Ghana is not a milking cow – Martin Amidu

0

Special Prosecutor nominee, Martin Alamisi Bens Kaiser Amidu, has strongly submitted that he is bent on fighting corruption if approved to occupy the position and that 
Ghana is not a milking cow where unscrupulous people steal.

Speaking in firm but loud voice during his vetting by the Appointment Committee of Parliament, the Cadre without a shred of fear from any quarters, said one of the ways to limit the spate of corruption in the country is to put in place mechanism to close the leakages in the system.

However, he said he will continue to fight corruption whether his appointment is approved or not. According to Martin Amidu, the work he is done so far makes him a very credible person to occupy the Special Prosecutor’s Office.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com 
 
 

Kidi, Kuami Eugene and Adina to headline Atinka’s Lovers Train on Val’s Day 

0

 

Atinka Media Village is set to thrill viewers and listeners to a fun packed day to mark this year’s Valentine’s Day.

The event dubbed, Lovers Train, will be held at the Plus 2 Pub and Kitchen at Kokomlemle, Accra.

The event, which attracts no gate fee only requires couples to buy a GHS30 worth of food and drinks and get an additional plate for free.

Audience will be thrilled to soothing music from three of Ghana’s top musicians: sexy Adina, “Odo” hit maker, Kidi and Kwami Eugene.

Lovers Train is sponsored by Mikkado Pharmacy, Sabroso Olive Oil, Smile Mouth Wash, Darling Lemon, Golden Tree Chocolates and Kasapreko Company Limited.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com

Police rescue alleged lesbians from being lynched by angry mob

0

 

The timely intervention of armed police personnel from the Tafo Divisional Command in the Ashanti Region prevented a deadly attack on two alleged lesbians Monday night.

Police disclosed that the youth upon a tipoff stormed a house in the area where the two ladies in their 20s were suspected to be engaging in lesbianism.

“The youth in their numbers without evidence wanted to lynch them even with our presence”, Tafo Divisional Police Command, Superintendent David Amoako confirmed.

“The aggrieved youth threw a stone at us and as a result, one officer was injured”, the Police Chief told the host of Nhyira FM morning show host, Aduanaba Kofi Asante Ennin Tuesday morning.

Superintendent David Amoako, however, ruled out the fact the irate youth in the area have gained notoriety in rowdyism which is making Tafo a flashpoint.
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights in Ghana are heavily suppressed. Physical and violent homophobic attacks against LGBT people are common, often alleged to be encouraged by the media and religious and political leaders.

Reports of young gay people being kicked out of their homes are also common. Despite the Constitution guaranteeing a right to freedom of speech, of expression and of the assembly to Ghanaian citizens, these fundamental rights are actively denied to LGBT people.

Source:mynewsgh.com
 

South Africa: ANC 'decides Zuma must go'

0

 

South Africa's ruling African National Congress (ANC) will formally ask for President Jacob Zuma to resign after he refused to do so earlier, reports say.

The reported decision to "recall" him followed marathon talks by senior party officials that continued into the early hours of Tuesday.

If Mr Zuma, 75, still does not budge, he will face a vote of confidence in parliament that he is expected to lose.

In power since 2009, he has been dogged by corruption allegations.

The ANC has not officially confirmed its plans but party sources have described them to South African media outlets and Reuters news agency.

Mr Zuma has resisted increasing pressure to quit since December, when Cyril Ramaphosa replaced him as leader of the ANC.

It is unclear how Mr Zuma will respond to the formal request to step down, which is expected to be issued later on Tuesday.

Earlier, Mr Ramaphosa left the meeting of the ANC's national executive committee to travel to Mr Zuma's residence, where he is said to have told the president he would be recalled if he did not step down. He later returned to the ANC conclave.

What has Mr Zuma done wrong?

Mr Zuma's presidency has been overshadowed by allegations of corruption which he has always vehemently denied.

In 2016, South Africa's highest court ruled that Mr Zuma had violated the constitution when he failed to repay government money spent on his private home.

Last year the Supreme Court of Appeal ruled that he must face 18 counts of corruption, fraud, racketeering and money laundering relating to a 1999 arms deal.

