to India for his inaugural G20 Health Ministers’ meeting.

    Allocated from the British Government’s aid budget, this funding will aid the activities of the Fleming Fund to address AMR in Asian and African countries, ultimately reducing the menace it presents to societies.

    This effort will fortify surveillance capabilities in around 25 nations that confront the highest levels of AMR risk and burden. These countries include Indonesia, Ghana, Kenya, and Papua New Guinea. Over 250 laboratories will be upgraded and equipped with cutting-edge technology.

    The funding will also incorporate new genome sequencing technology, facilitating the tracking of bacterial transmission across humans, animals, and the environment.

    The statement highlights, “It will also strengthen the international health workforce by supporting 20,000 training sessions for laboratory staff, pharmacists, and hospital personnel, and over 200 Fleming Fund scholarships to enhance expertise in microbiology, AMR policy, and One Health – which acknowledges the interrelation between humans, animals, and the environment.”

    Steve Barclay, the UK’s Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, emphasized the significance of addressing AMR, noting that the substantial funding would enable countries at highest risk to combat this issue, enhancing global safety.

    Antimicrobial resistance leads to the deaths of approximately 1.27 million people worldwide each year, as antibiotics and current treatments become ineffective against infections. The alarming statistic includes one in five deaths among children under five.

    The investment is also designed to support the UK-India Fleming Fund partnership, valued at up to £3 million. This partnership aims to accelerate collaboration on AMR surveillance within the health sectors of both nations and facilitate the realization of their shared roadmap for 2030.

    As part of his India visit, Steve Barclay will visit India’s National Centre for Disease Control, where joint efforts between the Indian Government and the Fleming Fund are targeting antimicrobial resistance.

    The visit will also involve a showcase of innovative health technology, promoting collaboration between UK and Indian artificial intelligence and digital health firms to further transform healthcare in both nations.

  • Greece offers free trips to Rhodes to individuals displaced by wildfires

    Greece offers free trips to Rhodes to individuals displaced by wildfires

    There has been compensation granted to the thousands of tourists who had to leave Rhodes due to destructive wildfires.

    In July, large portions of the Greek island were consumed by flames that raged for days, severely damaging hotels and residences.

    The inferno started on July 18 in the centre of Rhodes, but due to high winds, it quickly moved to the east and south shores, which are home to many beach resorts.

    Over 7,500 acres of land were burned, forcing more than 20,000 tourists and residents to hastily pack their bags and flee the depressing images.

    Rhodes entered a state of “extreme danger” emergency as a result of the wildfires and the 44C temperature spike.

    In the end, it meant that many individuals had their holidays cut short among the bloodshed.

    However, the Greek prime minister is now pleading with visitors to return the following year by offering them a free one-week stay.

    According to Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who spoke to ITV, “For all those whose vacation was cut short as a result of wildfires, the Greek government in collaboration with local authorities will offer one week of free holidays on Rhodes, next spring, next fall, so that we can ensure they come back to the island and enjoy its natural beauty.”

    According to him, 15% of Rhodes was impacted by the wildfires, and while things are now “back to normal,” the authorities “understand that it caused some inconvenience for visitors.”

    Ranch owner Lee Manning of the United Kingdom joined the volunteers helping to save animals as he drove through a wildfire that was threatening to consume his refuge.

    Shortly after flames approached within 300 metres of the gorgeous horseback riding facility he and his wife Katie maintain in the village of Gennadi, he sent an emotional video message.

    He stated in the video, wiping away tears, “Gennadi is in a really bad way; the locals have been amazing, and that’s island-wide; that’s not just Gennadi, that’s everywhere.”

    The locals are the only reason visitors and locals alike are safe on this island.

    They have been incredible, I’ve never seen anything like it, and right now there are soldiers risking their life for people’s homes they don’t even know

    The locals have suffered a disastrous knock-on impact as a result of the flames, which have destroyed livelihoods and businesses.

    In order to contain the fires and aid in the rescue of any trapped animals, firefighters and rescuers have worked nonstop.

    The actual extent of the destruction caused by the fires on the land was revealed by satellite photographs.

    Wildfires in the Mediterranean, according to Mr. Mitsotakis, are not uncommon, but climate change has made them more intense.

    In addition, according to a preliminary analysis of the effects of the flames, Greek officials said on Wednesday that 45 buildings had been damaged on the island.

    Greece’s economy, which recovered from a fiscal crisis in 2018, is primarily driven by tourism, and Rhodes, the ninth-largest island in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, is a well-liked vacation destination.

  • August to bring magnificent display of double-supermoons

    August to bring magnificent display of double-supermoons

    August will culminate with two massive, spectacular lunar eclipses as the moon approaches its closest point to Earth. A supermoon occurs when the moon appears full and is at this point in its orbit; this month, there will be two of them.

    According to calculations from retired NASA astronomer Fred Espenak, the first of the supermoons will peak at 2:32 p.m. ET on Tuesday, meaning lunar watchers in Europe, the United Kingdom, Africa, and the Middle East can see the orb glowing at its fullest in the night sky at a distance of about 222,158 miles (357,530 kilometres) from Earth. You may be sure that on August 1st evening, the moon will seem full for watchers in the United States. Due to their proximity, supermoons typically appear brighter and larger than regular full moons, however this difference isn’t always visible to the unaided eye.

    According to The Old Farmer’s Almanack, this week’s full moon is also known as the “sturgeon moon” since it happens around the time of year when indigenous populations discovered in the past that the giant freshwater fish were simple to catch in the Great Lakes. Looking towards the southeast after sunset on Tuesday is the best time to see the sturgeon supermoon from the United States.

    A full moon will then appear on August 30 at a distance of roughly 222,043 miles (357,344 km), making it an elusive super blue moon. This will be the closest full moon to our planet this year.

    Typically occurring only once every two and a half years, a blue moon is a second full moon that occurs inside the same calendar month. For instance, the most recent blue moon took place in October 2020.

    The almanack predicts that the super blue moon on August 30 will peak at 9:36 p.m. ET. If local weather permits, the celestial orb will also be visible on August 31st.

    However, despite its name, it won’t actually appear blue. According to Encyclopaedia Britannica, the phrase “blue moon” actually derives from a 16th-century idiom that meant something happened once in a blue moon.

    What exactly are a supermoon, blue moon, and full moon?

    A full moon occurs once a month when the near side of the moon is completely illuminated by the sun in the night sky.

    Supermoons are less frequent.

    The moon does not orbit Earth in a complete circle, which causes several lunar displays. Instead, the moon travels on an elliptical course that resembles an oval, bringing it closer to the Earth at specific times. According to NASA, the precise distance between Earth and the moon can vary by up to 26,222 miles (42,200 km).

    Supermoons happen when the moon is full and near or at its perigee, or closest point to Earth (in scientific jargon).

    According to the National Space Centre of the United Kingdom, this is what astronomers refer to as a “perigean full moon,” which can look up to 30% brighter and 14% larger than full moons that occur at the furthest point from Earth.

    Some claim that the term “supermoon” is overused because it can be used to describe full moons that don’t come at the closest point to Earth and don’t always stand out dramatically from regular full moons to the human eye.

    Supermoon isn’t an official astronomical term, but according to NASA, it “is used to describe a full Moon that comes within at least 90% of perigee.” These lunar occurrences are also frequent: Three or four supermoons normally occur each year.

    According to researcher Adam Block, an operations expert at the University of Arizona’s Steward Observatory in Tucson, the moon often appears greatest in the sky when it is close to the horizon, producing an optical illusion. And whether the moon is in supermoon territory has nothing to do with this phenomena.

    The illusion vanishes entirely if you spin around in the opposite direction and are flexible enough to bend over and stare between your legs at the moon upside down, according to Block.

    Although they are not extremely uncommon or physically distinctive, supermoons do have an influence on Earth. According to NASA, the Earth’s oceans may see higher tides as a result of the moon’s proximity.

    However, blue moons are less frequent. The phrase today usually refers to two full moons occurring in the same calendar month, however it originally referred to an additional full moon occurring during the same tropical year, or the time between two equinoxes.

    The August 30 full moon is particularly unique because not all blue moons are supermoons. According to Espenak’s research, the next time two supermoons coincide in the same month will be in January 2037.

