Founder and head of Perez Chapel International, Archbishop Charles Agyinasare, has come under fire after delivering a sermon to his audience on May 24, 2023.
The Archbishop on the third day of the Supernatural Summit held at the headquarters of Perez Chapel in Accra, preached about divine protection and the existence of evil forces where he cited several examples to support his teaching.
In the course of his preaching, Agyinasare recounted an incident where his team received spiritual attacks for hosting a crusade in the Volta Region.
“During this crusade in Aflao… we slept at Agbozume, that was where our hotel was and you have to go through Nogokpo. And Nogokpo is the demonic headquarters in the Volta Region. We only have not said it but the second night I made Bishop Yaw Adu talk about witchcraft and we disgraced the witches and wizards. When we were driving from Aflao to Agbozume, immediately we got to Nogokpo, Bishop Yaw Adu’s four-wheel drive, the tyre came out from under the car, “ he recounted.
Following the publication of the video online, the church leader has come under heavy criticism online including from the handlers of the Nogokpo shrine.
Reacting to the Archbishop’s post in a Facebook post shared on Thursday, May 25, 2023, the Nogokpo shrine warned the clergyman against making derogatory statements about their religion.
It said that some pastors of Agyinasare come to the place he is denigrating for powers to grow their churches.
“Dear Archbishop Charles Agyinasare our religion does not accept lies, fake prophecies, defrauding people under false pretence, extorting monies from people in the name of taking them to “heaven” which does not exist, taking taxpayers and innocent citizens money to build worthy homes, burry things or make sacrifices to get more members, we do not lose our focus to be preaching other religions rather than focusing on our ethics.
“We will rather advice you to focus on making your members understand your religion rather than attacking others. He who beats the war drum must be ready to dance accordingly. The same demonic headquarters are the places your pastors come to for more members and powers to do your ‘church businesses’,” parts of the post read.
“If you don’t have a topic to preach about then we will advise you close your church and come for proper education on our religion first. The last time we check, there’s freedom of religion and worship. For us, we will never say ill things about someone’s religion and see ourselves as holy. Your bible even says DO NOT JUDGE.,” it added.
‘Nogokpo is the demonic headquarters in the Volta Region’ – Agyinasare’s comment attracts massive backlash
???? Just watched the video of Archbishop @Cagyinasare declaring Nogokpo as the ‘demonic headquarters’ of the Volta Region. It’s disappointing to hear such baseless claims from a religious leader of his calibre. Emotional intelligence would call for an apology. @AnnyOsabuteypic.twitter.com/9PrgXQMyQR— MacJordan (@MacJordaN) May 25, 2023
Over the weekend, the communities of Duta and Agbawoeme were severely affected by floods caused by heavy rainfall.
This unfortunate event resulted in significant property damage and the displacement of numerous individuals.
The two adjoining communities are close to Diamond Cement at Aflao in the Ketu South Municipality of the Volta Region.
Property lost to the floods run into tens of thousands of Ghana cedis forcing residents to relocate to family members in nearby communities.
Sylvia Awuye Akpavor, a media practitioner, who lives close to the affected communities, told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) that the situation was alarming as it has affected the residents’ daily activities.
Akpavor said, “I have personally visited Duta and Agbawoeme. When you go there now, the situation is very bad. Buildings have collapsed and the people have lost their belongings: clothing, cooking utensils, furniture. Even school children have had their uniforms, school bags and books swept away by the floods.” Possible cause
The assembly member for Duta electoral area, Gabriel Ayitey, attributed the flooding to the spillage of a dam constructed by Diamond Cement. It overflowed and spilled over into the communities.
He said, “This is not the first time we have experienced this flooding. It occurs every rainy season, but this year’s is just too much. We haven’t witnessed anything like this before. It’s a spillover from the Diamond Cement dam which opens into the communities.”
The assembly member called on the management of the factory to take immediate action to redirect the drainage channel to forestall further destruction to property and livelihoods.
Victims of the disaster, Dabla Moise, Dziwornu Komla Song and Dabla Enoa, took turns to pour out their frustrations to the GNA. They called on the Ketu South directorate of the National Disaster Management Organization (NADMO) to come to their aid.
The municipal co-ordinator of NADMO, Torgbi Alossode Eve Agadzi II, told the GNA that his outfit has been informed about the incident. The outfit is assessing the situation to find out what interim support can be offered the victims.
The co-ordinator said, “NADMO has been informed about this development. My team and the municipal chief executive, Maxwell Kofi Lugudor, visited the affected communities to assess the situation and to see how best the municipality can offer some interim assistance to the victims whiles we work to find a permanent solution to the problem.”
Meanwhile, Tati Rama Rao, the general manager of Diamond Cement Company, refuted claims by the residents that the flooding was due to the spillage of the company’s drainage system.
He told the GNA that management of thecompanywas informed about the unfortunate incident but attributing the floods to the spillage of the drainage system is far from the truth.
Rao said the communities are located in a naturally swampy and low-lying enclave. This contributes largely to flooding after a heavy downpour.
He added that the river that passes through the said dam to the communities has its source from Togo and has nothing to do with the activities of the factory.
He stated that the factory is ready to cooperate with other stakeholders to find a permanent solution to the problem.
Member of Parliament for Keta constituency in the Volta Region, Kwame Dzudzorli Gakpey, has disclosed it cost him a whopping GH¢1.4 million to run his campaign for the National Democratic Congress (NDC) Parliamentary primaries which took place across the country on Saturday, 13 May 2023.
According to the lawmaker, politics has become expensive and not an easy enterprise to fund.
Speaking on Talk of the Nation on Class91.3FM on Tuesday, 16 May 2023, Mr Gakpey said “It cost me GH¢1.4 million to run the campaign.”
Asked by show host Klem Setumte if the money was from his own resources, he said “From my own funds, friends and family”.
Mr Gakpey explained further, “Now posters are very expensive, the economy is hard” and quizzed rhetorically “Do you know how much an A0 poster costs now? One is GH¢20, GH¢25 that one is even impression…do you know how much T-shirt costs now? GH¢45, and then, do you know how much fuel costs? You have to empower teams to go house to house, it’s not an easy task and then [on election day], you have to convey all the people to the election ground, how to feed them and all that, it’s not an easy task.”
He continued that “Politics is expensive, campaigning is expensive, but the resources are from multiple sources, genuinely, that is what is happening, campaigning cost, it’s not an easy task”.
He added that “conveying 1,200 people to a ground to vote and feed them and all that, and then radio advert and all that, is not an easy task, I must be sincere with you, politics is becoming a very expensive business now.”
Asked about his motivation for wanting to be a parliamentarian when it has to cost him this much, Mr. Gakpey noted that his motivation is to save lives.
“My motivation is to save lives and people that’s it so that your name will remain in the books that you also saved lives because I [have] human-centered policies for my people. So money is not everything, caring for the aged, the needy ones are things you can see. If you ask me the benefits of this to me, it is that I see my people being healthy, I see my people being happy that I’ve impacted their lives.”
Officers of the Ghana Immigration Service (GIS) at the Nyive border in the Volta Region have intercepted 896 slabs of suspected Indian hemp at Have.
The enclave is an unapproved route along the Shia-Nyive border in the Volta Region. The parcels, in rectangular shapes, were in sacks with the inscription “70”.
Courage Amegbe, Commander of the Operation Calm Life Patrol Team, Nyive Sector told the Ghana News Agency that around 10.30 pm on Friday, May 5, the team intercepted the contrabands while on night duty along an unapproved route.
Mr Amegbe said the officers came across the sacks in the bush when they reached Have. They transported the 12 sacks to the main border post at Nyive.
The consignment was handed over to a team from the Narcotics Control Commission in Ho.
Amegbe cautioned the public to desist from the use of and trade in illicit goods and called on the citizenry to provide information leading to the arrest of such recalcitrant members of the society.
TheEnvironmental Protection Agency(EPA) has announced that it will close churches in the Volta Region that operate without a permit.
In an interview with the media, the Director of EPA in the Volta Region, Hope Smith Lomotey, said the move by EPA was necessitated after some churches in the region failed to comply with the required standards of operating a church under the EPA’s regulations.
Mr. Lomotey also noted that, although some churches have acquired permits to operate in authorized areas, they are yet to renew their permits and may also be affected by the Agency’s enforcement.
According to him, churches must apply for a permit before establishing their churches.
He added that the move is also to address complaints of excessive noise caused by churches in unauthorized locations causing nuisance to residents, especially at night.
“Some [Churches] have applied for permits, others have not, so we are regularising those who have not. The challenge we have is that most of these churches, they establish before they apply for regularisation.
“But you are supposed to apply, after the application, we check and see if the place is conducive enough for such a facility.”
With a history that dates back several centuries, Kenteis one of Ghana’s most popular cultural goods.
Over the years, the craft has seen many evolutions but the good thing is that, Ghana’s Kente, has not lost its authenticity and value, thanks to the painstaking efforts of talented and hardworking weavers like Dakudzi Yohanes.
The 22-year old young man, earns his living from weaving kente in Ziavi, a small community in the Volta Region where he plies his trade.
In an interview, the skilled weaver disclosed that he got into the Kente business in 2015, learning the art from his big brother in Kpetoe, a town in the Agortime Ziope District, also in the Volta Region of Ghana, and has not looked back since.
Kente, although historically originating from Bonwire, a village in the Ashanti Region, has spread to many parts of the country, with each ethnic group having their own unique designs and names for their fabrics.
On what he does before commencing any weaving, the talented weaver stressed that it was important for a weaver to set up his weaving machine properly with the yarns carefully worked on one after the other.
He admitted though, that not all kente weavers adhere to this “rule”, which he said was fundamental to the success of the project; but went on to reiterate its importance saying it ensures orderliness in one’s work.
He cited sitting for long hours as one of the major challenges every kente weaver faces. Also, one is likely to make a mistake with the yarns in the course of weaving because of how fast the weaving process is. When that happens, the weaver is expected to reverse the yarn and make amends before proceeding.
Yohanes also shared that the recent economic downturn across the country has affected the kente business too, resulting in the increment of raw materials for production which consequently affects the selling price; but expressed optimism that business would soon pick up to make it easier for interested buyers to patronise him.
The price of a female designed kente cloth, he said, was doubles the price of a male designed kente fabric.
On his customers and their preferred designs, he intimated that while some customers prefered to determine their design, others allowed him put together his own designs for them.
In a day, a kente weaver, he revealed, could weave a maximum of sic kente fabrics but in the case where the design is too cumbersome, it would be impossible to weave more than two kente fabrics.
The young kente weaver urged all interested individuals to venture into kente weaving because it is easy to weave, pays well, and is a craft that everyone, regardless of gender, could take on and succeed at.
The Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) has begun evaluating the illegal mining report authored by Professor Kwabena Frimpong-Boateng, Chairman of the now-defunct Inter-Ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining (IMCIM).
