Tag: Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo

  • Ghana’s $430 million COVID combat budget is deemed sufficient by the World Bank

    The $430 million COVID-19 support from the Bretton Woods institution was used by the government in a manner that has been acknowledged as satisfactory by the World Bank.

    The World Bank claims that the expense complied with procurement regulations.

    The government has been charged with mismanaging the World Bank-funded COVID-19 program meant to combat the pandemic.

    Pierre Frank Laporte, the country director for Sierra Leone, Ghana, and Liberia at the World Bank, stated on TV3 that “we know each and every dollar that is spent and accounted for.”

    “We have done audits. There are always a few things here and there and some documentation that needs to be followed, but largely, speaking, we are very satisfied that our resources were spent in line with the procurement requirements that existed.”

    “All the funds for COVID were not spent. There were immediate things to be spent on, but there was also construction and procurement of equipment. We don’t feel that our resources have not been properly spent,” Mr. Laporte explained.

    The money provided by the World Bank was for communication campaigns, the sensitization campaign, equipping labs, equipping new facilities to receive patients, among others.

    The World Bank further provided an additional $130 million for the purchase of vaccines.

    Meanwhile, Seth Kwame Acheampong, the Eastern Regional Minister has said the government led by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo went to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a bailout to continue the development of the country.

    He said the government seeking IMF support was not to solve the economic challenges the country faces.

    He made this known when he addressed the Muslims at the Central Mosque in Koforidua during the celebration of this year’s Eid-ul- Adha.

    The Minister noted that Ghana is not broke as being festered for political gain by some Ghanaians especially the National Democratic Congress (NDC).

    Acheampong said “During the COVID pandemic, the President said we know how to bring back the economy but not the dead. So it is the same path of economic restoration that we are on now. I know many people think Ghana is broke reason we are going to IMF. No! That is not the case.

    “Fund to run the country is available but going to IMF for more funds to enable government continues its programs and developmental projects. So it doesn’t mean Ghana is broke.”

    “This is not the first time Ghana is going to IMF. For the sake of politics, people will say the government has mismanaged the economy but that is not the case.”

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has stated that all countries around the world are working to return themselves to a state of normalcy following the devastating impact of the pandemic of COVID-19, whose effects have been exacerbated by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

  • Why Biden was allowed to use a convoy for Queen Elizabeth’s funeral

    It became a major topic of discussion among inhabitants of the nations whose leaders had been ordered to take shared buses to the late British monarch Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral.

    On September 19, 2022, Westminster Abbey in the United Kingdom hosted the funeral service for the late Queen.

    many world leaders, including the presidents of Commonwealth nations like Ghana and Kenya.
    The new King, Charles III, had extended invitations to the presidents of the United States, France, Emmanuel Macron, and South Korea, Yoon Suk-Yeol, among others.

    Despite the fact that many foreign leaders had been invited, there were restrictions about procedure for attending the burial.

    A statement issued from the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office confirmed this.

    As part of the arrangements, the office warned foreign leaders to, if possible, arrive in the UK using commercial flights rather than private jets as Heathrow Airport will be closed to that. They were also asked to gather at a site in West London where they will be bussed to and from Westminster Abbey where the funeral was to be held.

    As such, Ghana’s President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, Kenya’s President, William Ruto, First Lady, and Tanzanian President Suluhu joined an arranged bus consequently for the event.

    Details of why Biden, others were exempted:

    The U.S President, Joe Biden, and some other leaders from G-7 countries including France’s Emmanuel Macron, Israel’s Isaac Herzog, Canada’s Justin Trudeau, and Emperor Naruhito of Japan were however exempted from this directive.

    They could use their official vehicles and for U.S President, Joe Biden who was attending with his wife, it had been stated that he was going to arrive in his 7-tonne armoured Cadillac presidential limousine: ‘The Beast’ escorted by a convoy.

    According to the UK’s Express news portal, the White House demanded that Biden travels via a six-car motorcade for “security reasons”. Their request was granted by UK officials hence the development.

    The Washingtonpost reports that the U.S. presidential limousine is armored, with thicker wheels, a heavy-duty chassis, expanded space for passengers, secure encrypted communications technology and ornate interiors that can include foldout desks.

    The report also noted that officials from Buckingham Palace declined to “comment on security matters” but instead referred them to the U.S to respond to any such questions.

    Aside from these exemptions and families of some European Royals, all other foreign leaders were supposed to be bussed to ‘ease traffic congestion’.

    The development was however not received very well, especially by citizens of African countries who believed and suggested that the move by the UK was racist. Others were unhappy and expressed concerns about the security of their presidents being jeopardised.

  • FULL TEXT: Akufo-Addo’s Address at 77th United Nations’ General Assembly

    ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF GHANA, NANA ADDO DANKWA AKUFO-ADDO, AT THE 77TH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS’ GENERAL ASSEMBLY, ON THE THEME “A WATERSHED MOMENT: TRANSFORMATIVE SOLUTIONS TO INTERLOCKING CHALLENGES”, ON WEDNESDAY, 21ST SEPTEMBER, 2019, NEW YORK.

    Mr President, I congratulate you on your election to lead us through this 77th gathering of the General Assembly of the United Nations. I wish you the best of luck, as you take on this onerous task at this most difficult period of the world.

    Mr President, as we would say in Ghana, our world is currently not in a good place. The World Bank observed, last Thursday, that the global economy was enduring its steepest slowdown since 1970. Two years ago, our world came to a thundering halt, as we cowered from a health pandemic from an unknown, malicious virus, coupled with a devastating global economic pandemic. High budget deficits were no longer concerns of only developing nations.

    By 2021, COVID-19 had pushed Africa into the worst recession for half a century. A slump in productivity and revenues, increased pressures on spending and spiralling public debts confronted us without relent.

    As we grappled with these economic challenges, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine burst upon us, aggravating an already difficult situation. It is not just the dismay that we feel at seeing such deliberate devastation of cities and towns in Europe in the year 2022, we are feeling this war directly in our lives in Africa. Every bullet, every bomb, every shell that hits a target in Ukraine, hits our pockets and our economies in Africa.

    The economic turmoil is global with inflation as the number one enemy this year.

    It hit a 40-year-high in the US and UK in recent months. There is record inflation in the euro zone. Several African countries have inflation rates surging three to four times higher than what they were just two years ago. In Ghana, we are experiencing the highest inflation for 21 years. The high costs of food are hurting the poor, especially the urban poor, the most.

    Moreover, the spillover from central banks raising interest rates to combat inflation has been severe beyond borders, as global investors pull money out of developing economies to invest in bonds in the developed world.

    This has led to depreciating currencies and increased borrowing costs; meaning we need to raise and spend more of our own currencies to service our foreign debts in US dollars.

    It has become clear, if ever there was any doubt, that the international financial structure is skewed significantly against developing and emerging economies like Ghana. The avenues that are opened to powerful nations to enable them take measures that would ease pressures on their economies are closed to small nations.

    To make matters worse, credit rating agencies have been quick to downgrade economies in Africa, making it harder to service our debts. The tag of Africa as an investment risk is little more than, in substance, a self-fulfilling prophecy created by the prejudice of the international money market, which denies us access to cheaper borrowing, pushing us deeper into debts.

    The financial markets have been set up and operate on rules designed for the benefit of rich and powerful nations, and, during times of crisis, the façade of international co-operation, under which they purport to operate, disappears. These are the savage lessons that we have had to take in, as the world emerged from the grip of the coronavirus to energy and food price hikes, and a worldwide rise in the cost of living. The necessity for reform of the system is compelling.

    Mr President, I am a modest student of history, and I would say it is doubtful that any generation of inhabitants of this earth has ever witnessed such a perfect storm of global economic chaos, a war with global consequences, and an unwillingness or inability to find a consensus to deal with the catastrophe.

    It is under such circumstances that we have gathered under the theme: “A Watershed Moment: Transformative Solutions to Interlocking Challenges.”

    The problems we face are, indeed, many, and vary in level of importance, depending on where you are in the global order of things. Just last year, the focus was on energy transition. This year, it is about energy security, as Europe goes back to burning coal to replace Russian gas.

    Nevertheless, we do not have the luxury of being able to pick and choose which big problem to solve. None of them can wait; the economic turbulence requires urgent and immediate solution; the turmoil and insecurity in many parts of the world require urgent attention; and so does the need to tackle the problems posed by climate change.

    A watershed moment, indeed, it is, and history will judge us harshly if we do not seize the opportunity to make the changes that will enable us deal with the many problems we face.

    Mr President, a case in point is the destabilising conflict in the Sahel. It might look to many, today, as a local conflict which affects only the
    countries in that region. We, in Ghana, know differently, we have watched in horror as the unrest has moved from the Sahel, inexorably, to the West African coastal countries. All of Ghana’s neighbours have suffered terrorist attacks, and some have lost territorial space to the invading forces.

    Furthermore, the terrorist pressure has provided a pretext for the unhappy reappearance of military rule in three (3) of the fifteen (15) member ECOWAS Community, two (2) of whom have borne the brunt of the terrorist outrages in the Region – Mali and Burkina Faso. It is a development we are determined to reverse, so that the ECOWAS space remains a democratic one.

    All of us in the Region are being forced to spend huge amounts of money on security. This is money we should be spending on educating and giving skills to our young people; on building much needed roads, bridges, hospitals and other such infrastructure, which we are spending to fight terrorists or to keep them out from destabilising our countries.

    This is a global problem, deserving the attention of the world community for a global solution. Mr President, I am contributing to this debate on a date that has special significance for us in Ghana. 21st September is the date we mark the birth of our first President, Dr Kwame Nkrumah.

    He would have been one hundred and thirteen (113) years old today, and it is worth recalling on this day the driving force of his political career, which was to contribute to the birth of a united Africa, i.e., a United States of Africa.

    We recognise today, more than ever before, the importance of the strength in unity of Africa, and we are working to shed that image of a helpless, hapless continent.

    There is a renewed commitment towards an inclusive and sustainable industrialisation and economic integration and the intensity of the challenges we face today is only matched, like never before, by the immensity of the opportunity before us. We, the current leaders of Africa, should be determined not to waste the crisis that confronts us.

    Incidentally, 2022 is billed as Africa’s Year to take action on food and nutrition development goals. We see the current geopolitical crisis as an opportunity to rely less on food imports from outside the continent and use better our sixty per cent global share of arable lands to increase food production.

    We have seen the devastating impact of relying on Russia and Ukraine for seventy per cent of our wheat consumption. We have enough land, enough water, enough gas and enough manpower to produce enough fertiliser, food and energy for ourselves and for others.

    But, we also recognise that we cannot do it all by ourselves. Our message to the global investor community is, therefore, this: Africa is ready for business. Africa needs you and you need Africa. You need Africa because Africa is busily building the world’s largest single market of 1.3 billion people.

    Soon we will have a customs union, and soon we will have a continental payment system that will accelerate and facilitate trade amongst ourselves. Already, goods and services are flowing more freely across our artificial borders. See Africa for what it is: the new frontier for manufacturing, for technology, for food production. That is why six years ago, I launched in Ghana the successful policy of ‘One District One Factory’.

    A policy, with government incentives, that has directly seen, so far, some one hundred and twenty-five (125) factories being set up in various districts across the country, leveraging on each area’s competitive advantage. That is why, six years ago, my government embarked on an aggressive policy of planting for food and jobs, which has helped our farmers increase their yields in folds. Indeed, we are recognising that many of the things we import can be found or produced in Ghana, or in other African countries.