    Sometimes, several lunar events coincide on the same night to produce a really unique sky-watching experience, as was the case on January 31, 2018, when the final full moon of the month was also a blood moon, or total lunar eclipse, in addition to being a blue moon and a supermoon. When the full moon acquires a reddish hue from Earth’s shadow, those occurrences take place.

  • Ghanaian man allegedly dies at UK airport upon arrival

    Ghanaian man allegedly dies at UK airport upon arrival

    An unnamed Ghanaian married man, who had left his home country in search of better opportunities abroad, has tragically been reported dead upon arrival.

    Hailing from Brong Ahafo in southern Ghana, he had completed all the necessary procedures to obtain a passport and a travel visa for the United Kingdom (UK).


    Reports indicate that he traveled with a student visa and was heading to the UK as a dependent.

    Passing through checks at Kotoka International Airport without any issues, he embarked on a long journey that eventually led him to Heathrow Airport.


    Upon arrival in the UK, after going through the customs and immigration process, with all his documents properly verified and stamped, he seemed poised to start a new life in this foreign land.

    However, fate had other plans, as he collapsed and passed away before he could even step past the airport’s exit doors.

    It’s important to note that he was in good health before his journey, as confirmed by reports.


    This shocking news has left many people bewildered, unable to comprehend how a physically fit individual could travel such a long distance without any assistance, only to meet such a tragic end.

    A friend of the deceased’s wife has shared the details surrounding this distressing incident in the video below.

  • Kojo Funds features Hajia4Real in new song

    Kojo Funds features Hajia4Real in new song

    A Ghanaian musician based in the United Kingdom, Kojo Funds, is poised to release a new banger featuring Ghanaian phenomenal talent, Mona Moutrage, well known in the entertainment business as Hajia4Real.

    The song will be released on Thursday, July 13, 2023.

    On Saturday, July 8, 2023, Kojo Funds shared a photo of himself and Hajia4real in a car with the caption “Be a good person and spread love”, “be you, not someone you’re not”.

    Following the claims of Hajia4Real’s $2 million romance fraud, the rapper wishes to encourage people to be themselves and to be optimistic in their pursuits.Hajia4Real, on the other hand, appears to be taking her music profession seriously and ensuring that she continues to make fresh and thrilling melodies for her following.

    Kojo Funds first gained international prominence with his track “Dun Talkin” two years ago and has been riding high ever since.

    The rapper from the United Kingdom is noted for using life-related lyrics and melodies in his music.

    He rose to prominence with his album “Golden Boy,” which included Giggs, Abra Cadabra, Bugzy Malone, Yxng Bane, RAYE, Kranium, Maleek Berry, and Masicka.

    Nonetheless, fans are eager to hear Hajia4Real’s debut song following her romance hoax.

    Kojo Funds conveys Ghanaian culture to the diasporas through his choice of words in order to foster unity among British and African artists.

  • King Charles attends church service commemorating Windrush’s 75th anniversary

    King Charles attends church service commemorating Windrush’s 75th anniversary

    At a church service honouring the ‘immeasurable’ contribution of the ‘Windrush pioneers’ to Britain, the King was joined by the young offspring of those immigrants.

    The 75th anniversary of the HMT Empire Windrush’s landing was commemorated with the event.

    In 1948, it brought Caribbean residents who heeded Britain’s plea for assistance in addressing post-war manpower shortages.

    Charles sat amid a group of 300 specially invited attendees, who also included students from several English schools, officials, and representatives of many charities and community initiatives.

    Reverend Rose Hudson-Wilkin, the Bishop of Dover, told the congregation at the service they had gathered at a time of particular ‘poignancy’ because it was a day of celebration and thanksgiving for the hardworking good citizens she refers to as the ‘Windrush pioneers’.

    She told the congregation: ‘They are pioneers who paved the way for generations who came after them, not merely to survive but to thrive.

    ‘The significant contributions made by them in the United Kingdom to the National Health Service, the transport network, to the arts, sports, religion and life is second to none.’

    The King said it is ‘crucially important’ to recognise the ‘immeasurable’ difference the Windrush generation has made to Britain.

    His comments were made in the foreword of a book which accompanies a display of portraits that celebrate the Windrush generation in the week marking the anniversary of the crossing.

    He added: ‘Those pioneers, who arrived in a land they had learned about from afar, left behind all that was familiar to them.

    ‘Many served with distinction in the British Armed Forces during the Second World War, just as their fathers and grandfathers had in the First World War.

    ‘Once in Britain, they worked hard, offering their skills to rebuild a country during peacetime and seeking opportunities to forge a better future for themselves and their families.

    ‘When they arrived on our shores with little more than what they were able to carry with them, few could hardly have imagined then how they, and those that followed them, would make such a profound and permanent contribution to British life.’

    The Prince of Wales said the Windrush generation’s contributions to Britain ‘cannot be overstated’.

    In a video posted on social media, William said: ‘They and the generation of Commonwealth citizens who followed in their footsteps, chose this country to start new lives. We know they experienced hardships.

    ‘But they also experienced joy; and life did indeed change for them and their families.

    ‘But these voyagers also gave to our nation, helping to rebuild our country and adding to our culture. Their contributions to the Britain we know now cannot be overstated.

    ‘We are a better people today because the children and the grandchildren of those who came in 1948 have stayed and become part of who we are in 2023. And for that we are forever grateful.’

  • 5 fact you should know about Sierra Leone

    5 fact you should know about Sierra Leone

    In addition to having white sand beaches and lush tropical forests, Sierra Leone, which will elect its president on Saturday, is also known for its history of slavery and a brutal civil war.

    Here are five things you need to know about the former British colony whose name, meaning “lion mountain”, derives from an old Portuguese phrase

    1. Freed slaves

    Sierra Leone was historically inhabited by the Mende, Temne and other indigenous groups who encountered the Portuguese, Dutch, English and French traders during the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries.

    At the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th centuries, the British, out of philanthropy or interest, settled former slaves freed from the United Kingdom, North America or the Caribbean.

    Freetown, today the capital of Sierra Leone, was founded in 1792.

    The descendants of former slaves are now considered forming their own human group, the creoles (or Krio).

    Krio, which combines English, Portuguese, French and local languages such as Akan, Yoruba and Igbo, is the country’s lingua franca.

    2. Civil war, blood diamonds

    Sierra Leone was ravaged between 1991 and 2002 by a civil war that claimed tens of thousands of lives and left its mark in barbaric terms.

    The conflict, an extension of the civil war in neighboring Liberia, was largely financed by the sale of diamonds mined in the south-east of the country.

    The UN security council-imposed sanctions on the sale of diamonds from Sierra Leone between 2000 and 2003. This aspect of the war inspired the 2006 film “blood diamond”, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Djimon Hounsou. 

    3. Ebola

    The Ebola virus disease killed around 11,000 people between 2014 and 2016 in Sierra Leone, Liberia and guinea.

    It has had devastating socio-economic effects on Sierra Leone, which was trying to recover from the war.

    4. Chimpanzees and ecotourism

    Sierra Leone has made the chimpanzee a national emblem for 2019. The country is trying to promote the image of an ecotourism destination offering pristine beaches, green hills and ecologically rich islands.

    It is home to a chimpanzee sanctuary in a rainforest reserve that has been visited by British primatologist Jane Goodall and Princess Anne.

    5. Idris Elba, Rüdiger and others

    Several international personalities have Sierra Leonese roots.

    British actor Idris Elba, whose father is Sierra Leonese and whose mother is Ghanaian, received Sierra Leonese nationality in 2019.

    Real Madrid central defender Antonio Rüdiger, a German international, was born of a Sierra Leonese mother, as was British foreign secretary James cleverly.

    Sheku Kanneh-Mason, the British cellist who played at Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s wedding in 2018, was also born to a Sierra Leonese mother.

  • Akufo-Addo leaves Ghana to Spain, France and UK

    Akufo-Addo leaves Ghana to Spain, France and UK

    On Monday, president Akufo-Addo, has left Ghana for a six-day working trip to Spain, France, and the United Kingdom (UK).

    At the joint invitation of the King of Spain, His Majesty Felipe Juan Pablo Alfonso VI, and the King of Jordan, His Majesty Abdullah II Bin Al-Hussein, President Akufo-Addo will on Tuesday, 20th June 2023, participate in the Aqaba Process meeting of West Africa and the Sahel in Cordoba, Spain.