The decision comes after Member of Parliament (MP) for South Dayi in the Volta Region filed a complaint.
He has accused government officials of colluding in the fight against illegal mining, despite the report having been dismissed by the Presidency but Mr Rockson-Nelson Dafeamekpor, the MP has asked the Commission to investigate the issue.
Other stakeholders are also calling for an independent probe into the allegations.
Joseph Whittal, Commissioner of CHRAJ, explained that various procedures would be initiated before a full-scale inquiry begins because the procedures of CHRAJ required it to make an assessment of the complaints.
He pointed out that procedures of the Commission required they made an assessment of the complaints and not every complaint that was filed met the standards expected of a complaint that could be admitted for investigation.
“We will do the assessment, determine which of the mandates, if any, has been evoked by the petition, after which if there are any further and better particulars in terms of clarification of documents, we will ask for that from the lawyers of the complainant,” Mr. Whittal indicated.
Mr. Dafeamekpor called for public hearing as CHRAJ launched a probe into unlawful mining activities in the country.
In a 37-page document, Prof. Frimpong-Boateng, former Minister of Environment, Science, Technology, and Innovation, accused important government political actors of poisoning significant water bodies.
Nii Kpakpo Samoa Addo, lawyer for the MP, after presenting the petition, said he believed the committee would conduct a thorough investigation and cautioned that the nation would be importing water in future.
He noted that just as the public had shown interest in the filing of the petition, they should follow up processes and ask questions about how far the investigations had got to and not seem like the issues were solely for the petitioner.
According to him, the petitioner would be issuing letters to check up on the issues every week to find out what was happening saying “I have been given utmost assurance the issues would be taken seriously, so l leave the rest to the commission.
“We will give them the benefit of the doubt to do an excellent job since they have done that in the past and CHRAJ stood up to issues of corruption and public interests which is existential matter and must be thoroughly investigated,” Nii Addo intimated.
Tidal wave victims in Agorkedzi in the Anloga district of the Volta Region are pleading with the government to build a conventional sea defense wall rather than merely providing temporary relief supplies.
Many affected victims are still counting their losses after the Sunday, April 17, destruction that led to the loss of property.
Raphael Agbanavor, the Assembly Member of the Atiteti Electoral Area, told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) that though the situation seemed to have returned to normalcy, it was high time government stepped in to build a sea defense wall to protect life and property.
He complained that relocation by the affected victims would not be appropriate as some had already moved to more than four locations.
“Those here were moved from the Kporkporgbor community in 2014 to Fukpeve in 2016 and later moved to Fuveme before finally landing at Agorkedzi, which is also being destroyed,” he said.
“It is not a matter of relocation, the residents there are fisherfolks, who engage infishing expedition as their source of livelihood, and moving them from here to a new place could cause disturbances in their daily activities.”
Mr Agbanavor noted that the only school in the area, which was affected by the waves, had reopened but some parents were hesitant to get their wards back to school due to fear of possible recurrence.
Mr Philip Bokorga, the National Disaster Management Organisation Director for Anloga, told the GNA that his team had assessed the situation and reported to the appropriate authorities for action.
Meanwhile, Seth Yormewu, the Anloga District Chief Executive, has urged the affected victims to remain calm whilst the Government worked to find a solution.
The GNA also observed that some areas along the shores at Keta were also affected by the tidal waves.
It registered the highest out-migration rate of 27 percent, followed by the Upper West and Upper East regions with 21 percent and 20.4 percent respectively. The Eastern Region had an out- migration rate of 19.7 percent, Ahafo Region, 17.7 percent and Central Region, 17.2 percent.
Meanwhile, Greater Accra had the highest gain of migrants amongst the six regions that saw a net gain of migrants at 35.1 percent, this was contained in the 2021 Population and Housing Census (PHC) Thematic report on migration by the GSS, in collaboration with the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
Ahafo had the second highest gain with 21.2 percent, followed by Western North, 19 percent and Western Regions (17 percent. The Upper East attracted 2 percent of migrants, North East, 2.1 percent and Upper West, 3.4 percent, making the three regions the lowest gainers.
On gender migration, the report revealed that most females migrate for the purpose of marriage and family reunion, whereas males migrate for economic reasons and these migrants settle mostly in Europe and America.
The Chief Director at the Ministry of Interior, Adelaide Anno-Kumi, underscored the importance of the report’s findings, adding that the data lays out the groundwork for planning, especially regarding conditions surrounding the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
“The data provides the basis for planning, implementation, monitoring and evaluating the needs of the population within the context of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 10.7.
“The Ministry of the Interior counts so much on the rich data emanating from the 2021 Population and Housing Census to address issues relating to migration in the country to move forward with our sectorial policies and programmes,” she added.
Mrs. Anno-Kumi pledged the ministry’s readiness to work hand in hand with the GSS to produce analytical reports that respond to relevant research questions on migration.
Government Statistician, Prof. Samuel Kobina Annim, in his remark, touched on the positive impact of data utilisation in line with the “leaving no one behind” sustainability development agenda. He added that it was important to include the Ghana Immigration Service and the Ministry of Arts and Culture when tackling migration data, in order to be able to correctly show the problems relating to travel and tourism.
The Chief of Mission for Ghana, Togo and Benin at IOM, Fatou Ndiaye Diallo, stated that: “Ghana requires up-to-date migration data to facilitate reporting and evidence-based policymaking as a country of origin, transit and destination. While this has been identified as a key need by the Government of Ghana through the national migration policy, the achievement of this goal has proven to be a challenge”.
“This report provides the very much-needed data to interrogate the state of play of migration in Ghana to inform the right policy engineering. Additionally, the data will support the review of the migration profile of Ghana”. Mrs. Ndiaye Diallo added.
Prof. Stephen Owusu Kwankye of the University of Ghana Regional Institute for Population Studies, in a presentation, highlighted that 30 percent of Ghanaians are classified as migrants (i.e. persons whose place of birth was different from the place of enumeration).
As part of the company’s one-month statewide revenue mobilization exercise, the Electricity Company of Ghana(ECG) in the Volta Region has restored power to certain institutions that were disconnected on Monday after they paid their debt.
The company on Monday disconnected, Ho Airport, KFC, GRA and other institutions during the exercise.
In a media briefing, Benjamin Obeng Antwi, the Public Relations Officer of ECG in the Volta Region announced that some institutions have been reconnected after settling their arrears.
“The Ho Airport has made a payment of 100,000 Cedis which is more than what they owed us. KFC also made payment of 123,000 Cedis”.
The Ghana Revenue Authority, GRA, after crunch talks with the company has also settled all arrears for the GRA Regional Office in Ho and the Customs training school at Kpetoe.
We thank these companies for cooperating with this exercise by settling their arrears and also urge other debtors to emulate this patriotic act to enable the company achieve its target.
The company also commends companies like GCB and the National Communication Authority for not owing the company as at the time the revenue officers visited them.
The company has also visited the Ho teaching hospital and Ho municipal hospital who have not paid any bill for over two years. The company has appealed to both hospitals to pay their bills since it’s a sensitive area and carrying out a disconnection might affect a lot of people.
As a company we do not take delight in disconnecting customers as that is mostly the last resort in order to prevent the customer from accruing more debt and to enable the company gather more revenue to keep the electricity supply chain running.
ECG is appealing to all customers to settle their arrears.
Five years in jail with hard labor has been given to the five individuals found guilty in connection with the operations of theWestern Togoland foundationgroup.
The Western Togoland movement is a group of people who want separatists to declare independence from the Republic of Ghana on September 25, 2020.
The accused persons, Ebenezer Gblorkpor, Afetorgbor Kpogo, Joseph Nyamewu, Wisdom Kuvor, and Israel Bessah Kpexor, have been accused on four counts under SMCD 20, i.e., attending meetings of a prohibited organisation contrary to Section 2(1)(b) and making contributions to the funds of a prohibited organisation contrary to Section 2(1)(g).
They were also charged with participating in the campaign of a prohibited organisation, contrary to Section 2(1)(d), and being a member of a prohibited organisation, contrary to Section 2(1)(i).
Ebenezer and his associates were apprehended in 2020 as part of a group of Western Togoland Foundation members who attacked a police station at Aveyime, released prisoners, stole ammunition, blocked roads leading to the Volta Region, and shot a police officer.
The prosecution challenged the defence attorney’s request that the court reconsider its sentence on the grounds that the defendants are first-time offenders who are young and have been held for more than a year while awaiting trial.
However, the prosecution requested that the court impose harsher sentences to act as a deterrent to others.
But the judge declined, noting that the convicts’ actions were premeditated and aggravated, hence the maximum sentence of five years should apply.
The Western Togoland movement, which unsuccessfully tried to declare independence in November 2019 under the leadership of Papavi Hogbedetor, sought to have the Volta Region and some other parts of the country, which were referred to as Western Togoland.
The National Youth Organiser of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Salam Mustapha, has pleaded with the residents of the Volta Region not to allow themselves to be used as voting machines that produce votes for the opposition National Democratic Congress in the general election of 2024.
In an interview on Volta-based Stone City FM, which was also carried on Keta-based Sandcity Radio, the youth leader, who is on a national tour to all the 16 regions of the country stated, “You are not voting machines.”
“It should be a hand-go-hand-come affair. The Volta Region has been loyal to the NDC since 1992. But what has been the reward for the region for this loyalty? The NPP has brought more development to this region despite our short stay in office compared to the NDC. We have offered young people hope and will continue to make the development of young people our priority,” he said.
Explaining further, the youth leader said “we are constructing eight district hospitals under Agenda 111 in the region, which includes Agortime Ziope District, Agortoe in the Anloga District, Ave-Dakpa in the Akatsi North District, Adeheta in the Akatsi South District, Adaklu Waya in the Adaklu District, Kpeve New Town in the South Dayi District, Dzolokputa in the Ho West District and Ve-Golokwati Afadzato in the Afadzato South District.
The Volta Regional Youth Resource Centre, the asphalting of roads, digitalisation, 1D1F, creating job opportunities, the hosting of the 66th Independence Day in the Volta region among others. Under President Kuffour, we also had Health Insurance, Free Maternal Care, etc”.
He continued further, “let us begin to have a conversation as to which of these two political parties have benefited more in terms of votes and which party has contributed more in terms of development. The youth of this region must do an analysis of the two parties and see which is good for the region in terms of development and progress”.
On the current state of the economy, Salam Mustapha indicated that the government has admitted the difficult moment the country finds itself in, and is working hard to restore the economy of the country, adding that it is only the NPP government that can ensure the economy is placed on a sound footing again.
“Yes, we, including His Excellency, the President, have all admitted that we are in a crisis largely due to exogenous factors of Covid-19 and the war in Russia and Ukraine. Ghana was the fastest-growing economy in the world somewhere in 2019, according to Reuters and Bloomberg.