More recently, Mr Zuma's links to the wealthy India-born Gupta family, who are alleged to have influenced the government, have caused his popularity to plummet.

Both Mr Zuma and the Guptas deny the allegations.

How likely is Mr Zuma to quit?

Correspondents say it will be very difficult for him to resist a formal request to resign but he would not be legally obliged to do so and could technically carry on as president despite losing the faith of his party.

However, he would then be expected to face a confidence vote in parliament. This has already been scheduled for 22 February.

Mr Zuma has survived other such votes but he is not expected to pull it off again. A confidence vote would be considered a humiliating process for him and the party.

South African media are calling President Zuma's seemingly inevitable exit "Zexit".

His predecessor, Thabo Mbeki, resigned in 2008, also after a power struggle with his deputy.

The deputy in question was Jacob Zuma, who took over the presidency the following year.

Why is this happening now?
The ANC was badly rattled by its performance at the 2016 local elections when it won its lowest share of the vote since coming to power under the late Nelson Mandela in 1994.

It wants to project a fresh image for next year's general election. Having served two terms in office (South African presidents are elected by parliament), Mr Zuma cannot legally return to power in any case.

On Monday, opposition parties called for an early election.

"Anyone from the ANC that wants to lead this country, must get their mandate from the people of South Africa," Democratic Alliance leader Mmusi Maimane told reporters.

Source: BBC

Veteran actor Super OD dead

0

 

Legendary actor, Asonaba Kwaku Darko, alias Super OD is reported dead.

The “Osofo Dadzie” actor died Tuesday morning  at  Swedru  in the Central Region.

The ace comedian was 82.

 

Detailed Biography

Super Od ASONABA Kweku Darko, better known as “Super O.D.” did not really know his father as his father died while O.D was a toddler. But still, he knows one thing — that his father was very tall. For him his father’s grave which in his childish eyes had seemed very long has influenced him to measure his father by the length of his grave.

Because O.D’s father died early, it was his mother Abena Akuwa, a petty trader, who struggled to care for him. She could hardly make ends meet, so Super O.D. had a rough childhood life which led to his inability to have formal education.

In 1958 he gained employment as a Native Authority policeman, popularly called “Ahenfie Police” at Agona Swedru but one year later, the authority police system was abolished. Super O.D. said he and his colleagues were directed by the then Minister of Interior, Mr Krobo Edusei, to apply to join the Ghana Police if they so wished.

“Becoming a policeman had always been my wish and therefore there could not have been any better deal for me than this.” But he could not get his dream job because he had not “been to school.” He was however advised to learn a trade and thereafter enter the police service as a tradesman.

This he said, was a rather tall order because he had nobody to sponsor him learn a trade but after wandering for some months, a driver who plies between Kpone and Abodom took him on as a driver’s mate and for six whole years he was allowed to handle the steering wheel only three times. He said after the sixth year he attempted a driving test and was surprised to have been okayed by one Mr Tackie who was the Testing Officer.

O.D. still wanted to be a policeman so after securing his driver’s licence he applied to the Ghana Police and after some weeks training under the instructions of Sidi Tumutu and Maudia Fulani, both Escort Police instructors, he was “failed” at the end of the course because, according to him, he could not pay a bribe of three pounds.

He said he was therefore forced to go into commercial driving and gained employment with the Accra City Council as a driver of one of its taxi cabs, known as “Ponko Abodam.”

After a short while he lost this job and had to go and stay with a friend at Labadi near Kojo Sardine’s house. Luck smiled on him as he soon landed a new job as a labourer working on the construction of the Cantonment Police Station.

He said it was during this period that one day Appiah Agyekum’s Concert Party came to Labadi and he joined the band on stage to sing as a backing vocalist. This, to him, was the starting point of his career in concert party theatre.

He said he had acquired the skill of making witty jokes from his mother who was nicknamed “Jack Johnson” for her jokes and soon found out that his jokes were in high demand and started hopping from one concert party to another.

Within a short span of time he had been with Akwasi Effah’s Band, Happy Stars, Akomanyi’s Guitar Band and finally settled with the Oppong Kyekyeku Guitar Band.