    He will travel to Paris, France, at the invitation of the French President, H. E. Emmanuel Macron, to participate in the Summit for a New Global Financial Pact, to be held from 22nd to 23rd June, 2023 and proceed to the United Kingdom on 23d June, 2023 for a private visit.

    He was accompanied by the Minister for Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation, Hon. Dr Kwaku Afriyie, and officials of the Presidency.

    President Akufo-Addo will return to Ghana on Saturday, 24th June, 2023 and in his absence, the Vice President, Alhaji Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, shall, in accordance with Afticle 60 (8) of the Constitution, act in his stead.

  • Isaac Dogboe’s father narrates how he lost his wife, house in England

    Isaac Dogboe’s father narrates how he lost his wife, house in England

    The father of former WBO junior-featherweight champion Isaac Dogboe, Paul Dogboe, has shared the story of how his wife divorced him in the United Kingdom (UK).

    According to him his ex-wife sold their only house, while his son Isaac texted him expressing his desire to no longer work together.

    He further revealed that he declined to join his son in the USA in his recent fight against Robeisy Ramirez which Dogboe lost and claimed he was cheated by the judges.

    The ex-British military man has told the story of how a Christian prophet successfully gossiped and lied about him to his wife in England leading to a divorce and the loss of his family.

    He also revealed that Dogboe texted him that he won’t work with him again and he hasn’t seen his son for the past four years.

    Below is the interview:

  • Piesie Esther to perform in UK on July 29

    Piesie Esther to perform in UK on July 29

    The current VGMA Gospel Artiste of the Year, Piesie Esther, will make her first appearance in the United Kingdom to celebrate her recent success, organized by the Pan African Art Society, at the prestigious Dominion Centre in London.

    This highly anticipated event promises to be a night of worship, uplifting music, and spiritual inspiration.

    The gospel musician took to her Instagram account to announce the “good news” to her fans.

    “LONDON GET READYYY!!!

    “Good news for us all !! The ‘Waye me yie’ train is coming to your door step, my UK family!! ????

    “Please if you are in the UK and Europe ???????? then kindly save this date
    Saturday 29th July 2023 I’m performing live at the Dominion center in London with other great supportive ministers from around the world.”

    Piesie Esther has been making waves worldwide for two decades in the industry. With her current chart-topping hit song titled “Waye Me Yie,” a powerful worship song that resonates with listeners from all walks of life, she is poised to continue her remarkable endeavour of captivating her audiences.

    The Pan African Art Society, known for its commitment to promoting African arts and culture, has curated an exceptional line-up for this gospel extravaganza.
    Speaking to Tru News Report, the CEO of the Pan African Art Society PK Ambrose stated, “The gospel event powerd by the Pan African Art Society aims to celebrate Piesie Esther’s 20 years in the industry and her accomplishments.”
    “We are honoured to have Piesie Esther to come to the UK to celebrate with her fans. Her hit song ‘Waye Me Yie’ is a testament to the positive impact gospel music can have on individuals and communities.”

    Tickets for the concert are in high demand, with fans eagerly anticipating the opportunity to witness this remarkable gathering. The Pan African Art Society advises interested individuals to secure their tickets early to avoid disappointment.

    Tickets are available on Shoobs and Eventbrite.

    For an evening of soul-stirring melodies and heartfelt worship, mark your calendars for July 29, 2023, and join Piesie Esther at the Dominion Centre in London.

    For further details about the event, visit the Pan African Art Society’s official website.

  • 100,000 new marine species likely to be found through the Ocean Census

    100,000 new marine species likely to be found through the Ocean Census

    In order to find and catalog the marine species that exists in the world’s waters, researchers have launched an ambitious global endeavor.

    In the following ten years, Ocean Census hopes to detect 100,000 undiscovered species, enabling researchers to better understand and safeguard the deep-sea ecosystem.

    We lack a great deal of information on the ocean’s depths. According to the census, just 240,000 of the 2.2 million species thought to live in the Earth’s waters have been described by scientists.

    The endeavor expands on earlier initiatives like the Census of Marine Life, which was completed in 2010 and found 6,000 potential brand-new ocean species.

    New advances in technology include high-resolution underwater imaging, machine learning and sequencing of DNA contained in seawater. The innovations will help accelerate the speed and scale of discovery of new life-forms, said marine biologistAlex Rogers, the project’s science director. He is a professor of conservation biology at the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom.

    “I would hope by the end of 10 years we would have made some incredible scientific discoveries, maybe completely new ecosystems,” Rogers said at the launch event in London on Thursday.

    It typically takes scientists at least a year to definitively describe a species post-discovery, but new types of technology are making it much easier for sea creatures to be studied in their natural habitat. These include tools like underwater laser scanning that can scan gelatinous creatures such as jelly fish that are hard to study on land.

    “You can now look at (the creature) in the water column and see what the morphology is and study them in situ,” said Jyotika Virmani, the executive director of the Schmidt Ocean Institute in Palo Alto, California, which will participate in the project.

    “What we’re moving towards is a place where we can actually perhaps even do taxonomic identification in the water column instead of bringing everything back to land. And that’s really exciting and will make things move a lot faster.”

    All living organisms, including humans, disperse genetic material into the environment, and the project will also make use of new and accessible techniques to sample waterborne DNA to detect and track species.

    While many of the species discovered are likely to be on the smaller end of the scale, Virmani noted that the world’s longest sea creature was only discovered in 2020 off the coast of Western Australia — a 150-foot stringlike animal known as a siphonophore.

    Ocean Census will also help to identify how marine ecosystems are responding to the climate crisis, and assess how marine life could adapt to a warmer climate.

    The project is being led by Nekton, a UK-based marine science and conservation institute, and funded by The Nippon Foundation, a nonprofit foundation based in Japan.

    Over the next decade, dozens of expeditions to the ocean’s biodiversity hotspots will search for new species involving divers, submarines and deep-sea robots. The project also hopes to involve private vessels and individuals. The data and information gathered will by openly accessible for scientists, policymakers and the public for noncommercial use.

  • Western diplomats criticize Russian Foreign Minister over UN summit on “international peace”

    Western diplomats criticize Russian Foreign Minister over UN summit on “international peace”

    In a face-to-face meeting at the UN Security Council on Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was criticized by Western diplomats for his nation’s unjustified attack on Ukraine.

    The conference was titled “Maintenance of international peace and security,” and Lavrov was in charge of it because Russia is presently the Security Council’s rotating president. When Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, it was the final time it presided over the Security Council.

    UN ambassadors for the United States, United Kingdom and Switzerland all used their speeches at the meeting to condemn Russia’s invasion. The three women – the US’s Linda Thomas-Greenfield, Britain’s Barbara Woodward and Switzerland’s Pascale Baeriswyl – all voiced strong, direct criticism of Russia and Lavrov, at times looking directly at the top Russian diplomat.

    “Our hypocritical convener today, Russia, invaded its neighbor, Ukraine, and struck at the heart of the UN Charter. This illegal, unprovoked and unnecessary war runs directly counter to our most shared principles – that a war of aggression and territorial conquest is never, ever acceptable,” Thomas-Greenfield said.

    “As we sit here, that aggression continues. As we sit here, Russian forces continue to kill and injure civilians. As we sit here, Russian forces are destroying Ukraine’s critical infrastructure. As we sit here we brace ourselves for the next Bucha, the next Mariupol, the next Kherson, the next war crime, the next atrocity,” she added.

    Opening the session, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres also condemned Russia’s actions.

    “Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, in violation of the United Nations Charter and international law, is causing massive suffering and devastation to the country and its people and adding to the global economic dislocation triggered by the Covid-19 pandemic,” he said, sitting right next to Lavrov.

    Russian diplomats have been largely cut off from various international conferences since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year. However, the leadership of the Security Council, UN’s most powerful body, rotates alphabetically among its 15 member nations. Five countries – China, France, Russia, the UK and the US – have permanent seats on the council. The remaining 10 members are elected for two-year terms by the UN General Assembly.

    Russia assumed the presidency on April 1, an event that multiple diplomats described as an “April Fool’s joke.”

    The meeting on Monday was attended by Elizabeth Whelan, whose brother Paul Whelan has been detained in Russia for more than four years. The US considers Whelan to be wrongfully detained. The US government was unable to secure Whelan’s release last year when it brought home two other Americans who the US said had been wrongfully detained in Russia – Trevor Reed in April and Brittney Griner in December.