    The African Continental Free Trade Area, whose Secretariat is located in Accra, Ghana’s capital, is driving intra-Africa trade and creating an unparalleled momentum for our continent’s economic diversity and transformation. We know that industrialisation is the way to go and, with the single market as the added incentive, we have taken policy measures in Ghana to add value to our natural resources. For example, we are processing more of our cocoa, refining more of our gold, and we are determined to exploit the entire value chain of our huge lithium deposits.

     

    We are busily building an integrated bauxite and aluminium industry and an integrated iron and steel industry, building new oil refineries and have, so far, attracted six (6) of the world’s biggest automobile manufacturers to set up assembling plants in Ghana, prior to producing them in the country.

    In line with the African Union’s Agenda 2063 and the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Africa’s ambition is to transform our food systems over the next decade, anchored in the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) and the Malabo Declaration on Accelerated Agricultural Growth.

    What we require now is support from the investor community for the rolling out of Africa’s lucrative agro-industry, and for the community to see agribusiness in Africa as much more an opportunity than the perceived, exaggerated risk which has been the false, but dominant narrative.

    In conclusion, Mr President, on 25 July 2016, the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution A/RES/70/293, proclaiming 2016-2025 as the Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa (IDDA III), with UNIDO tasked to lead it in collaboration with a range of partners.

    I believe it is time for the UN to take proper stock of this initiative and ask a few searching questions, recognising what could have been achieved with greater commitment and focus.

    Working together, we can get our world back into a better and happier place.

    I thank you very much for your attention.

    Source; presidency.gov.gh

  • Akufo-Addo honors Nkrumah in his UN General Assembly address

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, the fifth president under the Fourth Republic, has honored Ghana’s first president, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah.

    He did this during the UNGA, or United Nations General Assembly, which began on September 19 and will be the 77th General Assembly in 2022, an annual gathering of world leaders in New York.

    In his speech on September 21, Akufo-Addo made a special mention of the Osagyefo while also highlighting the necessity of African unity in the face of current global concerns.

    As the first president’s birthday was on September 21, he also emphasized the importance of making the announcement on that day.

    “Mr President, I am contributing to this debate on a date that has special significance for us in Ghana. 21st September is the date we mark the birth of our first President, Dr Kwame Nkrumah.

    “He would have been one hundred and thirteen (113) years old today, and it is worth recalling on this day the driving force of his political career, which was to contribute to the birth of a united Africa, i.e., a United States of Africa.

    “We recognise today, more than ever before, the importance of the strength in unity of Africa, and we are working to shed that image of a helpless, hapless continent,” Akufo-Addo stresed.

    The president harped on the increasing need for Africa to embrace industralization and economic integration to drive collective progress.

    “There is a renewed commitment towards an inclusive and sustainable industrialisation and economic integration and the intensity of the challenges we face today is only matched, like never before, by the immensity of the opportunity before us.

    “We, the current leaders of Africa, should be determined not to waste the crisis that confronts us,” he added.

    Watch Akufo-Addo full address below:

    September 21, 2022 observed a national holiday

    The Minister of the Interior, Ambrose-Dery, declared the September 21 holiday since it marks the birthday of Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah.

    Parliament in 2018 passed the new Public Holidays Act, 2018, to amend the Public Holidays Act, 2001.

    The Act replaced three public holidays, including September 21 and introduced two new holidays, January 7 (Constitution Day) and August 4 (Founders’ Day).

    According to the government, the real fight for Ghana’s independence started on August 4, 1947 (the day the United Gold Coast Convention, UGCC was formed), which is why it replaced the September 21 holiday.

  • Every bullet, bomb that hits a target in Ukraine hits our pockets – Akufo-Addo tells UN

    The effects of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on the world economy, particularly for African nations, have been emphasized once more by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
    According to the President, the conflict, which broke out in February 2022, made an already bad position even worse for African economies, which were just beginning to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic’s consequences.

    Akufo-Addo said the war had direct impact on Africa especially in the area of food supply triggering importantly, inflation.

    “Two years ago, our world came to a thundering halt, as we cowered from a health pandemic from an unknown, malicious virus, coupled with a devastating global economic pandemic. High budget deficits were no longer concerns of only developing nations.

    “By 2021, COVID-19 had pushed Africa into the worst recession for half a century. A slump in productivity and revenues, increased pressures on spending and spiralling public debts confronted us without relent,” he submitted.

    On the specific case of the Russian invasion, even though Moscow insists it was a military operation, Akufo-Addo stated: “As we grappled with these economic challenges, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine burst upon us, aggravating an already difficult situation.

    “It is not just the dismay that we feel at seeing such deliberate devastation of cities and towns in Europe in the year 2022, we are feeling this war directly in our lives in Africa.

    “Every bullet, every bomb, every shell that hits a target in Ukraine, hits our pockets and our economies in Africa. The economic turmoil is global with inflation as the number one enemy this year,” he added.


    Government has routinely explained that recent economic headwinds are attributable largely to the ravages of the COVID-19 pandemic, the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war and the banking sector clean-up.

    The rippling effect has been an increase in the cost of living, record high inflation rates and downgrades of the economy by rating agencies such as S&P and Fitch – a situation which has dealt a heavy blow to government’s ability to access the international capital market.

    The Cedi has also been on a free fall compelling the Bank of Ghana to resort to hiking its monetary policy rate to deal with the situation.

    The worsening economic situation compelled the government in July to initiate contact with International Monetary Fund for an economic support programme.

    Ghana is targeting an amount of US$3 billion over three years from the Fund once an agreement on a programme is reached.

    Government hopes to complete negotiations by end of the year in order to receive the funds in the first quarter of next year.

     

  • Every projectile or bomb that strikes a target in Ukraine hits our pockets – Akufo-Addo tells UN

    The President of Ghana, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has emphasized the negative effects of the Russia-Ukraine war on the world economy, particularly for African nations.

    According to the president, the conflict, which broke out in February 2022, made an already bad position even worse for African economies, which were just beginning to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic’s consequences.

    Akufo-Addo claimed that the conflict directly affected Africa, particularly in the field of food supplies, which in turn, significantly, caused inflation.

    “Two years ago, a pandemic of disease caused by an unidentified, hostile virus and a catastrophic worldwide economic pandemic brought our world to a crashing halt.

    No longer were only underdeveloped countries concerned about large budget deficits.

    “By 2021, COVID-19 had pushed Africa into the worst recession for half a century. A slump in productivity and revenues, increased pressures on spending and spiralling public debts confronted us without relent,” he submitted.

    On the specific case of the Russian invasion, even though Moscow insists it was a military operation, Akufo-Addo stated: “As we grappled with these economic challenges, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine burst upon us, aggravating an already difficult situation.

    “It is not just the dismay that we feel at seeing such deliberate devastation of cities and towns in Europe in the year 2022, we are feeling this war directly in our lives in Africa.

    “Every bullet, every bomb, every shell that hits a target in Ukraine, hits our pockets and our economies in Africa. The economic turmoil is global with inflation as the number one enemy this year,” he added.

    Goverment has routinely explained that recent economic headwinds are attributable largely to the ravages of the COVID-19 pandemic, the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war and the banking sector clean-up.

    The rippling effect has been an increase in the cost of living, record high inflation rates and downgrades of the economy by rating agencies such as S&P and Fitch – a situation which has dealt a heavy blow to government’s ability to access the international capital market.

    The Cedi has also been on a free fall compelling the Bank of Ghana to resort to hiking its monetary policy rate to deal with the situation.

    The worsening economic situation compelled the government in July to initiate contact with International Monetary Fund for an economic support programme.

    Ghana is said to be targeting an amount of US$3 billion over three years from the International Monetary Fund once an agreement on a programme is reached. The new amount requested as a loan was double the government’s initial target of $1.5 billion.

    Government hopes to complete negotiations by end of the year in order to receive the funds in the first quarter of next year.

     

  • Passion Air starts flying to Sunyani Airport

    Passion Air, a domestic airline operator with the greatest route network in the nation, will start operating flights to the Sunyani Airport, which is expected to significantly increase demand for domestic air travel in Ghana.

    According to the company, the flight heralds the launch of Passion Air’s Sunyani route, which will operate three times each week on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays and Sundays for a GHS600 cost.

    Since President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo this year officially opened the first stage of the renovation and expansion of the Sunyani Airport, this flight marks the first commercial flight to the airport.

    Speaking at an event to welcome Passion Air’s maiden commercial domestic flight to the Bono regional capital, Managing Director of Passion Air, Samuel Ato Hagan said the airline’s Sunyani flight would reduce time spent travelling from Accra to the region to just an hour.

    “The airline industry is an important contributor towards economic development and must be protected. It has increased easier and faster movements of goods and passengers within the country as well as creating jobs both directly and indirectly for the populace.

    Air transport is no longer a luxury but an important component of economic development where time is of essence. The journey time by road between Sunyani and Accra is about 6 – 7 hours, by air this is within an hour. That saves a whole lot of product hours which could be utilized elsewhere productively,” he said.

    He bemoaned the impact of the cedi’s continuous loss in value against major trading currencies and the high cost of fuel on the cost of air fares.

    “Just when we were beginning to get some respite from the effects of the pandemic, we encountered, two very strong head winds in the form of the depreciation of the Ghana Cedi against the major foreign trading currencies and the continuous increase in aviation fuel prices. This has had adverse effects on us as a business. Our ticket sales are in Cedis but over 98% of our transactions with vendors and suppliers are in foreign currencies. The price of aviation fuel seems to be flying just as high as our aircraft. The price of aviation fuel has increased by 112% from the beginning of this calendar year. This is a major challenge for us as a domestic operator,” he noted.

    Minister for Transport, Kwaku Ofori Asiamah, noted that, “the domestic air travel market had recovered and increased by 70percent from 2020 to 2021 after a drop of 38% was experienced from 2019 to 2020 due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.”

    He commended the Ghana Airports Company Limited (GACL) and the Ghana Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) for taking steps to ensure continued operations in the sector despite the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • Official bailout negotiations between the government and IMF will start on September 26 – Report

    Official negotiations for a package of economic assistance for Ghana are scheduled to start soon between the Ghanaian government and the International Monetary Fund.

    Upon reaching an agreement on a program, Ghana is reportedly looking to receive $3 billion from the Fund over the course of three years.
    The latest loan request was for $2.5 billion, which was double the previous $1.5 billion goal set by the administration.

    The talks between IMF representatives and Ghanaian authorities will begin on Monday, September 26, 2022, according to a Joy Business article.

    The COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine were recently blamed by the IMF’s managing director, Kristalina Georgina, for the current economic circumstances in Ghana.

    According to her, these two factors have significantly impacted other economies hence Ghana’s economic challenges cannot be blamed on bad policies implemented by the Ghanaian government.

    “Like everybody on this planet, Ghana has been hurt by exogenous shocks, first the pandemic, then Russia’s war in Ukraine, and we need to realize that Ghana’s challenge is not because of bad policies, but the combination of external shocks,” she indicated.

    The IMF boss also speaking on Ghana’s possible programme said her outfit is determined to reach an agreement with the Government of Ghana by the end of this year.

    She added that constructive discussions have so far been held with Ghanaian authorities for a possible economic support programme.

    On July 1, 2022, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo ordered Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta to present an economic rescue programme to the IMF following the current economic conditions in the country.

    Subsequently, a team from the Fund led by Carlo Sdralevich visited Ghana between July 6 – 13, to gather relevant data and met with relevant stakeholders.