“We were ahead of China and the USA. And it is only the NPP that can take us out of our current situation. Even our management of COVID-19 has been one of the best in the world. Under John Mahama and the NDC, when we were struck with mere cholera, we lost over 213 people in Ghana. If they couldn’t manage mere cholera, how could they have managed COVID?
“Even in our current state, we are still not doing badly, our lights are still on, and we still get fuel at the pump to buy. In the UK, Spain, Italy, and Nigeria, there is a shortage of fuel. There is dumsor there too.”
He further urged the people of the Volta Region not to become victims of the opposition party’s propaganda only aimed at deceiving the people of Ghana into voting for them, and plunging the nation into further difficulties, and derailing the progress being made in the Volta Region.
“Let’s not fall for the NDC’s propaganda, lies and treachery. They left office with virtually nothing left behind. All our statutory payments, GETFUND, NHIA, Common Fund, Road Fund, etc. were all in arrears. Even in the midst of all these difficulties, we still pay public sector workers monthly without delay, we still meet all our statutory payments obligations, our lights are still on, there is enough fuel at the pump, etc.
“We have carried water, and we have carried wine; and we can tell which one is heavier. Per the track record, it’s evident that the NPP has done more to the development and progress of the Volta Region than the NDC. It is now time for the good people of the Volta Region, especially the youth, to reward the NPP by voting for us in 2024 to break the 8 and do more for the Region,” he said.
Salam Mustapha appealed to the region to vote for the governing NPP to help maintain it in power to continue the good works it is doing for the region and Ghana as a whole.
“The NPP truly deserves a 3rd term based on our track record and performance. We have demonstrated enough commitment to solving the problems of the country more than the NDC. We have superior ideas and policy initiatives than NDC. I am not disappointed that Ghanaians are complaining because of the current economic difficulties. It is because they hold us in high esteem.”
The National Youth Organiser has been on a national tour to touch base with the youth and party’s youth organisers and their deputies across the country.
He is also using the opportunity to assess the strength of the party and energise the base. He is being accompanied across the country by his two deputies, Isaac Jay Hyde and Sandra Sarkodee-Addo, as well as the National Youth Administrator, Prince A. A. Sadat and Joe Waladi, Director of Operations and other supporting staff.
A delivery bed and two hospital beds were donated to the Glidzi CHPS Compound at Klikor in the Ketu South Municipality of the Volta Region by the GUBA Foundation in collaboration with PayAngel.
The gift, which was made in honour of GUBA Enterprise president and CEO Dentaa Amoateng MBE’s 40th birthday, will help the region’s healthcare system.
Both the Obogu Community Clinic, which is close to Juaso and where Dentaa was born, and the Juaso Government Hospital received the same kind gesture.
In all, four beds were given to the Juaso Government Hospital and two beds to the Obogu Health Centre.
The various donations are part ofLady Dentaa’s commitment to improving healthcare in Ghana, as well as her dedication to supporting efforts that promote the welfare of people.
Commenting on the motivation for the donation, Lady Dentaa said, “The best way to celebrate is to give to those who lack. 40 years of life has been phenomenal and I want to continue impacting society and humanity.”
“We are grateful for the opportunity to partner with PayAngel to make this donation to the Klikor Clinic,” said Lady Dentaa.
Divisional Chief of Klikor, Togbe Agbeli Akpalu said, “We hope that these new beds will help provide a better experience for mothers who deliver at the clinic.”
He added, “We believe that access to proper healthcare is essential to the development of any community, and we are committed to supporting causes that promote this.”
The Klikor Clinic has been providing healthcare services to the community for many years, but the facility unfortunately, did not have adequate beds for mothers who deliver there.
Dentaa and PayAngel recognised the need and donated the beds to improve the comfort and care provided to mothers and their newborns.
11 medical professionals have expressed interest in running for Parliamentary seats on theNational Democratic Congress (NDC) ticket in the impending 2024 general elections.
The 11 doctors, who work in some of the largest hospitals nationwide are eager to join the Legislature and contribute to the narrative of the nation’s progress.
They are:
Dr. Thomas Winsum Anabah, a former Administrator of the Greater Accra Regional Hospital for Garu Constituency in the Upper East Region;
Dr. Grace Ayensu -Danquah, for Essikado-Ketan Constituency in the Western Region
Dr Senanu Kwesi Djokoto for Keta Constituency in the Volta Region
Dr Madison Adanusa for Gomoa Central Constituency in the Central Region
, for Ho Central Constituency in the Volta Region
and Dr. Titus Beyuo for Lambussie Constituency in the Upper West Region
Others are Dr Abubakari Bawah Abdulai for Karaga Constituency in the Northern Region
Dr Prince Arhin, for Mfantseman C.onstituency in the Central Region
Dr. Roland Taylor, Essikado-Ketan Constituency in the Western Region
Dr. Winfred Korletey Baah for Lower Manya Krobo Constituency in the Eastern Region
and Dr. Kassim Abdallah for Sene West Constituency in the Bono East Region.
Dr. Sodzi Sodzi-Tetteh, Vice President of Global Health, took to his Facebook wall to write the following words for his colleagues vying for the NDC’s ticket:
“So exciting to see many social democrats in the medical profession step up and out to contest the upcoming NDC primaries.
“A major boost for the fortunes of the National Democratic Congress and wonderful prospects for the country’s Parliament eventually.
“The Ghana we want will need all hands on deck!
“Knowing many of these colleagues personally, I am excited for the NDC!
“Wishing you well in the primaries, guys! It is time indeed!”
According to Prof. Samuel Kobina Annim, the government statistician, the Volta Region has the most net migration.
This was the difference between people moving into the region and people moving out of the region, according on data from the 2021 Population and Housing Census.
Sharing this via his Twitter handle, Prof. Samuel Annim indicated that in the Greater Accra Region, over 1.1 million people had moved to the region.
That figure, he explained, is more than five times the number in the Ashanti Region.
“Greater Accra gained over 1.1 million persons through net migration, over five times higher than Ashanti, the region with the second highest net migration. Ten regions had negative net migration, with Volta recording the highest net loss of almost half a million persons,” he wrote.
Former President John Dramani Mahama, according to the New Patriotic Party (NPP), is merely inventing justifications for his absence from Monday’s Independence Day celebrations.
Ghana celebrated its 66th Independence Anniversary in Adaklu in the Volta Region on March 6, 2023.
The former President accused the NPP of turning the celebrations into a jamboree and also accused the party of busing its supporters to the venue for the celebration.
He added that he had been ridiculed by supporters of the NPP as he was seated in an obscure place on some occasions, hence his decision to boycott such events since 2018.
Reacting to the former President’s comment, the Director of Communicationsfor the NPP, Richard Ahiagbah said the reasons given by John Mahama are unfathomable.
“The former President is justifying all excuses to explain why he didn’t show up at the celebration of the Independence Day in the Volta Region and the previous ones he failed to attend. It’s most unfortunate because he’s only interested in going to the Volta region for votes. Just recently, you went there to launch your campaign. The people of Volta Region haven’t had the opportunity to host Independence Day before. He just left there a few days ago, if nothing at all, for the people of Volta Region whose chiefs and elders were assembled to celebrate, he could have showed up,” Mr. Ahiagbah.
The Volta Regional Coordinating Council, is taking advantage of hosting the 66th Independence Day National Parade, to promote the region’s economic potential.
The Regional Minister, Dr. Archibald Letsa, in an exclusive interview with GBC News, said Agriculture and Tourism, hold great prospects for the region.
On the Independence celebrations at Adaklu, today, Dr. Letsa, said the necessary security measures are in place to protect lives and property during the event and beyond.
The National Assembly elections were held last Saturday, February 25, 2023, alongside the presidential election. A new set of members, however, with returning familiar faces, will sit in the legislative arm of government making up the Red and Green chambers.
The Ghana Education Service(GES) has declared today, Tuesday, March 7, 2023, a holiday for all students across the country.
This comes after the nationwide celebration of Independence Day that took place on Monday.
On Monday, March 6, 2023, thousands of students from all over the country gathered in Adaklu in the Volta Region to commemorate Ghana’s 66th anniversary of independence.
Various Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies also celebrated the event at the local level giving students the opportunity to take part in the 6th March parade.
“It is announced for the information of all schools and the general public that Tuesday 7th March has been declared a holiday for all school children in Ghana,” GES said in its statement.
GES further explained, “this is to enable them have some rest after preparing vigorously for the Independence Day anniversary Parade”.
Schools, according to the GES will fully resume on Wednesday, March 8, 2023.
According to the former president of Ghana,John Mahama, the NDC will ensure that all NPP officials accused of engaging in shady business or misappropriating funds will face legal action under his tenure.
Over 10 health centers provide services to the district’s population of roughly 90,000 people.
According to him, the NDC will ready to deal with the canker aptly.
“We are saddled with debt, and we have been downgraded by every rating agency, and inflation has gone off the roof, sending people into abject poverty and misery.”
“It had never been my wish for political opponents to fail, but this NPPgovernment has refused to listen to contrary views, leading to the roll-out of poorly thought-through programmes, which have taken a toll on the economy and the public purse.”
The former President made this known when he addressed hundreds of NDC faithful, ward and branch executives at separate engagements at Dzodze and Aflao in the Ketu North and South constituencies, respectively, as part of his three-day campaign tour of the Volta Region.
Mr Mahama said the government had been clueless and, in many ways, insensitive in the management of the economy leading to job losses, high unemployment rates and poverty.
He said his vision was for Ghana to develop, irrespective of who or which government was in power.
Former President Mahama is contesting the NDC’s flagbearership race with Dr Kwabena Duffuor, a former governor of the Bank of Ghana, Mr Kojo Bonsu, a former Mayor of Kumasi, and Mr Ernest Kwaku Krobea, a UK-based Ghanaian businessman.
He urged all NDC faithful especially the delegates, who would be voting in the party’s presidential and parliamentary primaries in May, this year, to do the needful by voting for the right individuals capable of delivering on their mandate and with everyone in unison.
“So that together we can wrest power from the NPP and restore hope and dignity back to our people.” Mr Mahama is expected to tour other constituencies in the region, accompanied by some national, regional and constituency executives.
Earlier on Thursday, March 2, he launched his flagbearership campaign at the University of Health and Allied Sciences in Ho, on the theme: Building the Ghana that We Want Together.”
On 6th March, 1957, Ghana gained independence after 83 years of British colonial rule – becoming the first sub-Saharan African country to achieve independence from the British.
Since that day, every March 6 is celebrated across the country and amongGhanaians abroad with various activities, some of which are observed throughout the month.
Today marks 66 years since the West African country gained independence – and this year’s celebration is being held at Ho in the Volta Region for the very first time.
President Akufo-Addo in 2017 decided the Independence celebration be held on rational basis to open each of the 16 regions of Ghana to the world to boost the local economy.
Since the launch of the celebration last month, the Volta Regional Coordinating Council has been working feverishly to put the necessary arrangements in place to make this year’s event themed “Our Unity, Our Strength, Our Purpose” memorable.