    European Union countries issued a joint statement before the meeting, condemning Russia’s actions in Ukraine and criticizing Lavrov’s appearance at the meeting.

    “Russia is trying to portray itself as a defender of the UN charter and multilateralism. Nothing can be further from the truth. It’s cynical,” said Olaf Skoog, European Union representative to the UN. “We all know that while Russia is destroying, we are building. While they violate, we protect.”

    In his opening remarks, Lavrov launched into a tirade of unsubstantiated accusations against Ukraine and its western allies, blaming the conflict on them.

    “As was the case during the Cold War, we have reached the dangerous, possibly even more dangerous threshold,” Lavrov said, accusing the “United States and its allies” of “abandoning diplomacy and demanding clarification of relations on the battlefield.”

    Lavrov repeatedly described the Ukrainian government as “the putchists” and “the Nazi Kyiv regime,” a baseless claim that Russia has repeatedly made to justify its illegal invasion of the country. Lavrov also criticized Western countries for not recognizing the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea as Russian territory, despite “a referendum being held there.”

    Russia forcefully annexed Crimea in 2014 after holding a sham referendum there. Ukraine and its Western allies consider the area occupied Ukrainian territory. The UN overwhelmingly rejected the referendum as illegitimate and the annexation as illegal.

  • Foreigners caught up fighting in Sudan likely to be evacuated

    Foreigners caught up fighting in Sudan likely to be evacuated

    After a week of battle, there is now hope that foreign countries may soon assist in the evacuation of foreign nationals after both of the opposing parties vying for control of Sudan declared they are prepared to do so.

    The Sudanese army announced in a statement that it had consented to assist in the evacuation of citizens and diplomats from a number of nations, including the United States, the United Kingdom, France, and China.

    According to the announcement, evacuations are anticipated to start “within the coming hours.”

    On Friday, the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) said they were ready to partially reopen all airports in Sudan to air traffic to allow countries to evacuate their nationals.

    Fierce fighting broke out in Sudan last Saturday between the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF), commanded by Sudan’s military leader General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and the paramilitary RSF, led by Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo.

    The two are former allies but tensions between them arose during negotiations to integrate the RSF into the country’s military as part of plans to restore civilian rule.

    The humanitarian situation on the ground is worsening. Many residents of the capital Khartoum have been stuck inside for a week and up to 20,000 refugees from Sudan’s Darfur region have fled to Chad in recent days, according to a statement from the UN Refugee Agency.

    More than 400 people have been killed and 3,550 injured, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

    The announcements on evacuations came as fresh clashes between the two groups shattered a three-day ceasefire declared for the Muslim holiday of Eid.

    Fighting was reported in Khartoum on Saturday, with witnesses telling CNN fierce clashes were taking place in the vicinity of the presidential palace and the sounds of explosions and warplanes flying overhead could be heard.

    Saudi Arabia said Saturday its evacuation efforts were under way. The Saudi foreign ministry said in a statement that the government was evacuating its citizens from Sudan alongside “several nationals of brotherly and friendly countries.”

    CNN has reach out to the other countries named in the SAF statement.

    A spokesperson for the European Union said that estimated 1,500 citizens from various EU countries are currently in Sudan.

    “They are facing a very difficult situation and their safety is a priority. We urge both sides (the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces) to stop fighting and allow for safe passage out of the country,” the spokesperson said, adding the EU was working with member states to find solutions and get these people out of the country.

    It is unclear how many US citizens are in Sudan. The State Department does not keep official counts of US citizens in foreign countries and Americans are not required to register when they go abroad. US State Department officials told staffers estimated 16,000 American citizens in Sudan, most of whom are dual nationals.

    A US State Department spokesperson told CNN that the department remains in close contact with its embassy in Khartoum and have “have full accountability of our personnel.”

    “For their safety, I cannot discuss the details of their movements or whereabouts,” the spokesperson added.

  • A reward being offered to find a fireball that landed in the US last week

    A reward being offered to find a fireball that landed in the US last week

    A space rock that shot across the sky last week before crashing close to the Canadian border is being offered for sale by a museum in Maine for $25,000.

    Radar picked up the fireball, which was visible in broad daylight and produced a sonic boom, and this allowed NASA’s Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science (ARES) Lab to determine the location of the “strewn field”—a potential location for meteor fragments—near Calais, Maine.

    Darryl Pitt, head of the meteorite division at the Maine Mineral & Gem Museum, said he was keen to study any fragments of the meteorite, which could contain valuable information about the solar system. The $25,000 reward is for the first meteorite piece found that weighs 2.2 pounds (1 kilogram) or more. However, he said the museum would be willing to pay for any specimen “irrespective of its size.”

    “Finding meteorites in woods of Maine. It’s not the simplest of the environments,” Pitt said.

    “It’s a sparsely populated area but not as sparsely populated as where most meteorites fall — the ocean,” he added.

    Worldwide, only eight to 10 meteorites are recovered each year out of hundreds seen falling to Earth, Pitt said.

    A meteorite that fell on a driveway in the United Kingdom in 2021 turned out to be an extremely rare type of space rock and is now part of the Natural History Museum in London.

    Video: Meteor, meteorite, asteroid, comet: What’s the difference?

    The Maine meteorite was visible for more than four minutes from around 11.57 a.m. ET on Saturday, April 8, according to NASA. Winds might have carried smaller meteorites across the border into Canada, the agency noted.

    “For the light (of the fireball) to overwhelm the brightness of the day, it was a significant event,” Pitt said.

    Pitt said a meteorite would look different from the surrounding rocks. The outside would likely be blackened — after being toasted by the heat as it plummeted through Earth’s atmosphere — while the inside would likely be a different color. It may also contain iron and therefore be attracted to a magnet.

    The museum offered a reward for a meteorite once before. However, the search for fragments of a meteor that lit up the sky in the region in 2016 wasn’t fruitful, Pitt said.

    This time, Pitt said he was “guardedly optimistic” becausethere is more detailed information available from radar data, and he expects a “robust response” from meteorite hunters.

  • There are more Ghanaian nurses in UK than in Ghana

    There are more Ghanaian nurses in UK than in Ghana

    There are more Ghanaian nurses working in the UK than in Ghana, available data indicates.

    This has raised concerns about health worker shortage in the west African country

    The proportion of African-born NHS staff almost doubled from 1.8 percent to 3.1 percent since 2016, with Botswana and Kenya also featuring heavily.

    Health unions say While African nurses are helping to plug the gap, the (WHO) says sub-Saharan Africa’s own healthcare crisis will intensify as it estimates the region will be short of 5.3 million health workers by 2030.

    Martha Nugent, a specialist palliative care nurse, told : “If your expertise is all being exported, the health system will suffer. “Money or no money you will stay within a system where you feel comfortable. headtopics.com

    Last year, the (RCN) raised concerns that the NHS was recruiting nurses from countries which faced their own shortage of nurses. NHS nurse recruitment from these countries was in breach of WHO’s Global Code of Practice, which stressed that “active” recruitment of nurses from red-list countries should be avoided.

    NHS treating hundreds of children as young as 13 for gaming disordersThe number of people playing video games increased massively during pandemic lockdowns in 2020 and 2021 – but so did the risk of addiction. Campaigners have previously warned about the dangers of certain modern gaming tropes, such as the loot boxes seen in titles like FIFA. Lol this is why the nhs is fucked making up bullshit conditions. What the fuck is a gaming disorder? People can’t see a doctor but we need to treat kids who play a games console too much. Nobody dares to let children roam and play outside unsupervised any more, so why would they not spend what looks like an excessive amount of time engrossed by video games? Gaming disorder. More commonly known as: Shit Parenting!

    ‘Toxic’ bullying culture at NHS trust ‘could put patient care at risk’A report has revealed one of England’s biggest NHS trusts has a culture of bullying that has led to more deaths than usual. 2021 Aug New CEO Len Richards joins Mid Yorkshire Hospital 2022 Mar RESIGNED – Director of Nursing & Quality 2022 Apr RESIGNED – Director of Finance 2022 Nov RESIGNED – Medical Director 2023 Jan RESIGNED – Chief Operating Officer jumpedNotPushed midYorksNHS toxic NHS

    ‘Corrosive’ bullying culture at ‘toxic’ NHS Trust could put patient care at risk, probe findsBREAKING: A culture of bullying at one of England’s biggest NHS Trusts could put the care of patients at risk, a report has found Samaritans helpline: It’s time to scrap the NHS. Ah yes. More negative press about the NHS as the Tories run it into the ground. Who’d have thought it 🤷‍♀️ Ahh maybe the problems not the tories….