  • Government, IMF to commence official bailout negotiations on September 26 – Report

    The Government of Ghana and the International Monetary Fund are expected to commence official negotiations for an economic support programme for the country.

    Ghana is said to be targeting an amount of $3 billion over three years from the Fund once an agreement on a programme is reached. The new amount requested as a loan was double the government’s initial target of $1.5 billion.

    According to a Joy Business report, the negotiations between IMF officials and Ghanaian authorities will start on Monday September 26, 2022.

    Managing Director of the IMF, Kristalina Georgina, has recently attributed Ghana’s current economic conditions to external shocks emanating from the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

     

    According to her, these two factors have significantly impacted other economies hence Ghana’s economic challenges cannot be blamed on bad policies implemented by the Ghanaian government.

    “Like everybody on this planet, Ghana has been hurt by exogenous shocks, first the pandemic, then Russia’s war in Ukraine, and we need to realize that Ghana’s challenge is not because of bad policies, but the combination of external shocks,” she indicated.

    The IMF boss also speaking on Ghana’s possible programme said her outfit is determined to reach an agreement with the Government of Ghana by the end of this year.

    She added that constructive discussions have so far been held with Ghanaian authorities for a possible economic support programme.

    On July 1, 2022, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo ordered Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta to present an economic rescue programme to the IMF following the current economic conditions in the country.

    Subsequently, a team from the Fund led by Carlo Sdralevich visited Ghana between July 6 – 13, to gather relevant data and met with relevant stakeholders.

    Source: Ghanaweb

     

  • Gov’t has not lost control in galamsey fight – Seth Acheampong

    Seth Acheampong, the Eastern Regional Minister, claims that the government is still committed to the fight against illegal mining in spite of the many failures experienced so far.

    He believes that the determination to put a stop to all types of unlawful small-scale mining, often known as “galamsey,” is still on track and still within the bounds of the law.

    “Commentators claim that using the whip to discipline people is highhanded, but our government is resolute and determined. We are not moaning and flinging our hands in despair”, he remarked on The Point of View on Citi TV.

    He refuted criticism that the government has never been devoted to the struggle against the threat.

    The Minister mentioned that government losing out in the last election is somehow proof that state actions are yielding results.

    “The president, in putting his office on the line, the party suffered heavily in the 2020 election in areas that had illegal mining. They voted against us. That is the risk we took”.

    Mr. Acheampong emphasized that, “as we face this issue humanly and squarely, unfortunately, it is being made a matter of politics and it’s so depressing when you try to put your life on the line. This administration is poised to be responsible”.

    In 2017, President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo declared that he was prepared to put his presidency on the line in the fight against galamsey.

    His declaration was amidst new measures such as the deployment of police and military personnel to arrest illegal miners across the country and the introduction of a community mining programme aimed at regulating small-scale mining in communities in an environmentally sustainable manner.

    There have been complaints that the water bodies that were regaining their natural state at the height of the fight against galamsey are becoming polluted again due to the increasing activities of illegal miners in various parts of the country.

    President Akufo-Addo again made public statements on the development, saying that there is a need for an open discussion on the subject.

    The government, through the Ministry for Lands and Natural Resources, subsequently held a two-day National Consultative Dialogue on Small-Scale Mining that, among other things, urged the government to firmly enforce the country’s laws on mining.

    Recently, the debate on whether the government is in control of the fight has been renewed following controversies surrounding the re-arrest of galamsey kingpin, Aisha Huang.

     

  • Government will purchase a research vessel – Akufo-Addo

    In September 2017, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo declared that the government would purchase a research vessel to aid in the monitoring of the nation’s fish stocks.

    To assist in the monitoring of our fish stock, the government plans to purchase its own research vessel, though it won’t be as large as the Fridtjof vessel, he said.

    In order to aid in the monitoring of the nation’s fish stocks, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, the president of Ghana, has pledged that the government will soon purchase a research vessel.

    “Government intends to acquire its own research vessel not of the size of the Fridtjof vessel though, to help in the monitoring of our fish stock”, he announced.

    Nana Addo made the promise when he welcomed the new marine research vessel RV Dr Fridtjof Nansen, owned by the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD) which made her first call to the Port of Tema.

    The President expressed worry over the depletion of the country’s fishing stock, adding that government has put in place a fisheries, management plan to ensure long term conservation of the country’s waters and marine stock.

    “Illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing methods are depleting our fish stock. Our beautiful coastal wetlands are threatened by high volumes of plastic and metal waste that choke breeding habits for fish. This must not be allowed to continue. To this end, an inter-ministerial approach to curb this menace is in the pipeline,” he added.

    The Minister of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development, Elizabeth Naa Afoley said government is committed to ensuring long term conservation of fish stock to ensure food safety.

    The main goals of this strategy, according to her, are to lessen undue strain on fish stocks, ensure effective fisheries legislation, promote participatory decision-making, as well as fulfill regional and global duties in the field of fisheries.

    The research vessel in Ghana is outfitted for operations in developing nations in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. It is there to gauge the abundance of marine life in the country’s waterways.
    Her main responsibilities are on fishing research operations and ecosystem studies.

  • Today in History: Government to acquire research vessel – Akufo-Addo

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in September 2017 announced that government will acquire a research vessel to help monitor the country’s fish stocks.

    “Government intends to acquire its own research vessel not of the size of the Fridtjof vessel though, to help in the monitoring of our fish stock”, he said.

    The President of Ghana, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has promised that government will soon acquire a research vessel to help in the monitoring of the country’s fish stocks.

    “Government intends to acquire its own research vessel not of the size of the Fridtjof vessel though, to help in the monitoring of our fish stock”, he announced.

    Nana Addo made the promise when he welcomed the new marine research vessel RV Dr Fridtjof Nansen, owned by the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD) which made her first call to the Port of Tema.

     

    The President expressed worry over the depletion of the country’s fishing stock, adding that government has put in place a fisheries, management plan to ensure long term conservation of the country’s waters and marine stock.

    “Illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing methods are depleting our fish stock. Our beautiful coastal wetlands are threatened by high volumes of plastic and metal waste that choke breeding habits for fish. This must not be allowed to continue. To this end, an inter-ministerial approach to curb this menace is in the pipeline,” he added.

    The Minister of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development, Elizabeth Naa Afoley said government is committed to ensuring long term conservation of fish stock to ensure food safety.

    “The key objectives of this plan is to reduce excessive pressure on fish stock to ensure effective fisheries legislation to strengthen participatory decision making and also to meet regional and international obligations in fisheries,” she said.

    The research vessel which is in Ghana to assess the marine stock levels in the country’s waters is equipped for operations in developing countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Her primary duties include ecosystem studies and emphasising fishery research operations.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • The Russia-Ukraine war made our problems worse, while Ghana’s GDP expanded by 7% in 2021 – Akufo-Addo

    According to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, Ghana’s economy was expanding favorably before the crisis between Russia and Ukraine threw the nation into turmoil.

    He said that the economy was growing at 7% and was regaining ground lost to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    However, Akufo-Addo quickly added that the economy will eventually overcome its issues.

    He said this while delivering the keynote presentation at the Ghana Bar Association’s annual bar conference.

    “In recent times, we have been witnessing significant difficulties in the management of the national economy, largely as a result of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the global economy, which has been exacerbated by the effects of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

    “We will do so again. In fact, in the last quarter of 2021, the recovery from COVID-19 appeared to be on course, when our economy grew by seven percent (7%), only for the Russian invasion of Ukraine in the first quarter of this year to exacerbate our challenges. We will overcome them,” he said.

    However, the President emphasized that the fundamental commitment to addressing these issues within the bounds of fair procedures and democratic institutions must endure.

    And I am convinced that we will overcome these obstacles, God willing,” Akufo-Addo said.

  • Domestic operations at Sunyani Airport will start on September 19

    The Bono Regional Minister, Ms. Justina Owusu-Banahene, said on Thursday that the Sunyani Airport’s domestic flight operations will resume on Monday, September 19, 2022.

    She asserted that the restoration of the service will allow for quick economic development in the area.

    This was revealed by the regional minister during the Accra meet-the-press events.

    He said that Passion Air would start offering flights between Sunyani and Accra, and that plans had been made in advance for four weekly flights.

    The Sunyani airport was, on August 3, 2022, commissioned by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo after the completion of the first phase of rehabilitation after six years of closure.

    The operation, she stressed, would stimulate the economic growth potential of the region through increase in trade and investments and reduce road travel time from about eight hours to about an hour.

    On road infrastructure, she said the Government had constructed 13 road projects with a total length of 342.3km.

    Some of the projects are the upgrading of 30km menji-bui road, upgrading of 10 km Nkrankwanta-Krasse Road and 15 km Brekum-Drobo.

    She said the Government had constructed a new transport terminal, police post, ambulance bay, fire post, and supplied and installed electricity.

    On health, Ms Owusu-Banahene said the Government had made significant strides in the sector.

    She said the doctor to patient ratio improved to 1: 10395 in 2021 from 1:14898 in 2016.

    The midwife to women in fertility ratio age in 2021 was 1:372 compared to 1:1502 in 2016.

    She said other health infrastructural projects completed were the Tain District Hospital, nurse’s bungalows at Koraso-Brekum West, physician assistant bungalows at Jinijini and Agubie CHPS at Wenchi.

    Regarding education, the Minister remarked that the area could be proud of 12 unit classroom blocks, of which five had been finished, and six unit classroom blocks with auxiliary facilities, of which 21 had been finished, with six still under construction.

    Other examples include two-unit classroom blocks, out of which one is ongoing and two three-unit classroom blocks, 20 of which have been finished.

    She reported that a 32-seater bus had been given to CHIRAA Senior High School, that the Ghana Education personnel had been given motorbikes, and that Our Lady of Province Girls’ SHS in Keasibourkrom had a dormitory complex built.

  • I’ll prefer we use the National Cathedral as a theatre – Sista Afia

    The National Cathedral would have been a great venue to host musical concerts and events that would generate huge revenue for the arts and entertainment industry, this is according to singer, Sista Afia.

    The ‘Asouden’ singer in an interview on GhanaWeb TV with Paula Amma Broni disclosed her wish of converting the much-talked-about edifice into a theatre instead of a place of worship.

    When questioned what she could have done differently as the leader of the Musicians Union of Ghana, she said: “If I was the MUSIGA president, I would talk to Nana Akufo-Addo to give us the National Cathedral to do something for the music industry… a place where we can go do our concert which is actually gonna give money.

    “As for God, He gets plenty churches for here. Make he give the National Cathedral to us, ” she said in Pidgin.

    Ghana’s president, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in March 2018 unveiled the design for the cathedral, an interdenominational Christian edifice to be constructed around the Parliament House in Accra.

    The project has received stiff opposition from individuals and groups who believe that the estimated $200 million cost could have been used for more beneficial projects in the country like the construction of roads, improve healthcare, agriculture and education.

    Source:ghanaweb.com

     

  • Asantehene must organize Queen Elizabeth’s funeral else they will ruin it – Diana Asamoah

    Gospel music and minister of the gospel, Diana Asamoah has made a plea to Asantehene Otumfuo Osei Tutu II to take charge of the burial and funeral service of the late British monarch, Queen of Elizabeth II.

    The queen who reigned for 70 years passed away on September 8 at age 96. The world and its leaders have mourned Queen Elizabeth, the longest-serving British monarch.