The Special Guest of Honour for this year’s celebration is President Umaro Sissoco Embalóof Guinea Bissau, who is also the Chairman of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).
Over 5,000 people from across the country, including members of the diplomatic corps, the clergy, traditional rulers and other dignitaries will be present at the Ho Municipality to participate in the event.
A total of 22 contingents from the various Security Agencies and 12 from the various schools in the Volta Region would be on parade, aside from other performances.
The 66 Artillery Regiment in Ho is in charge to lead preparations for the march past.
All roads leading to the Ho Municipality as well as the streets of Ho have been decorated with the Ghana flag, with several workplaces also draping their buildings in Ghana colours (red, yellow, green and black) to mark the occasion.
Also, the Ho township roads as well the Atimpoku-Ho road are being fixed. The streetlights on the road leading to the Youth Resource Centre at Adaklu have also been fixed.
Police armoured vehicles and armed personnel of the various security agencies have been positioned at various intersections and vantage points to ensure law and order.
The frontal view of 240-year-old Fort Prinzenstein at Keta in the Volta Region shows an indestructible fortress. Its rear however displays decades of destruction caused by intense tidal waves from the Atlantic Ocean.
A remarkable rise in the sea level has left neighbouring villages fully submerged under water, and is now threatening the two- and a half-centuries-old heritage monuments.
About two-thirds of the fort currently lies in the belly of the ocean, said James Ocloo Akorli – 45, the fort’s caretaker who grew up in Keta. Eight of the fort’s 10 dungeons – built initially to hold enslaved Africans as part of the transatlantic slave trade – had been entirely covered by the rising sea level by the time a sea defence wall was built to preserve the monument.
“Visitors to the fort are left disappointed when they get to see its poor state,” said Akorli, who doubles as the local government official for Keta Central Electoral Area where the fort is located. “It takes some amount of convincing to let them know it is safe to enter,” the caretaker said, pointing to the entrance that leads to a courtyard.
A little over 100km east of Prinzenstein is Fort Kongenstein, which was built in the 18th century at Ada, Greater Accra Region. It did not survive the raging tidal waves. Where the former slave post once stood is now the open Atlantic Ocean. There’s no visible trace of Kongenstein. A former prison yard and an abandoned graveyard for the early European settlers are the only remains of the once-vibrant trading port.
Rising sea level accelerated by climate change is not only threatening the livelihoods of low-lying or below-sea-level communities but also posing an existential threat to some of the country’s historic slave forts and castles found within these areas. Fort Kongenstein in Ada has been completely submerged by the Atlantic Ocean. The remains of a nearby local primary school flattened by the destructive Atlantic Ocean Image by: Richard A. Abbey
Human activities – such as creating fumes or emissions from industrial production – generate heat that is trapped in the earth’s atmosphere, over time leading to warmer temperatures. The rise in temperature leads to the melting of large masses of ice, generating more water and making the sea level rise gradually. The steady shift in temperature and ultimately weather patterns is what’s generally referred to as climate change.
The monuments, numbering about 21, were listed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1979 – in recognition of their “enormous historical relevance” for local communities along the shoreline and the rest of the world.
In 2020, the UN agency found that some of the monuments – which constituted a significant and controversial symbol of European-African encounters and the origin of the African Diaspora and were to be preserved for posterity – were mostly falling apart.
In its report, the agency wrote that climate change-related threats such as coastal erosion – a phenomenon wherein strong tidal waves encroach on the coastline – and unpredictable torrential rains have exacerbated structural integrity issues caused by years of neglect and lack of maintenance.
“Because the forts and castles are situated along the coastal zone, the components are extremely vulnerable to environmental disturbances linked to climate change,” the report read.
Compared to the forts, Ghana’s three castles located in Accra, Cape Coast and Elmina remain in better condition. Sea walls built in Elmina and Cape Coast, both in the Central Region, helped provide a buffer not only for the towns but also for the two historical sites.
Nevertheless, the 360-year-old Christianborg Castle in Osu, Accra – which served as the seat of government until 2013 – remains barely protected. While there are several pertinent reasons for the decision to move the presidency away from the former slave post, the heightened risk of coastal erosion cannot be discounted, said Prof. Kwasi Addo Appeaning, Director-Institute of Environment and Sanitation Studies at the University of Ghana.
Sea walls
Ghana loses an average two metres of its coastline annually to coastal erosion. In some areas, the rate of erosion measured rose to as much as 17 metres, a study published by the Institute of Environment and Sanitation Studies said.
In Keta, where Prinzenstein is located, rampant coastal flooding fuelled by erosion measured between four and eight metres per annum led to the construction of the 8.3km Keta Sea Defence Wall Project in the early 2000s.
The US$94 million project was funded through a loan from the United States Export-Import Bank (EXIM Bank), and saw the construction of a wall that has kept the ocean at bay so it could not cause further erosion to the coastline.
Despite sea walls’ growing popularity in battling coastal erosion, they are costly and sometimes aggravate erosion or flooding in adjoining unprotected beaches. In 2018, flash tidal waves submerged several villages in the Keta Municipality; forcing hundreds of residents to flee their homes and abandon their livelihoods.
“After construction of the sea defence wall, some parts of Keta – especially the downstream side, started eroding at a very high rate,” said Prof. Appeaning. “Erosion in some areas measured as much as 17 metres in a year.”
Notwithstanding the peripheral effects of sea defence walls, they helped keep the destructive tidal wave at bay from Prinzenstein – preventing a total collapse. Two other former slave forts in the low-lying coastal twin towns of Old Ningo and Prampram in the Greater Accra Region, which do not benefit from the protection of a sea defence wall, are on the brink of complete disintegration.
Of the two, what is left of the 289-year-old Fort Fredensborg in Old Ningo is merely a stump that used to house the fortress’s armoury. Fort Vernon, which appears to have weathered an onslaught of tidal waves crashing into its base, is on borrowed time.
“It [Fort Vernon] is now a death-trap,” said Joyce Ayorkor Guddah, the Tourism and Culture Officer in Ningo Prampram district, the local government office.
While the Ghana Museums and Monuments Board – the government agency in charge of these forts – is aware of the imminent danger to Fort Vernon, Guddah added that little had been done to rescue the monument.
“Losing the fort will mean a big revenue loss in our bid to harness its tourism potential,” said Guddah. “And for the people, it will erase an important part of their history.”
Climate change’s increasing assault on heritage sites is not uncommon, especially in Africa where countries have found conservation costly.
Governments are increasingly becoming resigned to the idea of losing some of these heritage sites to the effects of climate change for good, said Will Megarry, who works at the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) as its Focal Point for Climate Change.
“They are accepting that the sites are going to be lost, and what they’re trying to do in the interim is preserve them by their records,” said Megarry.
“They’re using things like drones, 3D-scanning to preserve the knowledge of these sites, accepting that it’s not going to be possible to protect them physically.”
Local response
Ghana’s ability to stave off climate change impacts on its heritage sites is a costly endeavor and the government has demonstrated it cannot shoulder that cost without seeking external assistance; with the Keta Sea Defence and other similar projects proving this point.
In November 2022 President Nana Akufo-Addo, speaking in Egypt at COP27 during the UN’s climate change conference, reminded richer countries which generate more emissions into the environment of their promise to help vulnerable nations like Ghana mitigate the impact of climate change.
“Payment is overdue for the loss and damage suffered by our most vulnerable and least responsible nations,” President Akufo-Addo said.
These vulnerable nations, mostly small islands or countries with smaller economies, have demanded their counterparts support a fund that will help in dealing with the fallout of climate change. The conference raised more than US$230million in pledges for the fund – an amount that falls far short of the US$100billion per annum vulnerable countries have persistently demanded.
While Ghana and other vulnerable countries wait on the well-endowed economies to make good their promises, the Ghana Museums and Monuments Board- the government agency that manages these heritage sites – remain cash-strapped, barely generating enough revenue to fund conservation plans.
“As a country, we have not done enough in conserving these monuments apart from the notable ones in Accra, Cape Coast and Elmina,” said Bernard Agyiri Sackey, Director of Monuments at the Ghana Museum and Monuments Board.
The government’s inability to fund conservation plans has led the Monuments Board to seek the benevolence of institutions like UNESCO, the UN agency that previously identified these former slave posts as having “Outstanding Universal Value” – transcending national boundaries and of importance for present and future generations of all humanity.
Forty-four years after recognising the former slave posts’ uniqueness, the UN agency has committed almost US$280,000 to fund various conservation works in Ghana. It’s worth noting that the agency is not obliged to financially support the maintenance of these monuments, although countries seeking to carry out restorative works are mandated to notify the UN agency.
With Ghana looking to position its forts and castles at the centre of its ambitious tourism drive christened ‘Year of Return’ – a campaign inviting descendants of enslaved Africans to reconnect with the land of their ancestors – the existential threat faced by these historical sites appears problematic.
With poorer countries that ironically contribute less to climate change inexplicably affected by its impacts, there are suggestions that prosperous countries must shoulder the bigger responsibility of supporting affected countries to manage fallouts like threats to heritage sites.
“We are not a funding agency like some of our sister UN agencies that have funds,” said Carl Ampah, the National Programme Officer for Culture at UNESCO Ghana.
“We are the intellectual arm of the UN. We come up with the ideas and strategies to resolve some of these issues.”
The agency is currently helping the Ghana Museums and Monuments Board draft a management and conservation plan for all the listed heritage sites in Ghana. The project will undertake a needs assessment of the monuments, paving the way for the government and other stakeholders to have a fair idea of what would be required to maintain these sites’ status.
“Losing these forts is not something I can imagine. It would be devastating – whether in terms of the lost heritage or the potential for maximising tourism opportunities,” said Sackey.
The secretary general of the Trade Union Congress, Dr. Anthony Yaw Baah, has backed Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, the National Democratic Congress’ (NDC) party member of parliament (MP) for theNorth TonguConstituency in the Volta Region, in his opposition to the National Cathedral’s construction.
It came to light at a forum dubbed ‘Ghana’s Day of Shame’ organised by the Socialist Movement of Ghana on February 24, 2023.
The event saw in attendance many stalwarts in Ghana’s politics including former Chairman of the New Patriotic Party, Paul Afoko, founding member of the NPP, Dr. Nyhaho Nyaho Tamakloe, former flagbearer of the Convention People’s Party, Dr Abu Sakara and some members of the diplomatic mission to Ghana, including Cuba’s Ambassador to Ghana, Algeria, China, Namibia and Russia all in attendance.
Addressing the gathering, TUC’s General Secretary reiterated his opposition to the construction of the National Cathedral and called on Mr Ablakwa to do all he can to convert the construction of the cathedral into a hospital if the NDC comes to power.
“We don’t need to use state resources to build a cathedral. What saddens my heart was that when TUC started the campaign against the construction of the cathedral nobody minded.