    I’ve lost 13 teeth in seven years after being struck off by NHS dentistA DESPERATE mum has lost 13 teeth in seven years after being struck off by her NHS dentist while in intensive care. Mandy Sharp, 59, was put on anti-depressants by a GP when she got desperate at he… only the 1 dentist around by you then She could have just brushed her teeth properly. Is that when you stopped cleaning your teeth..

    NHS dentist charges to rise in April 2023 – list of new pricesThe NHS has said that standard charges will go up from April 25

  • Nitrous oxide to be set outlawed in the battle against laughing gas

    Nitrous oxide to be set outlawed in the battle against laughing gas

    Michael Gove has announced that the government would outlaw nitrous oxide.

    The laughing gas canisters are frequently used by young people in the UK.

    The statement was made this morning on the Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme by the Levelling Up secretary.

    The action is a part of a series of steps taken to combat anti-social behaviour.

    People convicted of anti-social behaviour will be ordered to repair the damage they have caused within two days of being told their punishment, under new plans.

    He said: ‘Antisocial behaviour can ruin lives.

    ‘I think anyone who has the opportunity to walk through our parks in our major cities will have seen these little silver canisters, which are examples of people not only spoiling public spaces but taking a drug which can have a psychological and neurological effect and one that contributes to antisocial behaviour overall.’

    Police officers carry canisters of nitrous oxide, known as laughing gas, confiscated from revellers planning to use it as a drug, during the Notting Hill Carnival in west London on August 29, 2022. - London's Notting Hill carnival celebrates Caribbean culture, at a carnival considered the largest street demonstration in Europe. (Photo by Susannah Ireland / AFP) (Photo by SUSANNAH IRELAND/AFP via Getty Images) hippy crack
    Police are going to impose stricter rules on the drug (Picture: Getty)

    In the United Kingdom, nitrous oxide is the second most prevalent drug among young adults aged 16 to 24 years, after cannabis, according to the European Union drugs monitoring agency EMCDDA. 

    A ban on the sale and possession of the substance will be announced as part of the Government’s Department of Levelling Up’s new strategy to target anti-social behaviour on the country’s streets. 

    Other crimes that are expected to be targeted by police are public drug-use, graffiti on public property and fly-tipping. 

    It is also expected that Home Secretary Suella Braverman will review drug laws to include the prosecution of anyone found with nitrous oxide in public. 

    Smaller nitrous oxide canisters – which are legitimately used in the catering industry – have been widely used for recreational drug-taking for at least a decade.

    The small, silver cartridges contain four litres of the colourless gas, but the larger types – which cost just £25 – can hold between 322 litres and 5,500 litres.

    One in 11 people aged 16 to 24 said they had taken laughing gas in 2019-20, according to the Crime Survey of England and Wales. 

    Mr Gove said he is unsure of what category the drug will fall under.

    He added: ‘We can’t have a situation, we mustn’t have a situation where our drugs, our public spaces become drug taking arenas and that is why we need to do crackdown on new manifestations of drug taking.’

    Sophy Ridge asked: ‘Are you really going to give people a criminal record for a 30-second high from laughing gas?’

    Mr Gove initially avoided the question and replied: ‘We need to deal with the scourge [of nitrous oxide].’

    ‘It’s absolutely right we uphold the law in this case,’ he added.

    When asked again if the plans were hypocritical, given some MPs have been known to take drugs, including himself, he said: ‘No… because I’ve learned.’

    He continued: ‘I’ve learned it’s a mistake, it’s worse than a mistake to regard drug taking as somehow acceptable.’

    Mr Gove accepted that ministers had been advised not to ban laughing gas but said the UK Government had taken a different view.

    He said that the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs had recommended not legally restricting its sale.

    He told Sky News: ‘It is the case that we need to be clear that there are types of activity, particular types of activity that cause distress to others in public which are unacceptable.

    ‘Of course it is absolutely right that we uphold the law in this case.

    ‘Yes, the advisory committee offered their advice but ultimately it is ministers who are responsible.

    ‘And we believe collectively that it is absolutely vital that we deal with this scourge and in the same way.’

    Mr Gove said ministers also wanted to bring in ‘extended drug testing of people who are responsible for criminal and anti-social activity’, adding: ‘We need to deal with it.’

    Shadow culture secretary Lucy Powell said Labour ‘want to see’ laughing gas banned.

    She told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge On Sunday programme: ‘I think we want to see it banned as well because I think it does cause a huge amount of littering, of disruption and of anti-social behaviour challenges as well.’

    Last year a woman from east London was left paralysed after bingeing on laughing gas for three days at a time.

    What is nitrous oxide (NOS)?

    Nitrous oxide is a gas legally used in medicine and catering.

    It is often sold in smaller silver cannisters for catering and events and this is usually how users get hold of it.

    The most common way to do NOS as a drug is to transfer the gas into a balloon and inhale the balloon.

    Some people inhale the NOS straight from the cannister but this is extremely dangerous.

    The desired effect is to feel giggly, relaxed, euphoric and distort reality. It can also make people feel anxious, paranoid and dizzy. The effects only last for about two minutes.

    The gas works by temporarily preventing oxygen from reaching the blood.

    As of 2016, nitrous oxide is covered by the Psychoactive Substances Act and is illegal to supply for its psychoactive effect.

    At present there’s no penalty for being in possession of the drug, unless you’re in prison.

    Supply and production can get you up to seven years behind bars, an unlimited fine or both.

    Like drink-driving, driving when high is dangerous and illegal. If you’re caught driving under the influence, you may receive a heavy fine, driving ban, or prison sentence.

    If the police catch people supplying illegal drugs in a home, club, bar or hostel, they can potentially prosecute the landlord, club owner or any other person concerned in the management of the premises.

  • British lady who joined ISIS loses her plea for UK citizenship

    British lady who joined ISIS loses her plea for UK citizenship

    The appeal against the decision to revoke Shamima Begum’s British citizenship was denied. Shamima Begum, then 15 years old, departed the United Kingdom to join ISIS.

    After a five-day hearing in November during which her attorneys claimed the UK Home Office had a duty to look into whether she was a victim of trafficking before stripping her of her citizenship, Judge Robert Jay issued the judgement on Wednesday.

    If Begum’s citizenship was revoked legally is what is decided in the judgement, not whether she can go back to Britain.

    Begum, now 23 and living in a camp in northern Syria, flew to the country in 2015 with two school friends to join the ISIS terror group. In February 2019, she re-emerged and made international headlines as an “ISIS bride” after pleading with the UK government to be allowed to return to her home country for the birth of her son.

    Family of ISIS victim says YouTube algorithm is liable. What will the Supreme Court say?

    Then-Home Secretary Sajid Javid removed her British citizenship on February 19, 2019, and Begum’s newborn son died in a Syrian refugee camp the following month. She told UK media she had two other children prior to that baby, who also died in Syria during infancy.

    Begum’s lawyers criticized Wednesday’s ruling as a “lost opportunity to put into reverse a profound mistake and a continuing injustice.”

    “The outcome is that there is now no protection for a British child trafficked out of the UK if the home secretary invokes national security,” Gareth Pierce and Daniel Furner, of Birnberg Pierce Solicitors, said in a statement seen by UK news agency PA Media.

    “Begum remains in unlawful, arbitrary and indefinite detention without trial in a Syrian camp. Every possible avenue to challenge this decision will be urgently pursued,” it continued.

    Rights group Amnesty International described the ruling as a “very disappointing decision.”

    “The power to banish a citizen like this simply shouldn’t exist in the modern world, not least when we’re talking about a person who was seriously exploited as a child,” Steve Valdez-Symonds, the group’s UK refugee and migrant rights director, said in a statement.

    “Along with thousands of others, including large numbers of women and children, this young British woman is now trapped in a dangerous refugee camp in a war-torn country and left largely at the mercy of gangs and armed groups.”

    “The home secretary shouldn’t be in the business of exiling British citizens by stripping them of their citizenship,” Valdez-Symonds said.