    Reacting to the news of her death and plans for her final funeral rites, Diana Asamoah in a video shared on TikTok just a day after the queen’s passing requested that Ghana’s president, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and the Chief of Staff, Frema Opare ensured that Asantehene took charge of the burial since the Ashanti Region holds the record as the best funeral organizers in the country and the world at large.

    “Dear Ghanaians and people worldwide, Africa, we all know what has happened to us. We are saddened by what has happened to the United Kingdom. Their Queen has been called to eternity by God. She lived a good life from which we all benefited.

    “I just have a little plea to make to our King, Asantehene, Osei Tutu II, President Akufo-Addo and Frema Opare,” she said in the video that captured her in a black dress.

    The gospel explained that in 2021, the funeral of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, husband of the late Queen wasn’t befitting for his status as a British royal reason why Asantehene must be handed over that duty.

    “We all witnessed the great and befitting funeral organized for the late Asantehemaa. I say that we weren’t impressed with the funeral of Queen Elizabeth’s late husband…as for the Queen’s funeral, I am on my knees begging the Asantehene to take over the organization.

    “It is a fact that we the Ashantis are the best organizers of funerals, so I plead with Asantehene to take over. The late Queen is a royal and so, we the Ashantis should give her a befitting burial…I am even prepared to sponsor it. Please act on it else they will ruin it. I thank you in advance for considering my request,” Diana Asamoah concluded in her message to Otumfuo.

    Meanwhile, the Manhyia Palace in a Twitter post on September 9, mourned the passing of Queen Elizabeth II.

    Watch the video below:



    Source:ghanaweb.com

  • Komenda Sugar factory shuts down after Akufo-Addo’s visit Group alleges

    Concerned residents of the Central Region’s Komenda Traditional Area have rejected President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-assertions Addo’s that the Komenda Sugar Factory has been upgraded to produce commercial quantities of sugar for the nation.

    The facility has been renovated and will be fully operating in December, according to the president, who was on a visit of the area over the weekend.

    Samuel Awugah, the convener for the Concerned Citizens of Komenda Traditional Area, disputes the president’s assertion that the facility will be modernized.

    According to him, the factory has not been operating for the last three weeks due to the layoffs of 80% of the workforce.

    He added the factory was only powered last Saturday, September 3, 2022, when the president announced his visit to the facility.

    Samuel Awugah speaking on the Ghana Yensom morning show hosted by Mr. Emmanuel Quarshie on Accra 100.5 FM on Monday, September 5, 2022, said the factory has been rusting away since it was test-run and shut down for maintenance some seven years ago.

    He claimed that it was when the president decided to visit the factory that the management of the factory moved to buy some Akpeteshie sugarcanes to utilise the factory to create the impression the factory was being run.

    “Even in the wake of this, the factory only produced some 29 bags of sugar and shut down,” he alleged and questioned that if the management of the factory claims that the factory will be operational by December what raw materials are they going to use?

    Also, he noted that the B41 type of sugarcane takes about six months to grow.

    “The latest news about production at the factory was a matter of window dressing to impress the president,” he stressed.

    He said the over 200 out-growers of the factory are idling about at home because the factory was not working.

    He stressed that “as we speak the factory has been shut down.”

     

  • National Cathedral: ‘It is long overdue for Christians to have a national monument’ – Palmer-Buckle

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has received praise from Most Reverend Charles Gabriel Palmer-Buckle, Vice Chair of the Board of Trustees of the National Cathedral of Ghana, for his vision to erect a cathedral for the country.

    The Archbishop of the Cape Coast Archdiocese of the Catholic Church in Ghana stated that a location for Christians in the nation to worship God together is long overdue in a GBC interview that GhanaWeb was watching.

    He also expressed his gratitude to the president for including him on the Cathedral’s board of trustees.

    “I thank the president of the republic for adding me to the trustees. It was quite a surprise but not a surprise. I also want to thank him (the president) and my colleague trustee members for what we have made of the president’s simple vision that he told us.

    “Because he (the president) came up with the vision of a place where Christians come together to thank the Lord together with the nation for the many blessings. And he entrusted it to us, and that is why we’re trustees. 13 of us were called to duty, and we have had a lot of time thinking about what the National Cathedral should mean physically, biblically, spiritually, even financially and economically.

    “What attracted me (to the Cathedral project) I will say, I was called to duty. As a Catholic Archbishop, I believe that it is long overdue for Christians in this country to have a national monument that we are united in the Lord Jesus Christ,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the Executive Director of the project, Dr. Paul Opoku-Mensah, on Tuesday, August 30, confirmed that the National Cathedral Project had been suspended due to a lack of funds.

    The National Cathedral project has been riddled with controversies, including financing.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, who has tagged the project as his personal pledge to God and his government, has been accused of channelling state funds into the project despite indicating that the private sector will fund the project.

  • 1D1F will industrialize the local economy – Trade Minister

    One District One Factory (1D1F), a government initiative, will soon industrialize the local economy, according to Trade and Industry Minister Alan Kyerematen.

    He added that the 1D1F plan would lead to the establishment of numerous industries across the nation.

    His remarks follow the president’s commissioning of a Ghanaian-owned auto lubricant manufacturing firm. Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

    The Trade Minister stated that this company, RIKPAT Company Limited, will create various automotive items for the market.

    In a tweet sighted by GhanaWeb on Monday, September 5, 2022, Alan Kyerematen said, “I was pleased to join @NAkufoAddo to commission RIKPAT Company Limited, a solely Ghanaian-owned auto-lubricant manufacturing company which produces various lines of automotive products.”

    “#1D1F is working to transform the Ghanaian economy into an industrialized one. More to come,” his tweet added.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo earlier this year announced that 106 out of 278 factories under his government’s 1D1F initiative were operational.

    He added that 148 factories were under construction while 24 were at the mobilization stage.

    He made this known during the 2022 State of the Nations Address in parliament.

  • Ofori-Atta determined ‘to get us out of this crisis’ – Akufo-Addo assures

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has reiterated his support for under fire Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta.

    The president speaking on Friday (September 2) on Day 1 of his tour of the Central Region stressed that despite public discontent towards Ofori-Atta, he believed in his competencies.

    According to the President, amid the calls for the Minister’s sacking, critics are failing to acknowledge the role Ofori-Atta played prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    He also referenced the role the Minister played in helping Ghana exit an International Monetary Fund, IMF, programme that the government inherited when it came into office in 2017.

    “This same Finance Minister who people are calling for his blood is the very man who took us very successfully out of the IMF programme and helped us produce the 7 percent rates of growth that we have before the COVID.

    “I believe that he has the same determination to work us out of this crisis as he showed at the beginning of our government,” the president added.

    On the subject of a reshuffle of his ministers, President Akufo-Addo reiterated that the buck stopped with him and so when the time was ripe, he will act accordingly.

    “When I am satisfied or someone is doing his work well or not doing his work well, I will act on it. If I am satisfied that the output is still strong, I will know what to do,” he said.

    President Akufo-Addo ordered Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta via a July 1 statement present an economic rescue programme to the IMF.

    A team from the Fund led by Carlo Sdralevich has since visited Ghana between July 6 13, meeting with relevant stakeholders.

    Reports indicate that government is seeking US$3 billion from the fund to help stabilize the economy. Government has serially blamed the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war for the economic headaches.

    Galloping inflation and a weak Cedi have piled pressure on government to act to avert an economic meltdown. Calls for Ofori-Atta to be axed have come usually from outside the party but also from notable personalities within the party.

     

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • Ill never step my foot into Akufo-Addos cathedral Kumawood actor Nana Yeboah

    Popular Kumawood actor Nana Yeboah, known in real life as Felix Nana Yeboah, has vowed never to enter the National Cathedral being constructed by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in fulfilment of a promise made to God.

    Akufo-Addo after being sworn into office as President of the Republic of Ghana stated that he made a covenant with God to build him a cathedral during his campaign.

    The president also revealed that the project was not going to be financed with public funds but the contrary appears to have happened following revelations made by some leading members of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC).

    Speaking on Ghanaman TV on the “Show Kanawu” monitored by MyNewsGH.com, comedian Nana Yeboah said the money being used to build the cathedral must be channelled into different projects like the construction of roads, vowing that he will never step his foot there upon completion.

    “Even if you build that chapel, I, Yeboah Asiamah will not enter. It is wrong for you to say you are building a cathedral. Totally wrong! How is it possible for somebody from afar to travel all the way to Accra before he can access the temple and worship?” Nana Yeboah asked.

    “Use the money to construct roads instead so that people can attest to the fact that you are indeed developing the country. How can you take such an amount to build a church? I will never enter it,” he added.

    Source:ghanaweb.com

  • Agya Koo and celebrities who endorsed NPP should bow their heads in shame – Mr Beautiful

    Ghanaian actor and party faithful of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Mr Beautiful, has stated that his colleagues who supported and endorsed the New Patriotic Party (NPP) have been put to shame considering what he described as a woeful performance of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

    The actor in a recent interview on Metro TV called out Agya Koo, Matilda Asare, Kalybos and other celebrities who he claim misled the public with the NPP’s message of hope during the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections that witnessed the party’s flagbearer being voted into office.

    The die-hard supporter of the NDC and former president John Mahama, however, noted that political differences should not create enmity between celebrities.

    “Forever and ever, I will involve myself in politics because, in your house, there is politics. Everywhere you are there is politics. I buy fuel and pay my children’s school fees. Therefore I will rally behind someone who I know can rescue the nation.

    “The fact that we support different football clubs doesn’t make you my enemy. You are simply not mature. So, nothing can stop me. I will encourage each and everyone,” he stated.

    According to the popular actor, his single decision to endorse the NDC back in the 2012 general elections paved way for his colleagues to openly campaign for political parties.

    “When I came out in 2012 and openly supported His Excellency John Dramani Mahama, it paved way for the likes of Agya Koo, Matilda Asare and others to support this government (NPP) in 2016.

    “These people, Agya Koo, Matilda, Kalybos should all bow their heads in shame because the party they supported has failed. Look at what the man I supported, Mahama, did for the nation,” he added.

    Source:ghanaweb.com

  • Dr. Nduom’s open letter to President Akufo-Addo

    Businessman, Dr. Papa Kwesi Nduom has issued an open letter to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

    Among other things, he touched on government’s ‘Ghana Beyond Aid’ agenda which he believes to be fading away and does not find expression in formal presentations such as the budget and speeches delivered by the president.

    “To begin with, I support this vision for Ghana because it will promote self-reliance that would lead to greater prosperity of our citizens. I am a supporter of “Ghana Beyond Aid” without reservations,” Dr Nduom said.

    “My concern is that this vision may become a mere slogan,” he opined.

    Read the full letter below:

    HE. Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo

    Jubilee House

    Accra

    Dear Mr. President,

    Ghana Beyond Aid: My Recommendations To Walk the Talk

    “Ghana Beyond Aid” is a vision put forth by your Administration. You have articulated this forcefully and pushed it in presentations to Ghanaian citizens. You have also stood your ground on this with foreign leaders particularly those from the western divide of global governance. Many have hailed it and bought into it as a very necessary agenda.

    Recently though, the vision seems to be fading and does not find expression in formal presentations such as the budget and your own speeches at home and abroad. It is time to light some fire under this vision and make it real.

    To begin with, I support this vision for Ghana because it will promote self-reliance that would lead to greater prosperity of our citizens.

    I am a supporter of “Ghana Beyond Aid” without reservations.