“We will back our brother here to change the plan of building a cathedral when in fact we don’t need a cathedral.
“We need hospitals and schools, we don’t need a cathedral,” he stated
The Member of parliament for North Tongu,Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, has received recognition from the Ghana Medical Association (GMA) for his efforts to develop the health industry in the Volta Region.
In a series of tweets shared on Sunday, February 5, 2023, the MP said that he is humbled and inspired by the gesture.
He expressed his gratitude to the GMA and his special public health advisor, Dr. Momodou Cham, who he said played a key role in his intervention in the health sector in the Volta Region.
“Sincerely, it is really humbling and deeply inspiring to know that the professionals and practitioners at the heart of health delivery have returned a positive verdict on my health interventions.
“This isn’t an individual accomplishment but a collective recognition; there wouldn’t be this award without my special public health advisor, Dr. Momodou Cham, our dynamic volunteers, our numerous donors both home and abroad, patients and healthcare workers who boldly tell us their needs, the many doctors and nurses who accept our outreach invitations, community leaders, party activists and strategic partners,” parts of the tweet read.
The tweets included a video of the MP receiving the award amid resounding applause and a standing ovation.
View the tweets plus a video of Ablakwa receiving the award below:
Last night I received a medal of honour and a citation from the prestigious Ghana Medical Association (Volta/Oti Division) for what they described as my “outstanding contributions to the advancement of the health sector.”
Dr. Momodou Cham, our dynamic volunteers, our numerous donors both home and abroad, patients and healthcare workers who boldly tell us their needs, the many doctors and nurses who accept our outreach invitations, community leaders, party activists and strategic partners.— Sam Okudzeto Ablakwa (@S_OkudzetoAblak) February 5, 2023
New Patriotic Party (NPP) presidential hopeful, Alan Kyerematen has made a strong case for the delegates of the party to choose him as their candidate for the 2024 elections.
Speaking in an interview on Angel FM on Tuesday, January 31, 2023, Alan said that the party needs a candidate who can win not less than 80 percent of the votes in the Ashanti Region.
The former trade and industry minister added that not only can he win the party over 80 percent of the votes in the Ashanti Region but he can pull a good number of votes for strongholds of the largest opposition party, the NDC.
“We are not just looking for a flagbearer, we are looking for someone who can help the NPP retain power… Everybody knows that the Ashanti Region is the backbone of the NPP… And so for a difficult election, which I perceive is going to happen in 2024, you need a candidate that is going to win at least 80 percent of the votes in the Ashanti Region to guarantee us victory.
“You need a candidate who can do two things, consolidate your base and reduce the strength of your opponent. We all know that the base of the NDC is the Volta Region but many people have been asking why Voltarians like me so much.
“Everybody in Ghana knows that the people of the Volta Region have taken me to be one of them. I believe that I am the candidate who can win 80 percent of the votes in the Ashanti Region and also compete with the NDC in the Volta Region for their votes to be reduced,” he said in Twi.
Alan added that he has name recognition and he is known in every corner of Ghana.
“I have been working with Akufo-Addo all these years and there is no village where Akufo-Addo is known where I’m not known,” he said.
The former Minister of Trade and Industry, Alan Kyerematen, is expected to face stiff competition from the likes of Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia and former Food and Agriculture Minister, Dr. Owusu Afriyie Akoto, for the flagbearership position of the NPP.
There have been some shocking revelations following an audit of COVID-19 expenditures by the Auditor General.
An audit report on the Government of Ghana’s COVID-19 expenditure has shown that nearly 50 percent of the money the state mobilised to mitigate the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in the country was used for budget support and not for issues related to the pandemic.
A portion of the report, which covers the period of March 2020 to June 2022, revealed that the Ministry of Health entered into a 25-year finance lease agreement in 2020 at a total lease value of GHC 15,265,000 for a building to be used as a holding and isolation centre in Adaklu in the Volta Region.
Another portion of the Auditor General’s report said the management of the Information Ministry and its support staff, who are not health workers, paid themselves an amount of GHC 151,500 as risk allowance for going to work in the wake of COVID-19.
The Auditor General believes these monies need to be refunded by the management and staff of the Information Ministry, who were beneficiaries.
The report, which was prepared by the Auditor General Department, indicated that the government raised nearly GHC 22 billion, as of June 2022, to fight COVID-19 in Ghana through the Contingency Fund, the World Bank Group, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the African Development Bank (AfDB), and the European Union (EU).
However, out of the total amount raised to fight COVID-19, only about GHC 12 billion (a little over 50 percent of the total funds raised) was used for activities geared toward fighting the spread of the virus and its impact in Ghana.
Following this development, Ghanaians have been reacting on social media with the hash tag NPPGrandCovidTheft which is topping trends.
Many have criticised government for looting COVID-19 funds.
“Bawumia and his NPP supervised the payment of GHC5,000,000.00 to Dredge Masters Limited for the removal of plastic waste and other foreign materials/debris from storm drains in Accra without certificate of work completed. #NPPGrandCovidTheft,” a user tweeted.
“Put all of these together, and it’s not even up to 10% the damage you have done to us with Covid 19 alone” another user added.
Fifi Kwetey, General Secretary of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) has described the Volta Region as the part of Ghana where saviours of the nation come from.
“Volta is the region, where saviours of the nation come from as far as this country is concerned but we need to know who we are, and somehow, we know, who we are, and we need to start appreciating who we are.
“Volta must appreciate NDC and back it no matter what. It should become like a religion. We need to let our people appreciate that this is what we are.
“And I believe if we knew who we were, the situation where the love for this party would start dwindling in this Region should not happen,” he said during a retreat for regional executives at Dzodze in the Ketu North Municipality.
He is concerned that unlike the Ashanti and Eastern regions which are strongholds of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP), the NDC’s fortunes in the Volta Region are dwindling.
“Because somehow, they (Ashanti and Eastern) appreciate it, and believe in their party as a religion. Your Religion may not be the best religion, yet that is your religion. It is your responsibility to make sure you fix it, and you change it.”
Kwetey also tasked the rank and file to rededicate themselves to supporting the party and do all it takes to ensure that they sell the NDC gospel as the party gears up to wrestle power after the 2024 elections.
At the opening of the four-day event which was on the theme “Empowering Our Base for Victory in 2024,” Dan Abodakpi, Chairman of the National Council of Elders tasked party executives to unite with MPs and other stakeholders particularly the grassroots to be able to remain formidable.
Lieutenant Colonel Edward Sarpong Appiah, Commanding Officer of the 66 Artillery Regiment in Ho, has assured the people of the Volta and Oti Regions of their readiness to ensure peace and security in the regions.
He said his outfit, in collaboration with other security services, would continue to conduct internal security operations to disrupt criminal activities that threatened the peace and security in the regions.
Lt. Col. Appiah was speaking at West African Soldiers Social Activity (WASSA) organised by the Regiment to reflect on activities of the past year and thanked God for His protection, grace and mercy for successful year.
He commended the personnel of the Regiment for their unflinching support, vigilance and high level of professionalism in the discharge of their duties and keeping the region peaceful.
The Commanding Officer charged the officers and soldiers to avoid complacency in any form, continue to be disciplined, professional and effective in the discharge of their duties.
Lt. Col. Appiah commended the media and the Regional Coordinating Council for the continuous support and was optimistic that the Regiment would continue to enjoy such support from all for effective discharge of its mandate.
Dr Archibald Yao Letsa, Volta Regional Minister, commended personnel of the Regiment for their sterling performance in executing their mandate in maintaining and improving the relative peace and stability in the region.
The Minister said the Volta Regional Coordinating Council was ready and would continue to support the 66 Artillery Regiment in the discharge of its mandate to the fullest.
He called for intensive intelligence gathering and collaboration among all the Security Agencies in the region to suppress any threats that might be posed by elements that might try to destabilise the current peace and security.
Dr. Letsa assured the people of the Volta Region that the Government was committed to keeping all the citizens safe and called for support for the Government and the security services to maintain the peace of the country.
The Minister said the Regiment demonstrated to be the torchbearer of any forward match in fighting the threats of potential secessionist attacks and that of terrorists in the country and the region.
He said the swift response of the 66 Artillery Regiment in the wake of the activities of the secessionist group was highly commendable.
Undoubtedly, 2022 will be one of the most difficult years Ghanaians have ever experienced, especially for those who did not experience the 1980s drought.
Many expect the father of the country, the president, to give hope to the citizenry with his public pronouncements. Unfortunately, some statements President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo made added insult to injury for many Ghanaians.
The president’s comments that annoyed Ghanaians were mostly made during his tour of some parts of the country.
Here are three statements by Akufo-Addo that did not sit well with many Ghanaians:
To those of you saying bad things about me in the Ashanti Region, I will shame you all – Akufo-Addo
President Akufo-Addo, while speaking during a sod-cutting ceremony for the Suame Interchange on October 18, 2022, as part of his Ashanti Region tour, berated his political detractors in the region.
According to him, these people will be shamed one by one for the numerous things he has done for the people of the region, which is considered the ‘political world bank’ of his party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP).
President Akufo-Addo stated that for the past six years that he has been in office, the people of the Ashanti Region have benefitted enough from his government; therefore, his detractors cannot say otherwise.
“And to those of you going around saying bad things about me in the Ashanti Region, one after the other, they are all going to be shamed convincingly today, tomorrow and the day after.
“In spite of our present difficulties, which I know will be gone as soon as possible, I continue to be excited about the future prospects of the nation, and I urge all Ghanaians to join hands in building the Ghana that we want, we can realize it if we all work at it,” he said.
Your threats to vote against the NPP don’t frighten me – Akufo-Addo
The president once again raised eyebrows in an interview on OTEC FM during his tour of the Ashanti Region when he stated how unfazed he was about the NPP losing the next general elections.
He explained that while there are threats to vote against them, he is unmoved, adding that the intimidation of voting against the NPP due to unfulfilled promises or lack of development under his tenure is a voter’s personal decision he cannot be bothered about.
“People make those kinds of threats; they don’t frighten me. Somebody votes for you, and somebody supports you. It’s because they want you to do certain things for them. I understand that. But there is no need for people to say that if I am unable to do this and that… those are their own issues to deal with. Of course, I will do it (the road).
“But if it comes to the election and you choose to vote for the NDC, that is your own issue; that is not my worry because nobody holds your thumb to vote; it is your own work. The important thing is that I understand my responsibility, and we will deal with it,” the president said.
I’m not so sure if Aisha Huang was deported – Akufo-Addo
In September 2022, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo contradicted statements by some of his appointees that illegal small-scale mining (galamsey) kingpin, Aisha Huang, was deported from Ghana in 2018.
Speaking in an interview on Stone City Radio in Ho during his tour of the Volta Region, which GhanaWeb monitored, Akufo-Addo expressed uncertainty about whether Aisha Huang was deported.
According to the president, it is likely that the ‘galamsey’ queen was never deported but fled the country in 2018.