Asonaba said this band did not belong to (first name?) Oppong. It belonged to a proprietor who gave them poor deals and therefore the entire membership resigned to form the Oppong Drama Group which enacted plays wherever African Brothers Band played. The troupe was made up of Oppong, Frimpong Manso, Fred Addae, Akua Boahemaa, Bea Kissi and himself.

He said one day the troupe enacted Aku Sika and it caught on so well with Kobina Taylor, then one of the bosses at GBC and he arranged for the group to start a series of Akan Drama on GTV. He said it was at this stage that Joris Wartenberg, their scriptwriter, changed their name from Oppong Drama Group to Osofo Dadzie Group.

He said while he was with the group he was getting private jobs as people contracted him to appear in television commercials to advertise company products.

Super O.D. said with the advent of Ghanaian video films he was invited by HM Films to play in Double Cross shot at Adiembra, Takoradi; Fatal Decision and Crossfire. He said these further shot him up and has since been involved in film acting.

What in recent times has been his major engagement are a series of one-man comedy shows that promoters outside the country have been inviting him to perform. He said these series have taken him to Stuttgart, Frankfurt and Bremen all in Germany; Holland, Belgium, Canada, London, Washington DC and New York.

He said his promoters are sometimes amazed by the fact that he is able to treat his audiences to three hours non-stop comedy.

He sums up the difficulties and successes in his favourite lines:

“I am the son of the long one,

I walk on lions, on hippos, rhinos and tigers

And I break their bones into pieces

I am the great one.”

Of course this is the adapted version of the caterpillar’s song in the Seven African tales but it suits the life history of ace comedian Asonaba Kweku Darko, alias Super O.D

 

 

 

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com  with additional files from Graphic Showbiz

8 feared dead in accident on Achimota-Ofankor Highway

0

Eight persons are feared dead after a sprinter benz bus they were travelling on reportedly fell from the flyover onto the underpass on the Achimota-Ofankor highway.

The accident is said to have happened around 6am.

The driver is said to have lost control of the vehicle after one of his tyres burst.

graphic

 

South African lions eat 'poacher', leaving just his head

0

 

A suspected big cat poacher has been eaten by lions near the Kruger National Park in South Africa, police say.

The animals left little behind, but some body parts were found over the weekend at a game park near Hoedspruit.

"It seems the victim was poaching in the game park when he was attacked and killed by lions," Limpopo police spokesman Moatshe Ngoepe told AFP.

"They ate his body, nearly all of it, and just left his head and some remains."

Police have not yet established the victim's identity. A loaded hunting rifle and ammunition were found next to the body, South African website Eyewitness News reports.

Lion poaching has been on the rise in Limpopo province in recent years.

The big cats' body parts are sometimes used in traditional medicine, both within Africa and beyond.

Wildlife charity the Born Free Foundation says lion bones and other body parts are increasingly sought-after in South East Asia, where they are sometimes used as a substitute for tiger bones.

In January 2017, three male lions were found poisoned in Limpopo with their paws and heads cut off.


BBC

Ghana, Cuba to join forces in malaria fight

0

 The Vice President of the Republic, H.E. Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, has reiterated government’s desire to eradicate malaria and other mosquito-transmitted diseases which lead to significant numbers of deaths in Ghana and costs Africa billions of dollars in lost productivity.

The Ghana Government will therefore renew discussions with the Government of Cuba for the establishment of a Biolarvicide factory at Savelugu in the Northern Region for the control of pests and mosquito transmitted diseases to serve the country and the West African subregion.

Dr Bawumia made the pledge when a high powered Cuban delegation, led by H.E Mrs Mercedes Lopez Acea, Vice President of the Council of State of Cuba, and including Hon Mrs Ana Teresita Gonzalez, Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs of Cuba, called on him at the Flagstaff House, Accra on Monday February 12, 2018.

Official statistics from ECOWAS show that in Africa, malaria kills more people than all the wars on the continent, combined with a child dying every 30 seconds from the scourge. Furthermore, the disease accounts for around 40% of public health expenditure in endemic countries.