    My concern is that this vision may become a mere slogan. Over the years, Ghanaians have heard “the private sector is the engine of growth” with no fuel to make the engine move for the benefit of the people. They have been presented with “Zero Tolerance for Corruption” and “Probity, Accountability, Transparency” and yet corruption is seen by citizens as the main barrier to their well-being. Many leaders, in business and politics have put out their versions of “Ghana First” visions yet there is no common agenda to work with to make it come alive.

    When the late General Ignatius Kutu Acheampong championed the Ghanaian ownership of the commanding heights of the economy, it spawned concrete actions that are still delivering benefits to the state and its people. “Operation Feed Yourself” was and remains a popular policy from the Acheampong era.

    Given where we are, the following are actions I highly recommend for you to consider implementing to push the “Ghana Beyond Aid” vision.

    All infrastructure contracts signed by the state must have a minimum 25% of value go to an indigenous Ghanaian and his/her enterprise.

    All Cocoa roads and projects funded by COCOBOD must be given to indigenous Ghanaians and their companies.

    Ban completely, the importation of chocolate, soft drinks, fruit juices, fruits, poultry, and meats.

    Ban the importation of rice and sugar.

    Immediately ban the serving of any imported food or drink at all state functions.

    School feeding programmes must only use locally produced food and drinks.

    Take firm steps to ensure indigenous Ghanaian control (ownership) of the financial sector – banking, insurance, investment, pension, and others at all levels.

    All professional services agreements – architectural, technology, financial etc., must have at least 25% indigenous Ghanaian participation.

    All new and renewed concessions for gold, bauxite, oil and gas, diamond, timber must have a minimum of 25% indigenous Ghana ownership.

    The digitalization agenda must be placed firmly, 100% in the hands of indigenous Ghanaians and their companies.



    Give full rights and recognition to Ghanaians who by necessity have become citizens of other countries – to vote, be employed by the state and compete for elective offices.

    Will this hurt? Initially, yes. But eventually, we will be a better country, one whose citizens can aspire to prosperity with confidence.

    I would appreciate the opportunity to discuss the recommendations further.

    Presented, Your Excellency, for your consideration.

    Papa Kwesi Nduom.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Kumasi International Airport to be operationalized in October

    The Kumasi Airport which is currently being upgraded to ease the travel burdens on the Kotoka International Airport is 98 per cent complete.

    The project, started in 2018 by the Government of Ghana under the leadership of President Nana Addo-Dankwa Akufo-Addo, costs 124.9 million euros.

    Being executed by Contracta Construction UK Limited, phase two of the Kumasi International Airport project will see the extension of the runway from the current 1,981 meters to 2,300 meters.

    A new road network and external works with security fence and substations are among the scope of work on the airport.

    The project also involves airfield works, new Air Traffic Control (ATC) building, a new fire station building, and the construction of a new terminal building with the capacity to accommodate one million passengers a year.

    However, aspects of the projects that have been completed include the construction of the terminal, installation of escalators, the baggage carousel, check-in points, and passenger boarding bridges.

    According to Mr. Yaw Appiah Dankwa, Director of Planning and Project of the Ghana Airport Company Limited, the project is expected to be ready for operationalization by October 2022

    Source:ghanaweb.com

  • Criminal syndicate jab: Lardy Anyenini could have done more to ‘police’ Kpebu – Employer

    Host of Newsfile, Samson Lardy Anyenini has admitted that he could have done more to question the propriety of an allegation made against President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo on his show last Saturday, July 23, 2022.

    The allegation related to a claim by lawyer Martin Kpebu, a panelist, who suggested that the President was part of a criminal syndicate at the Jubilee House slamming his inertia in the fight against corruption.

    A disclaimer issued by Anyenini and his employers said after a review of the show, “The sincere view is that the expression suggesting a direct involvement of the President in crime relative to some scandals was regrettable.”

    It continued: “Samson Lardy Anyenini is upfront that, on this occasion, he could have done more than stopping at asking Mr. Martin Kpebu (a panellist) if he thought the comment was “warranted”, “justified” or “fair” for reasons he canvassed including that the President is not the police to prosecute those indicted in the NDA contract-price forgery scandal and anti-corruption laws and policies made under his regime.”

    Mr. Kpebu has also issued a statement retracting and apologising to the President for the comments.

    “I do, hereby, retract and apologise for the expression purporting to connect the President of the Republic to crime,” his statement read in parts.

    Disclaimer: Matin Kpebu’s comment

    Management, together with the host of Newsfile, has reviewed Saturday, the 23rd July, 2022 edition which discussed the UNODC-funded CHRAJ/GSS survey report on actual corruption by public officials.

    The sincere view is that the expression suggesting a direct involvement of the President in crime relative to some scandals was regrettable.

    Samson Lardy Anyenini is upfront that, on this occasion, he could have done more than stopping at asking Mr. Martin Kpebu (a panellist) if he thought the comment was “warranted”, “justified” or “fair” for reasons he canvassed including that the President is not the police to prosecute those indicted in the NDA contract-price forgery scandal and anti-corruption laws and policies made under his regime.

    Accordingly, we issue this disclaimer.

    Signed,
    Fiifi Koomson,
    Senior News Editor.

    Source:ghanaweb.com

  • I pleaded with Mahama for 4 and half years to erect tombstone on Mills’ grave – Koku Anyidoho

    Koku Anyidoho, the founder of the Atta-Mills Institute has reacted to criticisms that he has arrogated the name of former President John Evans Atta-Mills to himself without recourse to his Mills’ family.

    He has also been accused of engaging with the government to refurbish the Asomdwee Park, the final resting place of the late President without recourse to the family of Professor Mills.

    In a radio interview Monday morning, Anyidoho dismissed the criticisms and said for four and half years while former President John Dramani Mahama was in office [July 24, 2012 to January 6, 2017], he pleaded with President Mahama to erect a tombstone on Mills’ grave but he was ignored.

    He said when he initiated moves to plead with President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo when he succeeded President Mahama to erect the tombstone and rehabilitate the Asomdwee Park, NDC folks told him to wait till Mahama was in power again so he could be it.

    Mr Anyidoho commended President Akufo-Addo for agreeing to his request for the state to rehabilitate the park to a status befitting the stature of the late President Mills.

    He gave an assurance that he would ensure the regular maintenance of the park.

    Source:graphic.com.gh

  • Rawling – boxing, Kufuor – football: Ghana’s 4th Republican presidents and their childhood sports

    In our previous article, we gave you a list of 5 active Ghanaian footballers whose Black Stars careers might be over after being out of the national team for a minimum of three years.

    Today, we look at the childhood sports of all the men who have occupied Ghana’s presidency since the beginning of the 4th republic in 1993.

    Children and their preference for a particular sport is mostly influenced by their community or the school they find themselves in.

    Some children after falling in love with a particular sport tend to pursue it as a career with the needed talents but others abandon it because of their parents.

    Here is a list of Ghana’s 4th Republican presidents and their childhood sports:

    Jerry John Rawlings – boxing

    Born June 22, 1947, the late president of the 4th Republic of Ghana is best remembered for promoting boxing in Ghana and helping nurture several talents across the country.

    Rawlings according to his son Kimathi had hoped in Ghanaian boxers because they had a strong disciplined mind to become great.

    Ghana’s legendary boxer Azumah Nelson has on countless occasions credited the successes he archived in his career to the late Jerry John Rawlings who was also an amateur boxer.

    Though JJ Rawlings couldn’t pursue his boxing career, he made sure that other young talents would get all the needed support from the State to be useful.

    During his reign, Ghana won three world titles through Azumah Nelson, Ike Bazooka Quartey, and the late Alfred Kotey.

    John Evans Atta-Mills – Hockey

    There isn’t much to be said about the footballing career of Ghana’s second president in the 4th Republic aside being in the school team during his days in Prempeh Colleague in Kumasi.

    However, John Agyekum Kufuor was an established football administrator before occupying the high office in Ghana.

    As a football administrator, former President John Agyekum Kufuor was the Chief Executive Officer of Asante Kotoko where he won a lot of local titles before he became Ghana’s leader in 2001.

    His love for football also made him commit more resources to help the Black Stars qualify for the FIFA World Cup for the first time in Ghana’s footballing history in 2006.

    Kufuor renovated the Accra Sports Stadium and the Baba Yara Stadium as well as built the Essipong and Tamale stadium in 2008 to host the CAN 2008.

    John Evans Atta-Mills – Hockey

    The late former President was a professional hockey player but also worked as a football administrator for giants Accra Hearts of Oak.

    He played for both the hockey teams of Achimota College during his Secondary School education and the University of Ghana, Legon in his tertiary days.

    As a State Man, Atta-Mills changed the face of Ghana hockey by supporting the construction of the first ever water-based Astro-turf hockey pitch in 1999, and an ultra-modern world-class National Hockey Stadium which was built in 2009.

    He is also a founding member of the Veterans Hockey team in Accra which was established in 1972.

    John Dramani Mahama – football

    Just like John Agyekum Kufuor, John Dramani Mahama was also a talented footballer but his father Emmanuel Adama reportedly made him ditch football to focus more on his education.

    Though John Mahama couldn’t pursue a career in football, his son Sharaf continues from where his father left off to become a professional footballer.

    Sharaf Mahama has played for several clubs in Eurpe inclduing Tempo Overijse, KV Mechelen, Charleroi and Rostocker FC.

    As President, John Mahama’s love for football was seen through the government’s sports policies.

    He built the Cape Coast Sports Stadium to ease the pressure of the four existing stadiums in Ghana. Mahama also built Ghana’s only boxing arena in Bukoum to promote the sport which sold Ghana to the world after football.

    Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo – boxing

    The current president is a football fan but his love for boxing precedes every sport in the world.

    Young Akufo-Addo played football in his high school days and was in the University of Ghana, Legon’s hockey team together with the late John Evans Atta-Mills.

    Akufo-Addo was an all-around athlete amongst all the presidents we have seen in the 4th Republic.

    As the president, Akufo-Addo has invested heavily in sports infrastructure with the building of the multi-purpose sports complex in all the 16 regions in Ghana.

    He will also be the 4th president to taste a FIFA World Cup after Kufuor, Mills, and Mahama.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • How much Akufo-Addo, Bawumia, Oquaye, others reportedly took as ex-gratia for their 2017-2020 tenure

    When the Agbogbomefia of the Asogli State, Togbe Afede XIV, made public the details of his ex-gratia and the reasons he decided to return the GH¢365,392.67 paid him as ex-gratia for his role as a member of the Council of State between 2017 and 2020, it gave Ghanaians a fair idea of exactly how much is paid to such beneficiaries.

    In a new list made available by Joy 99.7 FM on Twitter and sighted by GhanaWeb, it lists out the amounts paid to all the other Article 71 officeholders in the country.

    For clarity, aside from the president and his vice, the rest of the Article 71 officeholders are Members of Parliament (MPs), political appointees, and public servants with salaries charged to the Consolidated Fund but enjoying special constitutional privileges.

    The list below details who got what as ex-gratia for serving within the period of 2017-2020:

    President

    GH¢659,392

    Vice President
    GH¢549,492

    Speaker of Parliament
    GH¢488,456

    Cabinet Minister (MP)
    GH¢464,032

    Cabinet Minister (Non-MP)
    GH¢457,928

    Member of Parliament
    GH¢390,768

    Member, Council of State
    GH¢366,340

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Why should I criticize Akufo-Addo on TV when I have access to him? – Adom-Otchere to critics (VIDEO)

    Reacting to comments sent into the show yesterday, Mr Adom-Otchere said he was not obliged to criticise the government because he works for a private television station.