“… I am not still sure whether she was, in fact, deported or whether she fled the country the first time and has now come back or whatever. There still seems to be some uncertainty about it.
“Whichever way it is, she has become a sort of nickname for all that the ‘galamsey’ represents and also, unnfortunately, for the involvement of Chinese nationals in this illicit trade,” he said.
Oppong Nkrumah’s shocked expression after Akufo-Addo said Aisha Huang wasn’t deported.
To make up for the required 15% decrease, the GPRTU and the Ho Cooperative Transport Society Limited have both lowered the cost of the air-conditioned bus to Accra from GHc 73 to GHc 62. The non-air-conditioned bus ticket has also been reduced from GHc 70 to GHc 60.
“The fare reduction is a directive from the government and so we have to comply although the prices of spare parts engine oil, and tyres have not changed,” Oliver Nelson Osei, Treasurer of the Ho Cooperative said.
“It is affecting us seriously, but we have to adjust ourselves,” he added, saying that vehicles owners have threatened to recall their vehicles over of the present industry outlook.
Mr Osei went on to lament how passenger flow during the season had reduced to less than 40 per cent compared to the same period last year.
“It’s 1:30 pm and only three Ashaiman cars have loaded. Last year at this time, ten would have been delivered by now,” he said.
Speaking on measures to ensure safe travel during the season, the Treasurer said a meeting had been called the week prior, where drivers were advised to be cautious and disciplined on the road.
Mr. Osei said drivers were also asked to comply with the National Road Safety Authority’s rules and guidelines.
He used the medium to draw Government’s attention to the bad nature of roads linking the Region to the nation’s capital and said road repair works must be properly done to protect the longevity of their vehicles.
Mr Osei said more police visibility would be required along the eastern corridor as the activities of highway robbers were on the increase and said passengers should help maintain safe speed limits to safeguard lives.
Rotary Club of Accra La East has donated items worth over ¢5,000 to the South Labone Junior Girls Vocational Centre in Osu, Accra.
The items donated to the Centre include cooking oil, bags of rice, flour, beans, gari, liquid soap, washing powder, toiletries, yam, and plantain, among others.
President of the Club, Julia Asante Anim, explained the donation formed part of this year’s Rotary Christmas celebrations and that it was necessary for the club to have identified a facility and contribute its quota.
Ms. Anim added that the provision of the food and other items was a knock on the door of the Centre to present other opportunities to them in terms of education and shelter.
’’We are here today and have identified other focal areas and I can assure you that the Rotary Club of Accra La East will be back to support other areas of this facility. Over the last few years, the Club has supported various schools, orphanages and other social and community interventions and currently working with the Ministry of Health on a nationwide eye screening project,”
“For us to collaborate with any other people interested in the welfare of people then it is okay with us. It doesn’t matter the denomination, once you are interested in helping other people, we are also interested in it, so to collaborate is not an issue,” She said.
Rotary has six areas of focus Peace and conflict resolution, disease prevention and treatment, water and sanitation, maternal and child health, basic education and literacy, economic and community development, and so on are all covered by this donation.
The Volta Regional Minister, Dr. Archibald Yao Letsa, has entreated humanresource personnel in the Local Government Service to execute their duties with a high level of professionalism.
He stated that the success and survival of every organization depends on the effectiveness and competence level of its human resources.
He was speaking at the maiden edition of the Volta Regional Human Resource Conference held in Ho.
The Regional Minister acknowledged the contribution of the Human Resource Department of the Regional Coordinating Council to its attaining the enviable position of being ranked first among the 16 regions in Ghana.
Dr. Letsa stressed that Human Resource Management is a critical resource in the attainment of organizational goals.
He, therefore, appealed to the Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) and the Coordinating Directors to appreciate the role that human resource practitioners play in the various assemblies.
“They are the software, don’t concentrate only on the hardware”, he said.
The Chief Director of the Office of the Head of Local Government Service, James Oppong- Mensah, commended the Volta Regional Coordinating Council (VRCC) on organising the HR conference.
He implored the personnel to continue giving off their best to complement the government’s efforts in developing the country.
The Acting Director of the Volta Regional Coordinating Council (VRCC), Augustus Awity, said the role of the human resource manager has been underestimated for a very long time.
He added that HR management is the “fulcrum around which all other professions at the MMDAs revolve”.
The Volta Regional Human Resource Manager , Cyril Dzinyanu Xatse, commended the Office of the Head of the Local Government Service for upgrading the Human Resource Unit to full department.
He urged his colleague human resource professionals to hold in high esteem, the public service tenets in the discharge of their duties.
The maiden Human Resource Conference was held under the theme, “Enhancing Productivity in the Local Government Service; The role of the Human resource practitioner“.
It was a four-day program organized in collaboration with the Local Government Service’s human resource professionals.
Two persons have been shot to death while many others have suffered injuries of varying degrees following a confrontation between certain members of the Dzekle Royal Family and the stool father of the Battor Traditional region in the North Tongu District.
The shooting incident happened after the destoolment of the paramount chief of the Battor Traditional area.
The Paramount Chief of the Battor Traditional Area in the Volta Region, Togbe Patamia Dzekley VII, was destooled on November 27, 2022, by the stool father, Zikpitor Korsi Hottor, after it was alleged that the paramount chief had breached customs and traditions of the Battor Traditional Area.
But during a gathering to process for the firing of musketry in the Battor township ahead of a festival, supporters of the destooled paramount chief clashed with some supporters of the stool father resulting in two deaths and several persons being injured.
A resident, Charles Hottor, speaking to Citi News said the police must beef up security in Battor.
“If the police were on the street of Battor, I don’t think that lives would have been lost. They would have calmed them. They would have actually stopped people from shooting and killing each other.”
Healthcare professionals in the Volta Region, specifically the Central Tongu district, have recounted the positive impact the services of Zipline have had on healthcare delivery.
This comes after about a year since the company began operations from the Anum centre.
The Anum distribution centre of Zipline currently delivers medicines, vaccines and blood products to over 350 health facilities in both the Volta and the Eastern Regions.
Some health professionals, during a recent media tour to access the operations of Zipline, say there has been a significant improvement in the overall health delivery and disease control in the district as a result of the “fast, reliable and dependable” deliveries of Zipline.
A senior enrolled nurse at the Kpoviadzi Health Center, Aisha Naa Kwamaah, revealed that the decision of the government to partner with Zipline is a worthwhile one as this has come to reduce many of the challenges they had witnessed in the past.
“I must say that health delivery in this area [Kpoviadzi] has seen a very significant improvement. Attendance at our health facility has increased as many of the residents now know we will not refer them to other secondary facilities as a result of the non-availability of medical commodities.
“Even if we don’t have a particular medicine to prescribe, we can call Zipline who will definitely deliver within 30 minutes. We also do not have to travel long kilometres to Adidome for medicine as we used to.
Aisha added; “Aside from the improvements in health outcomes, their services have helped in reducing the time spent to access healthcare. We do not have to necessarily wait for the regular requisitions to the district capital before we work. Our previous way of using commercial vehicles to bring medical supplies has also drastically reduced”.
The Disease Control Officer at the Central Tongu District Health Directorate, Vera Nyamata said her work in the region has seen great improvements as a result of the partnership.
“Zipline has made our work towards reducing disease prevalence in the district very productive. We no longer panic when there is an outbreak of diseases because we are able to make multiple vaccine requests from Zipline and they are delivered to us faster.
“Within riverine communities where snake bites are more prevalent, the Zipline invention has seen us stock the health facilities there with enough anti-snake venom serums which are administered anytime we receive patients who have suffered snake bites”.
A Principal Health Nurse at the Kpoviadzi Health Center, Mercy Dugbenu was full of praise for the government since, according to her, the choice of partnering with Zipline is a bold one that is delivering real results, particularly for those in remote areas.
The Community Lead for Zipline in Anum, Magdaline Awushi Bukudah, told the media that the company has delivered over 1.3 million units of medical commodities, vaccines, and blood units just within a year of launching this center.
“There is no doubt that our services are truly making the desired impact in the communities where we serve. We appreciate the government and all other stakeholders who have given us the required social license to operate; we remain committed to our core mandate of not letting anyone behind access critical commodities when they need them the most.
Hopeson Adorye, a former National Security Ministry official has lamented the circumstances under which he recently lost his job.
He states in one breath that he is unperturbed by the turn of events but also that his contributions to the party, particularly the rise to the presidency of Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, is well known.
Speaking for the first time about his dismissal on Oman FM’s Boiling Point programme last week, Adorye disclosed how he purportedly helped secure the Volta Region from vote manipulation by way of Togolese being brought into Ghana to vote for a particular party.
“You can testify that I was not seated behind the fence wall, I was in the thick of affairs. Ghana – Togo border operations,” he told host of the show, before adding: “I did it with four youth organizers in the Volta Region, we did it at the blind side of the regional executives.
“Because if we had informed them, they will claim they had plans to do it,” he added before narrating how it wasn’t until the day of vote in 2016 when he met the regional secretary at Kpando, then the secretary said they had gotten wind of his undisclosed operations.
He stated further that with his operation, the other party that usually brought illegal voters in, failed so to do: “We all saw the results in Volta Region, when they went to recruit voters, it was unsuccessful but this is my reward today?”
On his dismissal, he stressed: “I’m not a zombie, uncle, I was told that my support is not towards a particular camp so I should be dismissed, I have been dismissed. ‘Your appointment has been terminated with immediate effect. That is why I am stressing that God will cater for us, we will never die.
“I have left it all to God, we won’t sleep hungry. I know it is not my minister who will do this, Kan-Dapaah will not do this. But from what I am hearing, I pity those who issued the instruction,” he added.
The hard economic times are now being reflected by the dwindled offerings in church, former President John Mahama has observed and urged Christians to pray for the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) and him for “rescue” Ghana from the current “suffering”.
At the 175th-anniversary thanksgiving service of the E.P Church in Ho, Volta Region, Mr Mahama urged Christians to be generous with the little they have since times are hard.
“We must always spread Christian love, especially in this time, when money doesn’t like noise”, he told the church, stressing: “Especially, at this time when we all agree that times are hard”.
“This is the time we must show our Christian charity by loving our neighbours as ourselves”, Mr Mahama urged.
“And, so, whatever little you have to share, you should share with your neighbour”, he told Christians.
Using an appeal for funds event at the church as the litmus test of the economic hardships, Mr Mahama pointed out: “I mean, we could tell the hardship in the system from the appeal for funds”.
“When it was GH¢2,000, madam chair and a few people came and donated. Then it came down to ¢1,000, then to ¢500, then to ¢200 and ¢100”.
“And when it got to the silver collection, ¢1, ¢2, the place was full, it shows that the pocket was not too good”, he observed.
He then told the church, which had on its schedule, a prayer session for Christians in Pakistan: “After we pray for Pakistan, Moderator should also say a special prayer for me and for the NDC so that, in some year that is just coming, luck will smile on us, God will smile on us and give us the power to come and rescue this country from the suffering we are going through”.