“The malaria programme in Savelugu in Northern Ghana is an area that Ghana wants to see the proposals come to fruition for the malaria control programme. Deaths from malaria are avoidable, and we want this facility to help eradicate it not just in Ghana but the whole of West Africa, if not the entire continent” Dr Bawumia stated.

Recalling the longstanding relations between the two countries, which began in 1959, Vice President Bawumia underscored Ghana’s appreciation of Cuba’s support for various sectors of Ghanaian society including the efforts of the Cuban Medical Brigade Assistance Programme, which has doctors and other health personnel working in very remote areas in Ghana.

Over 3,000 Ghanaian students have also benefitted from training in Cuba, many of whom have since been contributing their quota to national development.

The Vice President, who is also Head of Ghana’s Economic Management team, welcomed interest expressed by the Cuban business community in adding value to Ghana’s cocoa.

“We know that the Cuban business community has expressed an interest in Ghana’s cocoa beans. We believe that if Ghana and Cuba cooperate, we can add value to Ghana’s cocoa sector.”

Mrs Mercedes Lopez Acea commended Ghana’s leading role in ensuring peace and stability in the West Africa subregion, and called on officials of the two countries to expand and deepen areas of cooperation for mutual benefit.

“We are proud that we have trained over three thousand Ghanaian students, who are now playing key roles in Ghana’s development. We are also very proud of the achievements of the Cuban Medical Brigade, some of who have been in Ghana for over 15 years. I believe we can explore other areas of mutual benefit,” Mrs Lopez Acea indicated.

The delegation was accompanied by Ghana’s Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Hon Mohammad Habibu Tijani and Ghana’s Ambassador to Cuba, Amb. Napoleon Abdulai.

 

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com

Amissah -Arthur warns Akufo-Addo over EC impasse  

0

 

Former Vice President Paa Kwesi Amissah-Arthur, has called on President Akufo- Addo to tread cautiously on the current impasse at the Electoral Commission.  

Mr Amissah –Arthur said the President and his government should not exploit the current confusion within the commission for political gains.

The former Governor of the Bank of Ghana said, there is the perception in some quarters that the government and some politicians   are trying very hard to get rid of an independent minded individual and replace her with someone who will do their bidding.

He wondered why the president did not touch on the impasse at the EC in his State of the Nation’s Address, adding that the EC is one of the most crucial agencies that ensures free and fair elections in the country.

The former vice president said he doesn’t know “what the current Electoral Commission has done to invite the eye of the government.” 

He said the Electoral Commission chaired by Dr Kojo Afari  Djan conducted six elections – four won by the NDC  and two by the NPP . He therefore could not fathom why the NPP have directed their anger at Charlotte Osei even though they (NPP) won an election supervised by her.

The former Vice President also used the opportunity to touch on the current “disturbing” security situation in the country.

He said when he travels outside Ghana, quite a lot of people express concern about the insecurity in the country, citing the activities of the political vigilante groups.

According to him, if the problem is not addressed by the president, the NDC and other political parties could be forced to form their own vigilante groups to defend themselves.

Mr Amissah Arthur said the government has done well in the fight against galamsey and that, it should also employ similar method to fight political vigilantism.
Ghana | Atinkaonline.com  
 

Akufo-Addo appoints Elsie Awadzi as 2nd deputy Governor of Bank of Ghana

 


President Nana Akufo Addo has  appointed Mrs Elsie Awadzi as the 2nd deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana.

The appointment is subject to consultation with the Council of State.

Mrs Awadzi is an international economic and financial lawyer with a total of 21 years of professional experience working in various capacities in Ghana and internationally.

Her key areas of specialization are financial sector development and regulation, financial stabilityassessments, design of crisis management frameworks and financial safety nets, and legal andinstitutional aspects of public financial management.

She was, until the appointment, a Senior Counsel of the IMF’s Legal Department (Financial and Fiscal Law Unit) with experience working on countries such as Japan, South Africa, and the United Kingdom; and advised on financial sector reforms in many countries in the context of the IMF’s surveillance, lending, and technical assistance activities.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com