    He urged viewers who did not agree with his position to watch other broadcasters that do or criticise the President on their personal Facebook pages.

    “I support Akufo-Addo, you support John Mahama, there should be no problem. People write to me and say, ‘why don’t you use your programme to criticise the government?’ Is the programme for you?,” Mr Adom-Otchere quizzed.

    “Do your programme and criticise the government, I don’t understand it… Other people are criticising the government, watch that one. Today we all have media, If you like to go on Facebook and criticise the government, there is no problem with that.

    “The government ought to be criticised, governments are there so that they are criticised. I support Akufo-Addo because of my conviction and I feel there is something in there that is not good or not working well, I would not criticise him on this television because I have access to him, I would go to him and tell him…”.

    He also stated that some of the hardest critics of the President, always reach out to air their grievances.

    Source:  graphic.com.gh

  • Use your executive powers to grant workers at least 20% ‘COLA’ – TUC to Akufo-Addo

    Organised Labour has appealed to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to use his executive powers to grant workers at least a 20 per cent Cost of Living Allowance (COLA) in the wake of the economic hardships being experienced in the country.

    Addressing the 2022 May Day parade at the Black Star Square in Accra on Sunday, the Secretary-General of the Trades Union Congress (TUC), Dr Yaw Baah speaking on behalf of Organised Labour made the special request to the President.

    “With the rising cost of living due to high inflation, we will like to appeal to you [President Akufo-Addo] to use your executive powers to grant a cost of living allowance (COLA) of at least 20 per cent to all public service workers.”

    Dr Baah said the appeal was not only for those on the Single Spine Pay Policy (SSPP) but also for the Armed Forces, the police, prisons, immigration, fire and all the security and intelligence agencies. “The cost of living allowance must also be extended to workers in the private sector who are earning just GH¢365 a month.

    “We also expect that this COLA will be extended to all those pensioners on the SSNIT scheme who are earning just GH¢300 per month. Mr President the proposed COLA will not only cushion workers and pensioners from the harsh effects of inflation but even more importantly, it is prevent mass poverty in this country among the working group who are contributing so much to the development of our country.

    Watch the video below

    “Mr President, Ghanaians are suffering too much, this is not the country that was envisaged by our leaders who fought with their tears and blood to gain independence for us. God has endowed us with gold, diamond, forest, ocean, oil and other resources, therefore, nothing can justify the high incidence of severe poverty, destitution and suffering in Ghana today, 65 years after independence.”

    “It is obvious to us that the numerous IMF programmes in Ghana did not work, it is also clear to us that the partisan approach in dealing with Ghana’s problems is not working. What we need is our own homegrown solutions, supported by all the major stakeholders in the economy, including the executive, parliament, judiciary, workers and their unions, the business community , farmers, traders, NOGs, political parties and civil society organisations. We are confident that Mr President together we can transform our economy into a more resilient and prosperous one which can provide job for the youth and improve standard of living in all the 16 regions of the country.

  • ‘We are arguably the most stable democracy in West Africa’ Akufo-Addo

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has touted Ghana as operating the best democracy in the West African sub-region.

    The president pointed out the political successes of the Fourth Republic in arriving at that conclusion.

    Among others, he cited the peaceful transfers of power since 1992 and the resort to the courts to deal with major electoral disputes after presidential elections.

    “We have had five presidents in the history of the 4th Republic, with peaceful transfers of power from a governing to an opposition party on three separate occasions.

    “Even when there was disagreement with the outcome of an election, it was the Supreme Court, on two occasions, rather than the streets, that validated its result. We are, arguably, the most stable democracy in West Africa,” he added in an address on April 28 to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the referendum that birthed the Fourth Republic.

    In making a strong case for Ghanaians to protect the democracy that has been nurtured over three decades, he stressed: “there are no short-cuts for the progress and prosperity of our country. Only hard work, creativity, innovation, a sense of enterprise and unity in the nation can produce the accelerated economic development that we all yearn for and deserve.”

    The President also urged the citizenry to consolidate their trust in democracy and remain vigilance given that, “the price of liberty is eternal vigilance.”

    “I say so because there are some, who for their own parochial and selfish interests, would want to see a return to the dark days of authoritarian rule, simply because, with no respect for the Ghanaian people, they are either unwilling to subject themselves or their vision to the open scrutiny of the Ghanaian people, or because they know they will be rejected by the Ghanaian people and, thus, seek a shortcut to office and power. Let us strengthen our resolve to resist such persons for our own common good,” he said.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Akufo-Addo’s wife will deal with moral aspect of Serwaa Broni saga Ablakwa

    Member of Parliament for North Tongo, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, has defended the decision by the Minority in Parliament to push for a probe into some security-related allegations in the Serwaa Broni saga.

    According to him, the Haruna Iddrisu-led caucus was particularly worried about the specific allegation by Evelyn Aidoo, alias Serwaa Broni, made that National Security officials had staged a robbery on her with the view to retrieve some compromising materials she has on the President who she claims she once had a relationship with.

    Speaking on the April 20, 2022 edition of Starr Chat programme, Ablakwa said the Minority was careful about the issue it was pursuing because of the widely spoken about amorous relationship Serwaa Broni alleged she had with Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo was a personal issue.

    He stressed that such an issue could be addressed by the wife of the president, Rebecca Akufo-Addo and other family elders.

    “Let us be clear, we are not going into the morality, as for who is whose sidechick, who is sleeping with who, I mean, those are [his] personal family issues and I am sure Mama Rebecca will handle it with their family elders, that is none of our business,” he lawmaker stressed.

    The Minority in Parliament through leader Haruna Iddrissu said they were looking into the allegations the woman made in a recent interview with US-based journalist Kevin Taylor, in which she made allegations against National Security operatives and some politicians.

    “It is the allegations about National Security, and remember that the President as the Commander-In-Chief is the Chairman of the National Security Council per the Constitution of Ghana.

    “And so if the National Security is staging robberies, we are all not safe; journalists, CSO, MPs, whistleblowers … who want to expose wrongdoing, they will just come and stage robberies and who knows, you may be the next Ahmed Hussein Suale,” he added.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Akufo-Addo commiserates with Dag Heward-Mills and family on the death of his son

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has visited the home of the Founder and General Overseer of the United Denomination Originating from the Lighthouse Group of Churches (UD-OLGC), Bishop Dag Heward-Mills, to commiserate with him on the passing of his eldest son.

    The news of the death of Dr. David Heward-Mills broke on Good Friday, April 15, 2022, but with little information on exactly what led to his death.

    In photos shared by the president on his Facebook page, he said he visited the family to sympathise with them.

    “On Tuesday, 19th April 2022, I visited Bishop Dag Heward-Mills, Founder and General Overseer of the United Denomination Originating from the Lighthouse Group of Churches (UD-OLGC), to express the sympathies and condolences of my family and I, on the tragic loss of his son.

    “I wish the Bishop and his family the strength, comfort and love of the Almighty in these difficult times,” the post said.

    The president also signed a book of condolence opened in the memory of the late David Heward-Mills.

    On Saturday, April 16, 2022, GhanaWeb reported that the Founder of the Lighthouse Chapel International, Dag Heward-Mills had lost his first son to death.

    According to reports, his first son, Dr. David Heward-Mills, who was a medical doctor died in the United States of America on Friday, April 15, 2022, after a short illness.

    He died at the age of 31.

    About the late Dr. David Heward-Mills

    Before his demise, he worked as a resident physician at Prisma Health, Columbia, South Carolina in the United States of America for 1 year, 11 months.

    From July 2019 to June 2020, he was with Piedmont Healthcare as a medical doctor in Athens, Georgia, United States.

    Information gathered from his LinkedIn account shows that he worked as a part-time lead director for national alliance for mental health and substance abuse recovery for 5 years.

    He was also a research physician at Shriners Hospitals for Children – Galveston.

    Education

    The late Dr. David Heward-Mills had his Internal Medicine Residency Programme at the University of Georgia from 2019 to 2020.

    Before that [2008 to 2014], he acquired his Doctor of Medicine certificate from Vinnic’kij Deržavnij Medicnij Universitet im M.I.Pirogova.

    Here are some photos of the president’s visit:

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • We will account for E-levy Akufo-Addo

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has reiterated the commitment of the government to ensure transparency and judicious use of revenue mobilized through the implementation of the electronic transaction levy Act to engender confidence among taxpayers.

    According to the President, “government agenda to introduce the electronic levy bill, is now electronic transfer levy Act 2022 “Act 1075″ is a strategic decision to boost our revenue mobilization drive in order to grow our economy by ourselves to improve social, economic and infrastructural development in the republic of Ghana. The controversies which emanated from the inception of the electronic levy bill was a healthy one for our democracy as a nation”.

    President Akufo-Addo, therefore, assured that “the government is committed to ensuring the Judicious administration and implementation and the same time reporting of all revenues collected under the newly introduced electronic levy Act to impose a confidence in the government”.

    This was contained in a speech read on behalf of the President by the Eastern Regional Minister Seth Kwame Acheampong during the 60th-anniversary celebration of Rev. Friederich Monninger Memorial Presbyterian Church in Akosombo under the theme “Jesus Christ the light of the world”,

    He assured the congregants that the “government remains resolute and alive to serve all well-meaning Ghanaians despite the global economic challenges. We are focused on sustaining and growing the economy to make it an enviable one hence the need to continue to invest in the future the benefit for the generations unborn.”

    President Akufo-Addo said the Free Senior High, Vocational, and Technical Education policy is the special purpose vehicle to churn out the needed human capital for accelerated development.

    “I am very optimistic the legacy to ensure every school-going child of this country attains a minimum of secondary education has overly been achieved the data is available to show. The free senior high school and the free technical vocational and education training are the best vehicles we have devised to take us to the realization of our goal of an educated and skilled workforce,” he explained.

    He added that “considering our current dispensation of technological advancement, every school-going child will continue to be given the requisite education to be equipped to run a modern and digitalize economy, and also the pursue to achieve Ghana beyond aid is very promising especially when the government is poised to become self-reliant to win itself from over-reliance of foreign taste”.

    Asuogyaman MP

    The Member of Parliament for the Asuogyaman Constituency, Thomas Ampem Nyarko, haven been honoured with a citation for his immense contribution to the growth and development of the Rev. Monninger Memorial Presbyterian Church lauded congregation for their feat in Christianity. He, however, urged the church to pay attention to unemployment among the youth to roll out interventions to address the menace.

    “The church must also pay a little attention to helping to solve unemployment among the youth in the church; if the church can complement government and state institutions’ efforts in this regard, I believe that it will go a long way to reduce the current unemployment situation bedevilling the country” he added.

    Meanwhile, Rev. Oware Raynox Ankamah, who is the district minister and also the minister in charge of Rev. Friederich Monninger Memorial Presbyterian Church, urged Christians to portray the values of Jesus Christ in all their endeavour.

    Source: starrfm.com.gh

  • Haruna Iddrisu lists the number of funds used as security for loans by Akufo-Addo

    Minority Leader, Haruna Iddrisu, has raised concerns about the government’s continued lack of respect for Article 252 of the 1992 constitution.

    He claimed that the government has mortgaged and borrowed against statutory funds and constitutional funds.

    According to him, the move by the government to set aside one billion Ghana cedis out of the 3 billion Ghana Cedis allocated to the District Assembly Common Fund is unconstitutional and illegal.

    He said he shudders to think what type of economy the National Democratic Congress (NDC) will inherit when they come to power in 2025.