Ghana is currently experiencing an economic crisis which President Nana Akufo-Addo has acknowledged, forcing him to address the nation on Sunday, 30 October 2022 about measures being put in place by his administration to fix the problem.
A coalition of other Eight Executive Members of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) from across all Eighteen (18) constituencies of the Volta region are calling for a united and stonger leadership front ahead of election 2024.
The group at a press briefing during the Volta Regional Delegates Conference of the party in Ho, Saturday, noted that the NDC needs each and everyone now more than ever to wrestle power from the NPP government.
The group christenened as VEM Forum (Volta Executive Members Forum) is thus urging the new crop of the party’s leadership in the Volta region to take steps to reconcile and bring all party folks on board to deliver victory for the party in 2024.
In a statement read by Bright Yaw Sachie on behalf of members, the group said, “regional aspirants must know that we all belong to one family. Therefore, the outcome of the elections today should not bring division but rather uniting together for the rescue mission in 2024.”
The group is also calling on the NDC to involve them more in the party’s activities in ensuring a well coordinated campaign for the elections.
“Other 8 members have been neglected for too long -they only use us for elections as if we are election machines but that must stop.”
“Therefore, we are urging the new regional aspirants that will emerge winners to involve us in the new administration because we have a role to play to rescue power from the clueless NPP government,” the group urged.
According to the group, the country is now at a crossroad amidst unbearable living conditions to which only the NDC can offer a solution.
To ensure electoral success for the party in 2024, VEM Forum has outlined a number of activities including campaign activities in market places, regular press engagements and door-to-door campaign across the Volta region.
The group also placed a further call on youth in the Volta region to join their train to canvass votes for the National Democratic Congress.
Dancehall musician, Shatta Wale, has stormed social media with explanations in relation to his absence at the Hogbetsotso Beach Rave in Tegbi, Volta region.
Earlier, it was reported that Shatta who was billed to perform as headline artiste failed to show up on stage although he arrived in town for the event.
“It is interesting to note that Shatta Wale had shown up at the venue of the concert in vehicles rented for him and his team by the organizers yet could not be found afterwards. All efforts by the two management teams to get him to come to the concert grounds to perform to the waiting crowd proved futile,” parts of the statement from the organizers read.
It was said to be a chaotic scene as disappointed fans who were gathered at the venue attacked some organizers by pelting stones at them and destroying their gadgets.
After days of silence, Shatta has taken to social media to state reasons for his absence on stage.
Stating his own side of the story, the Dancehall artiste expressed that he was disrespected by the organizers.
Buttressing his point, Shatta asserted that he was driven directly to a radio station to grant an interview when he already had an agreement with organizers that he would not participate in such an arrangement or even greet any chief.
He added that one of the organizers threatened to withhold his accommodation if he fails to grant the interview and that was when he took off.
“Ibe show wey them contract me for. We no dey go greet greet people. Ago taya before the show starts sef. I know how people dey love me and I know I’d have to get into the crowd. Everybody go dey talk to you and your voice all go strain. I wanted to keep the energy for my lovely people of volta. As I ask them whether ino be this thing I tell them before coming, I hear sey one of the organizers say if I no go come the radio station, then them no go take me go my hotel room. So you expect me to carry all the luggage I came with to the radio station?” he expressed in Pidgin English during an Instagram live.
A disappointed Shatta however asked if a foreign artiste could be treated in such an unfair manner.
“Massa, make I carry all my luggage come the radio station den come do radio interview? As yourself whether that’s how they treat foreign artistes. Do they take them to radio stations immediately they land at the airport? Even some international artistes come with their live bands, do they carry all that to the radio station? When Usher came to Ghana did he carry all his luggage and band to radio stations for interview?
Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia has assured Ghanaians that the Akufo-Addo administration will tackle the economic challenges facing them.
He told Ghanaians that the challenges are also being felt in most countries around the world, not only Ghana
In a remark at the Hogbestosto Festival at Anlo in the Volta Region on Saturday November 5, he said “we all know we are facing global economic crisis which Togbe Sri III referred to.
“This is a crisis that is being felt all over the world and the cost of living accelerated across the globe.
“If you look at the cost of living as measured by the rate of inflation, between 2019 and now, the rate of inflation has increased by five-fold in Ghana, it has increased by sixteen-fold in Togo, it has increased by eleven-fold in Senegal, it has increased by seven-fold in Cote D’Ivoire and eight-fold in the United Kingdom.
“The increase in the cost of living has caused hardships not only in Ghana but many countries.
“In fact, the BBC noted about two weeks ago that so far, this year, in 93 countries we have had public protests against the increased cost of living. It is important to know however that amidst all of this turmoil we should put things in perspectives.”
He added “The government of Nana Akufo-Addo has over the last six years taken many steps to reposition and transform the economy.
“So whiles we have hardships today, which we are working very hard to alleviate, and In sha’Allah we will deal with it, let us not forget what we have been able to do in the last six years.
“Let me recall that our government in the last six years has created more jobs than any other government in the Fourth Republic, let me recall that we have constructed more roads than any other government in the Fourth Republic, Let me recall that we have built more interchanges than any other government in the Fourth Republic, we have built more airports than any other government in the Fourth Republic, more railways than any other government , we have built more classrooms than any other government in the Fourth Republic.”
The Anlo Traditional Council in the Volta Region has charged the government to scale-up efforts to protect coastal towns, especially Keta, and its environs from being washed away by the sea.
According to them, the move will reduce the growing destruction caused by tidal waves in the area.
The spokesperson for the Council, Togbe Agbetadua Kumassah, made the request in an interview with Adom News during the 60th annual Hogbetsotso celebration.
Hogbetsotso is one of the indigenous festivals in Ghana. It is celebrated by the Anlo people to commemorate the escape from Notsie in Togo to their present abode in the Volta Region of Ghana, between the fourteenth and the fifteenth centuries
He also called on government to consider developing the roads and completing the abandoned One District One Factory (1D1F) project to create jobs for the youth in the area.
Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumaia has indicated that the Akufo-Addo administration has over the past six years in office built more schools, roads, airports, interchanges than any other government in the Fourth Republic.
He has appealed to Ghanaians to recollect these achievements of the government in the midst of the economic turmoil they are saddled with currently.
Dr Bawumia indicated that the hardships are being felt globally, not only in Ghana.
In a remark at the Hogbestosto Festival at Anlo in the Volta Region on Saturday November 5, he said “we all know we are facing global economic crisis which Togbe Sri III referred to. This is a crisis that is being felt all over the world and the cost of living accelerated across the globe.
“If you look at the cost of living as measured by the rate of inflation, between 2019 and now, the rate of inflation has increased by five-fold in Ghana, it has increased by sixteen-fold in Togo, it has increased by eleven-fold in Senegal, it has increased by seven-fold in Cote D’Ivoire and eight-fold in the United Kingdom.
“The increase in the cost of living has caused hardships not only in Ghana but many countries. In fact, the BBC noted about two weeks ago that so far, this year, in 93 countries we have had public protests against the increased cost of living. It is important to know however that amidst all of this turmoil we should put things in perspectives.
He added “The government of Nana Akufo-Addo has over the last six years taken many steps to reposition and transform the economy . So whiles we have hardships today which we are working very hard to alleviate, and Insah Allah, we will deal with it, let us not forget what we have been able to do in the last six years.
“Let me recall that our government in the last six years has created more jobs than any other government in the Fourth Republic, let me recall that we have constructed more roads than any other government in the Fourth Republic, Let me recall that we have built more interchanges than any other government in the Fourth Republic, we have built more airports than any other government in the Fourth Republic, more railways than any other government , we have built more classrooms than any other government in the Fourth Republic.”
Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia Saturday received a rousing welcome at the Hogbetsotso Festival of the Anlo State in the Volta Region.
The enthusiastic crowd chanted New Patriotic Party (NPP) songs to welcome the Vice President and his entourage to the 2022 festival, which marks the 60th anniversary of the Hogbetsotsoza.
This year’s celebration is on the theme: “60 years of Anlo Hogbetsotso Za: Uniting for development, sustaining our unique cultural commonwealth for future generations”.
Also present at the festival were the Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, and the Ga King, Nii Tackie Teiko Tsuru II.
Other chiefs and personalities from the Volta Region and diasporans also graced the historic ceremony.
The Vice President called for togetherness for rapid socio-economic development.
Hogbetsotso is celebrated in November at Anloga, which is the traditional and ritual capital of the Anlo State.
The Festival unfolds Ewe history and brings to play the memories of legendary exodus and heroic acts of men of boldness and their mystical powers that liberated the Ewe-Dogbo people from the rule of tyrant King of Kings-Torgbui Agokorli of Nortsie in Togo.
Hence, Hogbetsotso is derived from the word ‘Hogbe’ or ‘Hohogbe’-the day of exodus – the moment in time when the Ewes in the Dogbo quarter of the walled city of Nortsie in Togo, escaped from the tyrannical ruler Agorkorli by walking backwards.
In order to commemorate the exodus and the bravery of their traditional rulers who led them on the journey, the people commemorate the annual festival of the Exodus – “Hogbetsotsoza”.
Thirty-six states from the Anlo Traditional Area are participating in this year’s celebration.
The Asantehene, Otumfuo Osei Tutu II, will join the Awomefia of Anlo state, Togbe Sri III, to celebrate the Hogbetsotso festival this Saturday, November 6, 2022 in Keta in the Volta Region.
The historical visit to the Volta Region, while it will not be the first time, is hugely anticipated to add to the grandeur of the meeting between the two powerful traditions in the country.
The relationship between Asante and Anlo states dates back to the 19th century during the reign of Asantehene Kofi Karikari, when the Asante, Akwamu and Anlo States formed a tripartite alliance during the Asante-Krepi War (1869-1872).
This year’s celebration is on the theme ‘60 Years of Anlo Hogbetsotso Za: Uniting for Development, Sustaining our Unique Cultural Commonwealth for Future Generations’.
Seven ministers are expected to appear before the house to respond to questions, which include urgent and oral questions.
The ministers expected to appear are the Minister for the Volta Region, Minister for the Interior, Minister for Food and Agriculture, Minister for Health, Minister for Environment, Science and Technology, Minister for Railways Development, and Minister for Roads and Highways.
The ministers will respond to over 40 questions during the week.
Aside from that, motions may be debated and their consequential resolutions, if any, taken during the week.
The Business Committee urged Ministers of State to endeavour to attend the House to respond to questions whenever they are scheduled to do so.
Also, some presentations of papers are expected this week, which include the Annual Report of the Public Utilities Regulatory Commission for 2020; the Reconciliation Report on the Petroleum Holding Fund for the year 2021; and the Annual Public Debt Management Report for the year 2021, among others.
Aside from that, motions may be debated and their consequential resolutions, if any, taken during the week.