    Javid, the home secretary who removed Begum’s British citizenship, welcomed Wednesday’s ruling, tweeted that it “upheld my decision to remove an individual’s citizenship on national security grounds.”

    “This is a complex case but home secretaries should have the power to prevent anyone entering our country who is assessed to pose a threat to it.” Javid added.

    Begum has made several public appeals as she fought against the government’s decision, most recently appearing in BBC documentary The Shamima Begum Story and a 10-part BBC podcast series.

    In the podcast series she insisted that she is “not a bad person.” While accepting that the British public viewed her as a “danger” and a “risk,” Begum blamed this on her media portrayal.

    She challenged the UK government’s decision to revoke her citizenship but, in June 2019, the government refused her application to be allowed to enter the country to pursue her appeal.

    In 2020, the UK Court of Appeal ruled Begum should be granted leave to enter the country because otherwise, it would not be “a fair and effective hearing.”

    The following year, the Supreme Court reversed that decision, arguing that the Court of Appeal made four errors when it ruled that Begum should be allowed to return to the UK to carry out her appeal.

    Shamima Begum loses legal bid to return home to appeal citizenship revocation (February 2021)

    Begum was 15 when she flew out of Gatwick Airport with two classmates and traveled to Syria.

    The teenagers, all from the Bethnal Green Academy in east London, were to join another classmate who had made the same journey months earlier.

    While in Syria, Begum married an ISIS fighter and spent several years living in Raqqa. Begum then reappeared in al-Hawl, a Syrian refugee camp of 39,000 people, in 2019.

    With ISIS fall, Europe faces returnees dilemma (February 2019)

    Speaking from the camp before giving birth, Begum told UK newspaper The Times that she wanted to come home to have her child. She said she had already had two other children who died in infancy from malnutrition and illness.

    She gave birth to her son, Jarrah, in al-Hawl in February of that year. The baby’s health quickly deteriorated, and he passed away after being transferred from the camp to the main hospital in al-Hasakah City.

    In response to that news, a British government spokesperson told CNN at the time that “the death of any child is tragic and deeply distressing for the family.”

    But the spokesperson added the UK Foreign Office “has consistently advised against travel to Syria” since 2011.

  • Ambulance workers announces a new round of strike in March

    Ambulance workers announces a new round of strike in March

    On February 10, 2023, in London, United Kingdom, British ambulance drivers and emergency medical staff join the wave of strikes in the UK for the fourth time.

    Next month, a number of healthcare professionals, including ambulance drivers, will strike once more over salary.

    The largest trade union in the UK, Unison, has declared that on March 8 in England, its NH members will join picket lines.

    ‘We want to see the colour of their money!’

    LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - FEBRUARY 10: British ambulance drivers and emergency medical personnel join the wave of strikes in the UK for the fourth time in London, United Kingdom on February 10, 2023. (Photo by Rasid Necati Aslim/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
    Healthcare unions say the industrial action is the culmination of years of low wage growth, staff shortages and government underfunding

    McAnea’s remark appeared to reference the Royal College of Nursing (RCN), the nurses union, which agreed to call off job action after the government agreed to long-sought pay talks.

    Unison said healthcare assistants, cleaners, porters and ambulance staff will be involved in the March 8 strike.

    Workers at NHS Blood and Transplant, Great Ormond Street Hospital, the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, Liverpool Women’s Hospital and the Bridgewater Community Trust will walk out for the first time.

    Four other services in England – South Central, East of England, West Midlands and East Midlands – will also stage stoppages following a vote last week.

    London, Yorkshire, the North East, North West and South West services – which have already taken job action four times – will strike once again on March 8.

    McAnea added in a statement: ‘Unfortunately for patients, staff and anyone that cares about the NHS, the strikes go on.

    British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak speaks to staff member during a visit to the University Hospital of North Tees along with British Secretary of State for Health Steve Barclay, in Stockton-on-Tees, Britain, January 30, 2023. REUTERS/Phil Noble/Pool
    Health Secretary Steve Barclay, following months of dodging, agreed to chat with the nurses union this week

    ‘There can be no pick-and-mix solution. NHS workers in five unions are involved in strike action over pay, staffing and patient care.

    ‘Choosing to speak to one union and not others won’t stop the strikes and could make a bad situation much worse.’

    McAnea said the government refusing talks with Unison will ‘condemn patients to many more months of disruption’.

    ‘Governments elsewhere in the UK know how pay deals can be done,’ she added.

    ‘Rishi Sunak must copy their example, hold proper pay talks and allow everyone to get back to work.”

    Ambulance workers have raised alarms about record delays for patients seeking emergency A, such as hour-long ambulance arrival and drop-off times.

    NHS Nurses from the Royal College of Nursing form a picket line as they strike for safe staffing levels, fair pay and working conditions outside St Thomas Hospital on 6th February 2023 in London, United Kingdom. Today nursing staff joined ambulance workers on strike on what will be the largest industrial action by healthcare workers as record numbers of them walk out, placing yet more pressure on the National Health Service during already difficult times. (photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    The RCN called off some job action after the government agreed to pay talks

    Unite said yesterday Welsh ambulance staff will walk out for two more days in March with ‘no end in sight’ to the dispute.

    The stoppages, set for March 6-10, come on top of emergency services strikes up and down Britain every day this week.

    Unions representing ambulance workers rejected the government’s last pay offer of 3% for 2022-23, which was on top of the average 4.5% increase paid to health workers last autumn

    But unions said this figure barely keeps up with double-digit inflation and amounts to a cut in real terms.

    Inflation has soared to as much as 11.1% in recent months, driving the cost of food, fuel and more to astronomical levels.

    Several other unions representing healthcare workers have been locking arms with them, who see the issues facing emergency services as worsened by years-long problems within the NHS.

    Up to 15,000 Unison ambulance workers went on strike last month and were joined by 5,000 of their NHS colleagues at two Liverpool hospital trusts.

    Health workers such as junior doctors and nurses say the high level of staff turnaround has led to backlogs, long waits and burnt-out staff.

    Ever-rising demand hasn’t helped, health unions say, neither has years of austerity measures by Conservative governments gutting public services.

  • Ghanaian students on govt scholarship stranded in UK over delayed stipends, fees

    Ghanaian students on govt scholarship stranded in UK over delayed stipends, fees

    Some students on the Government of Ghana scholarship under the “Ghana Scholarship Secretariat” are said to be stranded in the United Kingdom (UK) over the delay in releasing their fees and stipends.

    Some of the students are said to have been dismissed while others are being chased by their schools and landlords to pay their rent.

    According to sources, some of the students have not received over 8 months’ stipend, thus worsening their situation.

    Others have had to overstay because they cannot get money to return to Ghana. Some are also said to have been sued by their landlords for refusing to pay rent.

    The students are calling on the government to immediately rescue them from the predicament.

    Some Ghanaians have already started an online petition to gather signatories to force the Government of Ghana to come to their aid.

    “The Government of Ghana should act immediately to rescue these stranded citizens and to save the nation from disgrace,” a write-up on the online platform captured.

  • Asiedu Nketiah leads NDC delegation to UK for Mahama lecture

    Asiedu Nketiah leads NDC delegation to UK for Mahama lecture

    The National Chairman and leader of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Johnson Asiedu Nketiah is leading a delegation to the United Kingdom to attend a lecture to be addressed by former President John Dramani Mahama.

    The event is billed to take place at the Chatham House, United Kingdom, on Friday, 27th January 2023.

    Other members of the delegation include the Director of International Affairs of the NDC, Comrade Alex Segbefia, Deputy National Women Organizer, Comrade Abigail Elorm Akwambea, and the Deputy Treasurer of the party, Comrade Vida Addae.

    A statement issued by the party said, “The lecture, which will be under the theme: ‘Africa’s strategic priorities and global role’, will among other things discuss the prospects for economic recovery and growth on the African continent in light of recent debt crisis that has compelled African countries including Ghana to seek debt treatment under the G20 Common Framework”.

    Mr. Mahama, the statement said, will share with his audience his ideas and insights on the key economic and governance reforms required for economic stability and prosperity across Africa.

    “The Former President and distinguished statesman shall be sharing with his audience his ideas and insights on the key economic and governance reforms required for economic stability and prosperity across Africa. He will also discuss priorities for regional integration and Africa’s role and responsibilities in global economic governance,” the NDC added in the statement.