    Giving his closing statement after the State of the Nation Address by Akufo-Addo, he said, “It is important that Ghanaians appreciate that, in respect to the statutory funds, District Common Funds, these governments are simply not respecting the provision of Article 252 of the 1992 constitution. Only yesterday (April 4) we were told the Minister of Finance has written a letter to set aside one billion of the 3 billion allocated to the District Assembly Common Fund.”

    He went on to name some funds that have been mortgaged and borrowed against, by the Akufo-Addo led government.

    “Mr. Speaker, I say without fear of contradiction that, that move by the finance minister is unconstitutional and illegal. Mr. Speaker, I worry for the future of Ghana particularly ESLA has been mortgaged, borrowed against, GETFund has been mortgaged, borrowed against, District Assembly Common Fund has been mortgaged, borrowed against. What type of economy are we going to inherit when we come to power in 2025,” he said.

    He added that Ken Ofori-Atta has no power to set aside revenue of the District Common Fund, as it violates the provision of Article 252 in the 1992 constitution.

    “He (Ken Ofori-Atta) has no such power to vary what Article 252 imposes that 5 percent of total revenue be set aside for the District Common Fund. Mr. Speaker same attitude but he can do so for Statutory Fund using the power of Cabinet but not for the constitutional fund mentioned under Article 255 of the constitution,” he added.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

     

  • Government creating enabling environment for mining sector to flourish Jinapor

    The Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, Samuel Abu Jinapor, says President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo-led government is committed to creating a conducive environment for the mining sector to thrive.

    The Minister said this when the Canadian High Commissioner to Ghana, Ms. Kathleen Csaba paid her second official visit to him on Monday, 4th April 2022, in Accra.

    Ghana’s mining sector, the Minister said “is one that is very robust and indeed we are happy to work together to create that conducive environment for the mining sector to flourish with a strong Canadian involvement.”

    Mr. Jinapor pointed out that the over-arching goal of the President Akufo-Addo-led government is to make Ghana the Mining Hub of Africa, where all the various components of the Mining industry in Africa can be found, mainly from exploration, mining, downstream services, financial services, and other related mining activities will be planted in Ghana.

    To achieve this, it will require that “We at this ministry will create a conducive environment for private sector involvement and that will mean a whole gamut of measures are needed to attract private investments and that is exactly what we intend to do.”

    For her part, the Canadian High Commissioner said Ghana is blessed with many natural resources as Canada is with lots of expertise and know-how, and she is looking forward to continuing to work closely with the Ministry in developing Ghana’s vast resources together.

    “We are pleased as to the degree of investment we have made so far by Canadian Mining companies in the Ghanaian Mining sector and we look forward to growing that,” she said.

    Source: classfmonline.com

  • Akufo-Addo assents to E-Levy bill, makes it law

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has assented to the E-Levy bill which was approved by Majority side in Parliament on Tuesday, March 29, 2022.

    The action taken by the President today, Thursday March 31, 2022 means the bill can now be passed into law.

    This follows its approval in Parliament on March 2022 in the absence of the Minority in Parliament who staged a walk-out during the consideration stage.

    The bill was approved after its third reading, with the Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, in the seat.

    The Minister for Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, on Tuesday, March 29, 2022, moved a motion in Parliament, asking the House to approve the second reading of the reviewed 1.5% E-Levy bill to advance its passing into law.

    The debate on the motion was divided between the Majority and Minority, who argued entrenched positions on the bill.

    While the Minority maintained their opposition to the bill, members of the Majority argued in favour of the E-Levy, tagging it as essential for revenue mobilization and development.

    The Majority leader, Haruna Iddrisu during his submission on the bill informed the presiding Speaker of a decision by his side to abstain from supporting the bill.

    “In conclusion we are not able to support the Electronic Transaction or Electronic Transfer Levy of 1.75%. we think that it is regressive, it smacks of double taxation and the people of Ghana should not suffer further taxes, financial institutions and banks should not be made to pay E-Levy.

    “Therefore, Mr Speaker I am serving you notice, I have listened, my colleagues have listened to me. Mr Speaker, because we do not support the E-Levy, the Minority group led by me after listening to the majority leader will not be associated with any further proceedings on the E-Levy. We want to be recorded that when the E-Levy was brought to the 8th Parliament, we stood together, we opposed it, we asked for its rejection and we said we would not support it,” the Minority Leader said.

    President Akufo-Addo has signed the E-levy Bill into law

    Following his announcement, the Minority trooped out of the chamber.

    The Majority Leader who was scheduled next to make his final statement on the debate, waived the opportunity and impressed on the Speaker to go ahead and put the second reading to a vote for adoption.

    Speaker Alban Bagbin who was presiding over proceedings went ahead to put the second reading of the E-Levy to a voice vote which was given in favour of the Majority who were the only side in the chamber and shouted for the adoption.

    The House, following the adoption, went ahead unto the consideration stage of the bill also without the presence of the Minority.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Government begins Military Housing Project – Akufo-Addo

    Government has started the first stage of the Military Housing Project, dubbed, the Barracks Regeneration Project, at all garrisons across the country.

    The Project seeks to address the accommodation problems facing the Military in the country.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo said this when he delivered the 2022 State of the Nations Address (SONA) in Parliament on Wednesday in Accra.

    He said the Military Academy at Teshie had also been modernized whiles entire Armed Forces had been retooled and reequipped to perform their duties.

    “We are building a modernised Armed Forces, with higher personnel, that will be fit to meet the demands of the 21st century,” he said.

    The President indicated that each of the Armed Forces branches being, the Army, Navy and Airforce had received significant financial assistance to upgrade its logistical bases, and strengthen its capabilities, and its welfare requirements being addressed substantially.

    Source: GNA

  • Akufo-Addo came with a vision to industrialise Ghana – Gabby

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is gradually fulfilling his vision of industrialising Ghana, a leading member of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, has said.

    Gabby said already Nissan, VW, SinoTruk, Peugeot, Suzuki, and Toyota are assembling in the country.

    “He came in with a vision to industrialise Ghana. By 2030, AfCFTA will be in full swing. Already, Nissan, VW, SinoTruk, Peugeot, Suzuki, and Toyota are assembling here. KIA, Hyundai, and Renault are to start production this year. Ghana is on course to produce for an integrating Africa,” the former Executive Director of the Danquah Institute tweeted on Thursday, March 31.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo will later today, Thursday, March 31 commission a Nissan Assembly Plant in Ghana.

    The ceremony will take place in the Tema Industrial Area.

    Delivering the 2022 state of the nation address in Parliament on Wednesday, March 30, Mr. Akufo-Addo said “Mr. Speaker, quite a number of global vehicle manufacturing companies have set up assembly plants here in our country, and started producing vehicles for our market and for the West African market. The well-defined Ghana Automotive Development Policy we outdoored in August 2019 has facilitated this welcome development.

    “Since June 2021, Toyota and Suzuki brands of vehicles are being produced here, commencing with the production of Hilux Pickup and Swift models. VW and Sinotruck, which commenced commercial operations in 2020, have continued to assemble their brands of vehicles and are enjoying significant local patronage.

    “In addition, a new state-of-the-art assembly plant with the capacity to assemble 5,000 new vehicles per annum has been established by Nissan in Tema, which is currently producing Nissan and Peugeot brands of vehicles for the Ghanaian and West African markets. I will have the pleasure to commission this new plant in Tema tomorrow. Three other vehicle manufacturers, namely KIA, Hyundai, and Renault are also expected to commence commercial production this year.

    “Our national iconic automobile brand, the Kantanka brand produced by Kantanka Automobile Company Ltd., also stepped-up production of its made-in-Ghana vehicles which include Nkunimdie SUV, Omama Pickup, Onantefo 4×4 Pickup, Otumfuo SUV, and K71 Small SUV models.

    “Now that the Minister for Finance has announced an embargo on the importation of 4×4 vehicles for official use, I hope the local assembly plants will take full advantage of the opportunity especially since the government is continuing with its policy of giving first priority to locally assembled vehicles in respect of all publicly financed procurement of vehicles.”

    Source: 3news.com

  • Akufo-Addo has no credible funding source for Agenda 111 Akandoh

    The Ranking Member for the Health Committee in Parliament, Kwabena Minta Akandoh, has said President Akufo-Addo has no funding source for Agenda 111; hence it is unachievable.

    According to him, the continuous changing of the timeline for the project means the president is only preparing the minds of Ghanaians that he will not be able to complete it.

    “That is clear; I mean, there is no ambiguity in that; let’s see where we came from. Do you remember that in 2020 the president promised us that he was going to build 88 hospitals within one year? It’s in public records.

    “So at the end of 2021, we were expecting that we would see 88 hospitals, but that didn’t come on; he increased it to 111. Even if anything, when he promised 88 hospitals, and it’s ambitious, he should have learnt lessons from there. He then promised 111,” Mr. Akandoh told Starr FM’s Parliamentary Correspondent, Ibrahim Alhassan.

    He continued, “When he promised 111, what the president is telling us is that he didn’t think through the project. The president didn’t think of the cost of the project; he didn’t look for a source of funding for the project because, as I speak to you now, nobody knows the source of funding for the project.”

    The Ranking Member further explained that “For your information, the budget of Ghana is in public records; go check the records as far as Agenda 111 is concerned. An allocation of 580 million Ghana cedis was made. Ask yourself how many hospitals can that amount construct?”

    President Akufo-Addo, when addressing Ghana’s Parliament on the State of the Nation on Wednesday, March 30, 2022, admitted that the initial schedule he gave for the completion of Agenda 111 was overly ambitious.

    According to the President, identifying suitable sites around the country for the project has turned out to be even more problematic than anticipated.

    He, however, added that a great deal of the preparatory work has now been completed, and work has started at eighty-seven (87) of the one hundred and eleven (111) sites.

    “Mr. Speaker, I have to report that, like all major construction projects, it is evident that the initial schedule we gave for the completion of Agenda 111 was overly ambitious. Identifying suitable sites around the country, for example, has turned out to be even more problematic than had been anticipated.

    “I am able to say that a great deal of the preparatory work has now been completed, and work has started at eighty-seven (87) of the one hundred and eleven (111) sites. I have been assured that preliminary work on the remaining twenty-four (24) sites is ongoing.

    “We have every intention of seeing this project through to a successful end, which will enable me to commission all one hundred and eleven (111) hospitals before I leave office on January 7 2025,” President Akufo-Addo assured.

    Source: starrfm.com.gh

  • If you doubted the insensitivity of Akufo-Addo’s govt, look at how they dragged a sick MP to parliament – Ablakwa

    The Member of Parliament for North Tongu, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, has called out the incumbent government over what he describes as their “stubborn insensitivity” in getting the Electronic Transactions Levy (E-Levy) passed.

    After months of backs and forths, parliament, without the Minority in attendance, passed the E-Levy on Tuesday, March 29, 2022.

    Although the Minority had always kicked against the levy, it staged a walkout from parliament just before the controversial document was passed, giving reasons later to the effect that did so to show they stand with Ghanaians.

    But reacting to their decision, the National Democratic Congress (NDC) MP said that the extent to which the government, led by Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, went to get this unpopular levy passed was a testament to their insensitivity.

    “If anyone doubted the stubborn insensitivity of this government, just look at the extent they went in violating the dignity of their own extremely sick colleague MP by dragging him to the precincts of Parliament in an ambulance. That is not a superior political tactic, it is heartless politics without regard for human life. Politics must not be this ugly and barbaric,” he wrote in a post on Facebook.

    Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa further stated that the NDC MPs had done everything possible to ensure the E-Levy was not passed but admittedly, it had become evident that it takes much more to sustain a hung parliament of this nature.

    “For 5 good months, we have stood by the Ghanaian people in fiercely resisting the E-Levy and standing up to a government desperately determined to do everything by hook or crook to impose the most unpopular tax policy of the Fourth Republic.

    “It takes grit, strategy and integrity to sustain a hung parliament resistance of this kind for this long,” he added.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • 2022 SoNA: Weve spent GHC17.7billion on COVID-19 since 2020 Akufo-Addo

    President Nana Adoo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has disclosed that the country has spent a whopping GHC17.7 billion fighting the COVID-19 pandemic since 2020.

    Delivering the 2022 State of the Nation address in Parliament on Wednesday, March 30, 2022, the president said, “In all, data from the Ministry of Finance tells us that an amount of GHC17.7 billion (or 4.6% of GDP) has been spent in containing the pandemic since 2020.”

    He noted that the economic devastation of COVID-19 has been further aggravated by the Russian invasion of Ukraine since the beginning of this year, which has worsened the economic outlook of the entire world.

    President Akufo-Addo added: “We, in Ghana, have not escaped this development, and the consequences are being felt in rising living costs at our markets and at fuel stations”.

    “The terrible events in Ukraine have a direct impact on our lives here in Ghana. Mr Speaker, 30% of our wheat flour and fertilizer imports come from Russia. 60% of iron rods and other metal sheets are imported from Ukraine, and almost 20% of Ghana’s manganese is shipped to Ukraine.”

    “The bombs might be dropping on cities half a world away, but they are hitting our pockets here in Ghana. Even so, we have managed to ensure that fuel supplies have not been disrupted, unlike in several other parts of the world.”

    Source: kasapafmonline.com

  • 2022 SoNA: President Akufo-Addo’s joke about eliminating football age syndrome

    The era of “football age” will soon be a thing of the past as the government intends to extend its digitisation drive to the Births and Deaths Registry. 

    This, according to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, will be made possible as the Ghana Card has been fully integrated into everyday lives.  

    He added that with this system, people could no longer alter their ages since the synchronised system would make it impossible to do so.  

    “Indeed, Mr. Speaker, we are expecting greater things from the greater use of technology and the digitalisation of our economy as a whole. I am happy to report that the National Identification Card, the Ghana Card, has finally been integrated into our everyday lives as a cradle-to-grave necessity.

    “Never again will it be that someone, born in this country, will live a full life, die and be buried without any record of his or her existence. The operations of the Births and Deaths Registry are finally being digitised to make sure that documents issued from that department are accorded the respect they should have,” he said.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo added that this would eliminate all forms of age alterations in the country. 

    “Every child born in this country will be registered, and the date of birth registered will remain your date of birth throughout your life. There will be no school age, no football age, no SSNIT age, and no official age. When we register for National Health Insurance, the details of our identification will be the same as the details on a driving license, a passport and yes, on our tax identification,” he added. 

    President Akufo-Addo made this known while addressing parliament during his 2022 State of the Nation Address, in line with Ghana’s constitutional provisions. 

    Watch the president deliver his address here:

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Photos of parliament ahead of 2022 SoNA

    Parliament House is expected to see a full chamber as President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo delivers his 2022 State of the Nation Address. 

    Already, Members of Parliament on both sides of the House- the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the National Democratic Congress (NDC)- are seated, awaiting the president’s arrival. 

    Also in the Chamber are members of the Supreme Court of Ghana, political party heads, the diplomatic community, among other dignitaries.

    The Chief Justice, Kwasi Anin-Yeboah, is already seated on the right side of the Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, who is also present in the House. 

    This year’s SONA comes a day after the controversial Electronic Transactions Levy (E-Levy) was finally approved by parliament in the absence of Minority MPs. 

    Here are some photos: 




    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • Akufo-Addo, ministers to cut some emoluments and allowances Council of State Chairman

    Chairman of the Council of State, Nana Otuo Siriboe II, has disclosed that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and members of his cabinet have agreed to a reduction in their emoluments and allowances.

    According to him, the move is part of their recognition of the economic difficulties the country is facing and is their contribution towards easing the situation.

    Nana Otuo Siriboe II also mentioned that the Council of State members have decided to reduce their monthly allowances by 20 percent until the end of the year in view of the economic challenges.

    He made the pronouncements when he held a meeting with the President at the Jubilee House on Tuesday, March 22.

    “Mr. President, over the past few weeks, the Council has been deliberating on the current economic conditions of the country and have been collecting views with the view to sharing with you as early as possible.

    “As we were going through our routines, you and your cabinet were at a retreat over the same issues. Since yesterday, we have been fed with a snippet of information regarding some of the decisions that you have made.

    “We are particularly delighted to read that you and your cabinet have decided to reduce some of your emoluments and your allowances. Mr President, in tandem with your decision we as Council of State had also decided that we will reduce our monthly allowances by 20 percent until the end of this year,” Nana Otuo Siriboe said.

    The economy in recent times has witnessed a downward spiral.

    Many economists have cited the depreciating cedi, increase in fuel prices and general cost of living as pointers to this claim.

    Some analysts have asked the government to seek an IMF bailout programme, even though that idea has been shot down as government banks its revenue generation hopes on the E-Levy.

    The President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, over the weekend held a crunch meeting with key members of his government to decide on ways to mitigate the current economic challenges.

    Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta is to address the nation on Thursday on the outcome of the meeting.

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • We have to work together to address current economic challenges Akufo-Addo

    President Akufo-Addo is calling for a collaborative effort to deal with what he says are difficulties facing the Ghanaian economy.

    Nana Akufo-Addo says support from the citizenry and all stakeholders will go a long way to deal with the economic challenges affecting the country.

    Speaking at a meeting with officials from FBNBank at the Jubilee House, Nana Akufo-Addo, while stressing that the government is working to mitigate the plight of Ghanaians, suggested, that the prevailing situation was driven by external factors that have also negatively affected other economies of the world.

    “The difficulties that all of us are going through now are nothing that we have to re-emphasize and reiterate. It is obvious, and the source of it is also something that all of us know. It has been different impacts on different economies and countries but the root causes of it are well known. They are matters that we have to also resolve together. I believe that at the end of the day, it is this cooperation across borders in our regions that will give us the strongest base in which to deal with the problems that have emerged in these last two years,” he said.

    The COVID-19 pandemic and the recent Russia-Ukraine war has created challenges to many economies.

    The prices of fuel products have recently shot up across the world owing to the war.

    In Ghana, the fuel price hikes have led to a corresponding increase in the prices of general goods and services, sparking serious inflation concerns.

    FBNBank Ghana is a member of the First Bank of Nigeria Limited Group which is renowned for its great customer service and general stakeholder engagement garnered over its 127 years of operation. FBNBank Ghana has 21 branches and two agencies across the country with almost 500 staff.

    FBNBank offers universal banking services to individuals and businesses in Ghana.

    Source: citinewsroom.com

  • I dont underestimate the challenges Ghanaians are facing Akufo-Addo

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has said he does not underestimate the challenges which Ghanaians are facing at the moment.

    He expressed optimism that the government and the people would overcome these challenges.

    “I do not underestimate the challenges with which we are confronted. But I am strong in my conviction that we can overcome them. I know we are capable.”
    “I believe in the can-do spirit of Ghanaians. Ours is a bright future, and I am confident that the years ahead will be great,” he tweeted.

    He added, “The great majority of us, who are committed to democratic values and democratic institutions, will continue to resist the claims of these adventurers and employ all legitimate means in a democracy to maintain our free open system of governance.”

    Source: 3news.com

  • Have the humility to appreciate that we still have some way to go Akufo-Addo tells Ghanaians

    President Akufo-Addo has admonished Ghanaians to consider the enormity of the task ahead and measure their expectations of government accordingly.

    According to him, the country has made a lot of positive strides which must be taken into account as well.

    “We must have the pride to acknowledge that we have made positive strides. We must also have the humility to appreciate that we still have some way to go,” he said on Thursday.

    He was speaking at the 2022 Head of State Awards in Accra.

    The President said Ghanaians must also “have the patience to accept that just as our fight for freedom and independence was not achieved in a day, so too, national prosperity will not come overnight.”

    Addressing the gathering, the President further explained that he is spearheading a strong base from which to catapult the country into better fortunes.

    While enumerating his commitment to ensuring development, he insisted that his administration is poised to work hard to “build a new Ghanaian civilization that will attract the admiration of Africa and the world.”

    “We are establishing a solid foundation for the economic take-off of our country. In peace and in unity, I am certain that we will,” he added.

    SourceMyjoyonline.com

  • Investments in education are a key priority for my government Akufo-Addo

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has said his government intends to deepen the education of the population so as to attain the industrialisation objective.

    President Akufo-Addo was speaking at the independence day awards ceremony ahead of the 65th Independence Day celebration, in Accra on Wednesday, March 2.

    “Investments in education are a key priority for my government. The government intends to deepen the education of our population so as to attain our industrialisation objective.

    “This means there will be increasing emphasis in our education system on science and technology education and technical and vocational training.

    “In addition to the ongoing construction of the Accra STEM Academy, the government has commenced the construction of 20 science, technology, engineering and mathematics centres across the country with all twenty-eight at various stages of completion.

    “The completion of nine model senior high schools across the country is imminent. This year the government will expand the free senior high school programme to cover all first-year students in public TVET institutions.”

    “Government believes that knowledge and talent are not for the rich and privileged alone and that free education widens the gates of opportunities to every child, especially those whose talents are arrested because of poverty.

    “At this point in our history, we are determined, in spite of the difficulties, to complete the transformation of the country into a modern, 21st century nation that remains distinctly and uniquely Ghanaian. It is for this reason that investments in our educational system are a key priority for my government,” he stressed.

    Source: 3news.com

  • President opens National Labour Conference

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo will Monday open a National Labour Conference organised by the Ministry of Employment and Labour Relations and its Tripartite Constituents.

    The two-day conference is to reinforce a tripartite conversation on the dynamics and happenings on the labour front.

    The conference, which is on the theme, “Strengthening Tripartism for Peaceful Labour Relations and Resilient Economy”, is expected to end with the adoption of a road map and a communique that will inform and shape the Government’s approach for the resolution of labour issues for the national development.

    A technical presentation will be made by the Minister for Finance, Mr Ken Ofori-Atta on “The State of the Economy”, for discussions to proceed on the concerns of workers and employers in the public sector in relation to economic realities.

    Participants will, subsequently, agree on ways to collaborate on measures to address the concerns.

    Issues that will dominate the discussions include the State of the Economy, Conditions of Service of Public Sector Workers, Public Sector Salaries, Labour Productivity, Labour Dispute Prevention and Resolution, and Sustainable Pensions for all.

    The Conference will provide a unique opportunity for the various actors to exchange views and ideas on the thematic areas and emerging issues in a changing world of work to promote a positive and proactive approach to resolving labour issues for national development.

    The Minister for Employment and Labour Relations, Mr Ignatius Baffour Awuah, and other social partners, will also address the conference at the Rock City Hotel, in Kwahu-Nkwatia in the Eastern Region.

    Participants include representatives of Government, Organised Labour, Employers, media organisations and other stakeholders.

    Nana Otuo Siriboe II, Chairman of the Council of State and Omanhene of Juaben Traditional Area, will chair the conference.

    It will be officially closed by Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, on Tuesday.

    Source: GNA