They are bold and beautiful and are currently making strides as justices of Ghana’s Supreme Court, having been appointed at different periods by the President Akufo-Addo.
Out of some 14 Justices of the Supreme Court, these 5 women are making a name not only for themselves in legal history but on behalf of all Ghanaian women.
We take a look at their profiles and achievements.
Agnes Mercy Abla Dordzie
Agnes Mercy Abla Dordzie was born in Taviefe-Deme in the Volta Region. After her basic and secondary education in various schools including the Ola Girls Secondary School in the Volta Region, she proceeded to the University of Ghana to study Law and Political Science from 1974 to 1977.
Dordzie worked as a national service personnel at the National Council on Women and Development at Koforidua from 1977 to 1978.
She then enrolled at the Ghana School of Law in 1979 and graduated in November 1980 with a Barrister-at-law degree. Justice Dordzie was called to the bar that same year. text
She joined the Attorney General’s Department as an assistant state attorney until January 1983. A month later, she moved to Nigeria on a contract appointment to work with the Minister of Justice at Calabar, Cross River State as a state council.
She later returned to Ghana to begin private legal practice at Adzoe Gbadegbe and Company.
She remained in private legal practice until May 1987 when she appointed magistrate at Somanya. In November 1991 she was elevated to a Circuit Judge, working in Accra.
She served as a High Court judge in Accra from November 1995 to November 2003.
From December 2003 to November 2005, she was the supervising High Court judge of the Ashanti Region.
Justice Dordzie was appointed by the Commonwealth Secretariat on the secondment of the Judiciary of Ghana to serve as a High Court judge in The Gambia and was later elevated to the Court of Appeal in July 2010.
In 2007 she pursued a master’s degree program in International Relations at the Commonwealth Open University, British Virgin Islands, United Kingdom, graduating in 2010.
She also enrolled at the Institute of Theological Studies to study a six-month diploma course in Christian Counselling in 2014.
Agnes Mercy Abla Dordzie was one of four Supreme Court Justices nominated by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo on July 3, 2018.
Her nomination followed the retirement of some justices of the Supreme Court and the need to replace them.
In the first place, this is not gold that comes from the ore that is mined from many kilometers beneath the earth’s surface per se, but this product is as cherished as the jewelry you wear on your wrist or neck.
Known differently to different tribes in Ghana by name: Agatawoe in Ewe; Ayilo for the Gamɛi; shirew by the Akans; and kaolin in English, this product is also known as food that is loved by mostly pregnant women.
It is believed that it is because of its unique smell that pregnant women are so drawn to it.
Formed from a type of clay, ayilo is used for many other things including it being a reliable material for electro-porcelain fabrication, as well as a major material used for making wall and floor tiles.
In Ghana, Anfoega is one of the locations where this product is mostly produced from, through a process of moulding the freshly mined clay soil into lumps, oven-baked and distributed to markets.
The industry in Anfoega in the Volta Region, for instance, is such a big one, almost everyone in the town has benefited from the economic gains that come with it.
According to a Facebook post shared by Kofi Semamu Atsu Adzei, he said that this ‘white gold’ has created many rich people and prominent business people from the community.
“This is white Gold, yes you heard me right. This can be found in Anfoega and it’s called Agatawoe, the Gamɛi call it ayilo, it is shirew by the Akans and kaolin in English.
“Almost everyone in Anfoega has benefited from the economic gains of this white gold. Anyone into the white gold business is a rich person. Ask anyone from the holy village of Anfoega about it and you will marvel,” he wrote.
Uses of Ayilo:
Apart from the already stated uses of kaolin, the product is also used by many to manage nausea, while others claim it helps in the prevention of things like diarrhoea, discomfort and other pregnancy-related conditions, a report by graphic.com.gh said.
Further details online show that some experts explain that kaolin has absorbent qualities that make it a good addition to helping with diarrhoea.
Also, the use of kaolin is said to help improve conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome and leaky gut.
Ayilo is also used for as a beauty enhancement and is said to be used for many traditional and medicinal purposes.
“It is also a key ingredient in some cleansers, shampoos, toothpastes and beauty products, as it is claimed to gently cleanse and pull impurities from the pores
without causing redness,” a report stated.
Effects of Ayilo:
But there have also been reported after effects of using this product, some of which researchers say is that when pregnant women, for instance, consume too much of it without taking more nutritious foods, it can expose them to anemia.
Besides, because of its source and composition, it is believed that ayilo could carry some amounts of worm eggs, and as such, should it be consumed, the eggs could hatch in the body, leading to the worms feeding on the red blood cells and posing great health risks to an individual.
With chemical elements such as Aluminium, Arsenic, Boron and Nickel, the product poses even more harmful threats to anyone who consumes it.
The Constituency Executives positions of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) have attracted a total of 834 aspirants in the Volta region.
Among them are a total of 135 females.
Mr James Gunu, Regional Secretary of the Party, who disclosed the developments to the Ghana News Agency (GNA) said all were successfully vetted with a non-significant number of disqualifications.
He said the constituency elections would be held from October 22 to October 23 in all except Hohoe.
“We have a different strategy for taking back Hohoe,” he noted.
He said the nomination, filing and vetting processes, which have been digitised, had been “very smooth.”
“What is heartwarming is the enthusiasm and the growing desire for people to serve the Party, to see the Party regain power in 2024.
“We can see clearly that everybody is fed up with this Government”
Regional Executives’ elections for the Party have been slated for the 11th and 12th days of the month of November, processes for which had advanced past the nomination stage.
The regional positions also have attracted some stalwarts of the party, and Mr Gunu told the GNA he was seeking to maintain his position as secretary.
He said Volta Region remained the stronghold of the Party, and with cues from previous elections, victory would not evade.
“We are going to adopt very dramatic steps to ensure we win 2024. We will take every election process very seriously.”
The Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) is cautioning the general public against the consumption of AIA Wudy and Pavo sausages.
This comes after the products, produced by Agricola Tre Vali, were recalled by Italian authorities due to the presence of Listeria bacteria in these sausages made from poultry meat.
Two batches with codes 1785417 and 01810919 with an expiration date of November 30, 2022, are implicated.
According to the FDA, following the recall activities ongoing in Europe and other countries, it has also conducted a market surveillance activity and Pavo Frankfurt sausages with an expiry date of November 2022 were found in Ho in the Volta Region.
The products have since been detained for safe disposal. So far, no AIA Wudy sausages have been found on the Ghanaian market.
The FDA has however directed that anyone in possession of the above-mentioned products should immediately take them to either their Head Office or Regional Offices across the country.
“The FDA wishes to assure the public that its surveillance teams continue to monitor the markets for any of the above-mentioned products,” it concluded.
Listeria infection is a foodborne bacterial illness that can be very dangerous for pregnant women, people older than 65 and people with weakened immune systems.
It’s most commonly caused by eating improperly processed deli meats and unpasteurised milk products.
Healthy people rarely become ill from listeria infection, but the disease can be fatal to unborn babies, newborns and people with weakened immune systems.
Prompt antibiotic treatment can help curb the effects of listeria infection.
Listeria bacteria can survive refrigeration and even freezing. So people who are at higher risk of serious infections should avoid eating the types of food most likely to contain listeria bacteria.
The video, which has since gone viral on social media, particularly Twitter, has had people express horror at the feeding situation in schools.
In the said video, a student with a spoon is seen carefully dividing the fish in what looks like palm nut soup into several pieces to share with other students seated around the table who had been served rice.
“This is not healthy,” Kobby Kyei wrote while tagging the Ghana Education Service on Twitter.
It will be recalled that from May this year, some Senior High Schools reported food shortages while threatening to close down if nothing was done about the situation.
The regional Conference of Heads of Assisted Secondary Schools (CHASS) in the Northern, Eastern, Central and Volta regions were worst affected by the crisis and demanded that either students are made to feed themselves, or the schools shut down.
However, government intervened and had supplies delivered to the various schools to avert their closure.
The situation seems to have resurrected in some schools in the Volta region as letters shared by Deputy Ranking Member on Parliament’s Education Committee, Dr. Clement Apaak, shows a request by school heads for supplies.
The headmistress of Avatime Senior High School, Rebecca Mawusi Veny, wrote to the Volta Regional Director of Education to request permission for the students to begin feeding themselves as the school was running out of stock.
“This unfortunate situation has been reported to the regional Buffer Stock Company and other officers that matter, but the situation has remained the same.
“Director and Board of Directors, please I seek permission for my students to buy their own food come next week if nothing is done about the food situation,” part of the letter dated September 29 read.
Similarly, the headmaster of Alavanyo Senior High Technical, Rev Samuel Pius Elewokor, wrote to the Volta Regional Free SHS Secretariat for urgent supply as they have resorted to feeding their students twice daily.
“We hope our request would be given a quick response because we currently feed the students with only breakfast and supper, and this can take us to Friday, September 30 2022,” part of the letter read.
St Paul’s Senior High School and Minor Seminary at Hatsukorpe(Ketu South) SPACO.
A video shared by blogger, Kobby Kyei, in which students of St Paul’s Senior High School and Minor Seminary in the Volta Region are purportedly sharing one fish during dining.
The video which has since gone viral on social media, particularly Twitter has had people express horror at the feeding situation in schools.
In the said video, a student with the ladle is seen carefully dividing the fish in what looks like palm nut soup into several pieces to shared to other students seated around the table who had been served rice.
“This is not healthy,” Kobby Kyei wrote while tagging the Ghana Education Service on Twitter.
It will be recalled that from May this year, some Senior High Schools reported food shortages while threatening to close down if nothing was done about the situation.
The regional Conference of Heads of Assisted Secondary Schools (CHASS) in the Northern, Eastern, Central and Volta regions were worst affected by the crisis and demanded that either students are made to feed themselves or the schools shut down.
However, government intervened and had supplies delivered to the various schools to avert their closure.
The situation seems to have resurrected in some schools in the Volta region as letters shared by Deputy Ranking Member on Parliament’s Education Committee, Dr. Clement Apaak, shows a request by school heads for supplies.
Headmistress of Avatime Senior High School, Rebecca Mawusi Veny, wrote to the Volta Regional Director of Education to request for permission for the students to begin feeding themselves as the school was running out of stocks.
“This unfortunate situation has been reported to the regional Buffer Stock Company and other officers that matter, but the situation has remained the same.
“Director and Board of Directors, please I seek permission for my students to buy their own food come next week if nothing is done about the food situation,” part of the letter dated September 29 read.
Similarly, the headmaster of Alavanyo Senior High Technical, Rev Samuel Pius Elewokor, wrote to the Volta Regional Free SHS Secretariat for urgent supply as they have resorted to feeding their students twice daily.
“We hope our request would be given a quick response because we currently feed the students with only breakfast and supper, and this can take us to Friday 30th September 2022,”part of the letter read
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St Paul’s Senior High School and Minor Seminary at Hatsukorpe(Ketu South) SPACO.