    The party noted that as part of the visit, the team together with the former President will hold a meeting with the UK/Ireland Chapter of the NDC.

    “The team together with the Former President shall hold a meeting with the UK/Ireland Chapter of the NDC as part of this visit,” the NDC added in the statement.

  • Prince Harry: Family would never forgive me if I told all

    Prince Harry: Family would never forgive me if I told all

    Prince Harry claims he had enough material for “two books”, and did not include some things in his memoir because his father and brother would never forgive him.

    He told the Daily Telegraph there were some things “I just don’t want the world to know”.

    He also said he wanted an apology to Meghan from his family members.

    Spare, published this week, has become the fastest-selling non-fiction book ever in the UK.

    The book outlines a long list of grievances against the Royal Family, as well as unresolved trauma over the death of his mother, his struggles with mental health, the isolated life he led before meeting Meghan, and the breakdown of relations with family members.

    Kensington Palace and Buckingham Palace have both said they will not comment on its contents.

    In an interview with the Telegraph’s Bryony Gordon – who travelled to California to speak to him – the Duke of Sussex said he was not “trying to collapse the monarchy”, but “trying to save them from themselves”.

    Prince Harry said there was information he revealed to his ghostwriter JP Moehringer “for context” but there was “absolutely no way” it could be included in the book.

    “It could have been two books, put it that way,” he said, adding that the first draft was 800 pages, double the final 400-page manuscript.

    “And there were other bits that I shared with JR, that I said: ‘Look, I’m telling you this for context but there’s absolutely no way I’m putting it in there.’”

    He said it was impossible to tell his story without his family members in it, “because they play such a crucial part in it, and also because you need to understand the characters and personalities of everyone within the book”.

    “But there are some things that have happened, especially between me and my brother, and to some extent between me and my father, that I just don’t want the world to know. Because I don’t think they would ever forgive me,” he said.

    “Now you could argue that some of the stuff I’ve put in there, well, they will never forgive me anyway.

    “But the way I see it is, I’m willing to forgive you for everything you’ve done, and I wish you’d actually sat down with me, properly, and instead of saying I’m delusional and paranoid, actually sit down and have a proper conversation about this, because what I’d really like is some accountability. And an apology to my wife.”

    Among the claims made in the book, Prince Harry said his brother described Meghan as “difficult”, “rude” and “abrasive”. Prince Harry also accused his brother of physically attacking him.

    He told the Telegraph that “no institution is immune to criticism and scrutiny”, claiming that if only 10% of the scrutiny put on him and his wife had been applied to the Royal Family “we wouldn’t be in this mess right now”.

    He also spoke about therapy, describing it being “like clearing the windscreen, clearing away all the Instagram filters, all of life’s filters”.

    And he said he feels a responsibility towards William’s children, “knowing that out of those three children, at least one will end up like me, the spare. And that hurts, that worries me”.

  • Ghana Health Service cautions people to stay safe over the holiday season

    Like every other nation with a significant Christian population, Ghana continues to place a great value on Christmas.

    The day that was originally set aside to commemorate the birth of Jesus Christ has evolved beyond its original meaning and is now considered a social occasion honoring family togetherness and love.

    ‘Kill fowl’

    “Bronya akoko” it is called. Across the length and breadth of the country, most homes will at least slaughter a fowl to celebrate the arrival of Jesus Christ.

    The very rich homes will make do with sheep, cows, or goats but for most homes, fowl will be killed and used to prepare the special light soup.

    Only a few things compare to the excitement of sitting together as siblings de-feathering the fowl for the soup.

    ‘Borga’ will come home

    Whether from the United States, United Kingdom or from the big cities, most homes are likely to host a relative who for the most part of the year was at another place hustling or engaging in some economic activities.

    The ‘borga’ will sponsor the family’s Christmas activities with ‘soft drinks’ on the table.

    Christmas outfit

    Be it the Santa hat, fresh dress from the tailor or dressmaker, a Ghanaian will at least see some Christmas-tuned dress.

    For most Christians, the first Sunday of the festivities is white Christmas so churches are usually packed with people in white clothes while the following Sunday usually sees red-dominated clothes.

    Give out to the needy

    This is fast becoming a feature of Christmas celebrations in urban areas with well-to-do families preparing dishes and presenting them to the less privileged.

    What used to preserve corporate institutions is now being embraced by homes as they donate food to street hawkers and others.

    In the villages, families cook and share with other members who are financially not in a place to at least buy ‘bronya akoko”.

    Non-alcoholic drinks dominate family gatherings

    Alongside the special Christmas, food is special drinks, usually non-alcoholic drinks, as the day of the Saviour is supposed to be kept holy.

    If you happen to be the youngest in such homes, you will most likely get half a bottle of the drink as you cannot share the same amount with your parents and elder siblings.

    Ultimately, the day is marked with loads of fun in Ghana.

  • Adam Afriyie: UK MP of Ghanaian parentage declared bankrupt over £1.7m debt

    A Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom, Adam Afriyie has been declared bankrupt by a court after it emerged that he indebted to the tune of £1.7 million.

    Afriyie, despite being a Brit was born to a Ghanaian father and British mother but grew up in Britain largely under the guidance of his mother.

    His indebtedness according to the BBC is in two parts, an amount of around £1 million is owed to state-run HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) whiles £700,000 is owed to Barclays bank.

    A bankruptcy order was made against the MP at a hearing in the Insolvency and Companies Court on Tuesday, a BBC report added.

    Afriyie is Windsor MP on the ticket of the governing Conservative Party, he had already announced he would be standing down at the next election, saying with Brexit “concluded” it was the “right time.”

    Afriyie reacts to bankruptcy

    Afriyie said of the court order that it was “a stressful time”.

    “This has been ongoing for many years following business failures some time ago.

    “I am ultimately responsible for some of the bank borrowing through personal guarantee. I’ve been trying to sell our home and downsize for some time, but it’s a tough market.

    “It’ll be tough for a while, but I’m far from the only person in a difficult position, and I will continue to do my best to support my constituents until the next general election when I’ll be standing down.”

    The BBC report added that the embattled MP had asked for the court proceedings to be adjourned until March arguing he would be able to pay off his debts by selling off a property.

    About Adam Afriyie

    He was born 4 August 1965 in Wimbledon, London to an English mother and a Ghanaian father, growing up in a council estate in Peckham.

    He has been an MP since 2005 and has along the way held a number of cabinet portfolios.

    He attended the local Oliver Goldsmith Primary School as well as Addey and Stanhope School in New Cross, before earning a bachelor’s degree in agricultural economics from Wye College in 1987.

    Afriyie has seven half-siblings and one brother. He said of his upbringing: “I never knew my father until I was much older and my mother, Gwen, brought us up alone. She was my rock, the gel at the centre of my life, although her tumultuous relationships with different men made for a constant state of flux at the boundaries of our family.”

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Adam Afriyie: UK MP of Ghanaian parentage declared bankrupt over £1.7m debt

    A Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom, Paul Afriyie has been declared bankrupt by a court after it emerged that he indebted to the tune of £1.7 million.

    Afriyie, despite being a Brit was born to a Ghanaian father and British mother but grew up in Britain largely under the guidance of his mother.

    His indebtedness according to the BBC is in two parts, an amount of around £1 million is owed to state-run HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) whiles £700,000 is owed to Barclays bank.

    A bankruptcy order was made against the MP at a hearing in the Insolvency and Companies Court on Tuesday, a B0BC report added.

    Afriyie is Windsor MP on the ticket of the governing Conservative Party, he had already announced he would be standing down at the next election, saying with Brexit “concluded” it was the “right time.”

    Afriyie reacts to bankruptcy

    Afriyie said of the court order that it was “a stressful time”.

    “This has been ongoing for many years following business failures some time ago.

    “I am ultimately responsible for some of the bank borrowing through personal guarantee. I’ve been trying to sell our home and downsize for some time, but it’s a tough market.

    “It’ll be tough for a while, but I’m far from the only person in a difficult position, and I will continue to do my best to support my constituents until the next general election when I’ll be standing down.”

    The BBC report added that the embattled MP had asked for the court proceedings to be adjourned until March arguing he would be able to pay off his debts by selling off a property.

    About Adam Afriyie

    He was born 4 August 1965 in Wimbledon, London to an English mother and a Ghanaian father, growing up in a council estate in Peckham.

    He has been an MP since 2005 and has along the way held a number of cabinet portfolios.

    He attended the local Oliver Goldsmith Primary School as well as Addey and Stanhope School in New Cross, before earning a bachelor’s degree in agricultural economics from Wye College in 1987.

    Afriyie has seven half-siblings and one brother. He said of his upbringing: “I never knew my father until I was much older and my mother, Gwen, brought us up alone. She was my rock, the gel at the centre of my life, although her tumultuous relationships with different men made for a constant state of flux at the boundaries of our family.”

  • BoG erred in employing high interest rates to control inflation, – Togbe Afede XIV

    Togbe Afede XIV, the paramount chief of the Asogli Traditional Area, has declared that it is wrong for the Bank of Ghana to follow the policy of hiking interest rates in order to curb inflationary pressures.

    To support his claim, Togbe Afede XIV compared Ghana’s minimum salary to that of the United Kingdom, which is GBP9.50 per hour, or GBP76 for an 8-hour workday, whereas the wage in Ghana is GH14.88 per day, less than GBP1.

    “It is also inappropriate for BoG to persist in trying to contain inflation in Ghana using high-interest rates as may be successfully done in a rich country like the UK,” Togbe Afede XIV wrote in an opinion post spotted by GhanaWeb.

    “These high interest rates made it difficult for businesses to borrow to invest in the real sectors of the economy to achieve the value-addition we crave. It also perpetuated our import dependence, while making it difficult for local entrepreneurs to borrow, invest and increase local ownership of the economy,” he noted.

    He further accused the BoG officials of inadvertently frustrating efforts aimed at restructuring the Ghanaian economy.

    “Bank of Ghana officials have inadvertently frustrated the restructuring of the economy, which they themselves have identified as the solution to our balance of payments deficit and currency depreciation problems.”

    “It is difficult to see how policy rate increases can fight cost-pushed inflation resulting from food or crude oil price increases or increased taxes on petroleum products. Sadly, even at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, when income levels had fallen world-wide, and stimulus packages were being implemented everywhere to boost economic activity, BoG still ensured that we suffer under strangulating high interest rates,” the economist added.

    While indicating that Bank of Ghana’s monetary policy decisions have not helped in improving economic policy measures over the years, Togbe Afede XIV said it has succeeded in maintaining a growth-stifling ‘high inflation – high interest rate’ environment adding that “it has also created the most profitable banking sector in Africa, if not the world, all with disastrous consequences for the cedi.”

     

  • Former British-Ghanaian UK finance minister Kwarteng admits to having been ‘carried away’

    Kwasi Kwarteng, the former Chancellor of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom, has acknowledged that he “got carried away” while holding the position.

    The former minister of finance admitted as much to the Financial Times, as reported by the BBC, and claimed that he was “too impatient” with the mini-budget when he and his boss, the former prime minister Liz Truss, unveiled the huge package of disastrous cuts.

    “There was a chance, but the decision-makers, including me, blew it.
    People, including myself, became irrational “said he.

    It would be recalled the British-Ghanaian politician’s plan sparked turmoil in the markets, a situation that eventually led to his resignation, same as Truss’.

    As Chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng set out a package to abolish the top rate of income tax for the highest earners, axe the cap on bankers’ bonuses, and provide an expensive and long-running energy support package.

    The plans would have required more than £70bn of increased borrowing, but most of the measures were torn up by his successor, Jeremy Hunt, the BBC reported.

    In the end, the politician became the first finance minister of the UK to stay the shortest in office, having only served 38 days.

  • Climate change: Over 70% of Ghana’s cocoa lands will be ‘dead’ by 2050 – UK’s High Commissioner

    Harriet Thompson, United Kingdom (UK) High Commissioner to Ghana, has warned that over 70 per cent of cocoa lands in Ghana will no longer be suitable to grow the crop by 2050.

    According to her, this will happen if temperatures continue to rise as is currently the case in the country.

    The High Commissioner made these comments via a tweet on Tuesday, November 29 after she paid a courtesy call to the Minister of Food and Agriculture, Dr Owusu Akoto Afriyie.

    Her visit to the minister was to enable the two deliberate on issues of relevance in the agriculture sector, especially on the subject of the United Kingdom Support Climate Smart Agriculture in Ghana.

    “Over 70% of land currently used to grow cocoa in Ghana will not be suitable for that crop by 2050 if temperatures continue to rise as they are doing currently.

    “Now is the time to adapt – and the potential to do so is great,” Harriet Thompson tweeted.

  • United Kingdom expects trade with Ghana to increase to £1.4 billion

    Trade between Ghana and the United Kingdom (U.K.) is targetted to grow to £1.4 billion in value as the two countries commit to a new three-party partnership, including Rwanda, which is expected to boost trade opportunities between local businesses and their foreign counterparts.

    According to the British High Commissioner to Ghana, Harriet Thompson, while increasing trade remains a key priority for both countries, it is expected that products going from the country to the U.K. meet market standards.

    She observed that supporting Ghana’s exporters to meet the standards the UK markets require will help to remove one of the barriers currently stopping goods from the country from entering their markets.

    The British High Commissioner to Ghana, speaking in an interview at the sidelines of the launching of the ‘Standards Partnership Pilot,’ reiterated that the platform created was fundamental to boosting trade between the country and the rest of the world.

    “This programme will help put Ghanaian businesses on the global stage. By adopting and working within international trading standards, this new partnership will build greater capacity in Ghana’s Standard Authority (GSA), and better position companies to export Ghanaian products to the UK.

    “The launch of the UK-Ghana Standard Partnership Pilot is timely. With the roll-out of the AfCFTA and the implementation of the U.K. – Ghana Trade Partnership Agreement, quality standardisation will play a critical role in driving further trading opportunities between our two nations and beyond,” she stated.

    The programme is the first U.K. Government-backed initiative to use global standards to support trade in Africa. It is led by the British Standards Institution (BSI) in collaboration with and to support GSA.

    It will focus on strengthening national quality infrastructure organisations and systems in complying with internationally recommended practices.

    Also, the pilot will help deliver secondary benefits by enabling businesses to build resilient, diversified supply chains with high-quality products and services, resulting in greater choice and lower prices of goods for consumers.

    The project is the first step toward the Standards Partnership programme – a Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office-funded (FCDO) initiative to unlock sustainable economic development by increasing the capacity of developing countries to use and comply with standards and regulatory measures – enabling them to access new markets, and benefit from global supply chains.

    The Deputy Minister of Trade & Industry, Michael Okyere Baafi, also speaking at the ceremony, said the project will, among other benefits, strengthen the long-standing relationship between Ghana and the U.K.

    He added that it will also ensure that the products are vigorously checked and maintained so that they can be consumed locally and exported, which will enhance the country’s foreign exchange earnings.

    On his part, the President of the African Organisation for Standardisation (ARSO) and Director-General of GSA, Prof. Alex Dodoo, acknowledged that the initiative holds the potential to transform intra-Africa and global trade.

    He said the U.K. is one of Ghana’s leading trading partners, and goods from Ghana are always in high demand provided they meet strict international standards and related requirements.

    Because of this, he observed that the Standards Partnership Programme provides a timely opportunity for Ghana to improve standards and quality infrastructure to expand trade with the UK and the world.

  • Those suggesting I contest NPP presidential primaries are leading me into temptation – Majority Leader

    Osei Kyei Mensah-Bonsu, the Majority Leader of Parliament, has stated that those who advocate for him to be the next presidential candidate for the New Patriotic Party (NPP) are leading him into temptation.

    He claimed that, while these people have good intentions, such a suggestion will only lead him into temptation.

    He was responding to a suggestion made by some Ghanaians who claim to be Suame members in the United Kingdom for him (Kyei-Mensah) to run in the presidential primaries.

    However, the lawmaker told Rainbow Radio 87.5Fm Frontline host Kwabena Agyapong that such a suggestion is a temptation.

    The lawmaker stated, “Those who make the suggestion is leading me astray…

    “What I will suggest is that we need someone who can resonate and win the NPP victory. There is only one presidential slot available, and we need a candidate who can connect with the people “.

    In response to a question about whether he would accept the position of running mate, he stated, “We’re not there yet.” We’ll cross the bridge when we get there.