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Liberia's 'missing millions': Charles Sirleaf charged

The son of Liberia's ex-President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has been charged with economic sabotage in connection with the unlawful printing of local currency worth millions of dollars.

Charles Sirleaf, a deputy governor of Liberia's Central Bank, is suspected of pocketing some of the proceeds in 2016-18.

Four other ex-bank officials were also charged. Two of them are on the run.

The accused have so far made no comments on the allegations.

An independent report into the missing millions was released last week.

One of the world's poorest nations, Liberia has been struggling with rampant corruption.

Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, president of the West African country from 2006 to 2018, was credited with bringing economic stability after years of conflict.

On Monday, Mr Sirleaf, former bank chief Milton Weeks and bank official Dorbor Hagba were charged with economic sabotage, misuse of public money and criminal conspiracy.

A judge in the capital Monrovia ordered them to be held in prison pending their trial.

Lawyers for the accused have not responded to the allegations.

The other two defendants still at large were named as Richard Walker and Joseph Dennis.

The much-anticipated report was carried out by investigative auditing firm Kroll.

It was looking into the alleged disappearance of more than $100m (£75m) worth of newly printed Liberian banknotes last year.

It had been widely reported that shipping containers full of banknotes had vanished from Monrovia's port and airport.

However, the report did not find any proof that this happened.

Instead, it found that Liberia's Central Bank had acted unilaterally and unlawfully by printing and importing into the country three times the amount of banknotes it had been authorised to do.

BBC

Two youth groups clash in Fadama, one dead

Two youth groups have reportedly clashed in Fadama, a suburb of Accra, resulting in the death of one person. 

This has led to the cancellation of the 62nd Independence Celebration in the municipality scheduled to take place at Fadama Cluster of Schools.

The Okaikoi North Municipal Council Executive , Boye Laryea, in a statement explained that the suspension has become necessary due to the tensions between these two youth groups. 

"The Municipal Security Council finds the venue for the Celebrations unsafe as it is within the same vicinity that the youth groups clashed. The Munical Assembly regrets any inconvenience this would cause the general public especially the people of Okaikwe North Municipality", he said.

 

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com 

Kronkron: All ten bands ready and poised to deliver at grand finale

 

The ten finalists of Atinka TV’s big band reality show, ‘Kronkron’ have confirmed their preparedness towards the grand finale of the maiden edition.

The grand finale of Kronkron, will be held on March 10, 2019 at the National Theatre in Accra at 4.p.m.

The remaining teams out of the 24 that qualified for the reality show includes Joyful Singers (JS), Favel Music band (FM), Heavenly Flames (HF), Adam Nana, Divine Voices (DV) and Nkwa.

Others are the Faith Voices (FV), We2 Praise (We2), Catholic Adehyemma (ADM) and 4G Crew (4G).

Preceding the grand finale, the finalists will on March 6th demonstrate their preparedness at a rehearsal session which will be live on Atinka TV.

Meanwhile, the Managing Director of Atinka Media Village (AMV), Mr Albert Kwabena Dwumfour, has also stated that the prizes that will be given to the winners will be out-doored before the finals to encourage them deliver.

Outdooring the prizes, he said, will also boost the confidence people have in the AMV when it comes to delivering on their promises.

“We want the public to know that we are not just mentioning prizes to the public while we do otherwise. We have done it before and we will do it again. When it comes to delivering on our promises we do not hesitate at all,” he added.

The ultimate winner will take home a set of musical instruments and a cash prize of GH₵10,000.

The first and second runners-up, will also be going home with cash prizes of GH₵5,000 respectively, while fourth to eighth-placed music groups will be given cash prizes of GH₵2,000 each.

Mr Dwumfour therefore, called on the public to come and support the programme in order to make it a success.

“I will also encourage the pubic to vote for their favourite bands to avoid any form of disappointment on that day,” he added.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com

Anas continues to live on

In the beginning, was Anas
And Anas was a journalist
And Anas was a mere reporter at Crusading Guide.
Anas covered political press conferences and mundane parliamentary debates and beauty pageants and rainfall patterns.

But Anas was not happy.
Anas saw that the stories he covered did not address the issues that were dear to his heart. Anas saw that our nation was ill – in fact, terminally ill – and resolved to use the only tools he had as a journalist – the pen and the camera – to address those ills.

Anas started small. Very small. One day in 1999 he observed that those police officers deployed to keep street hawkers off certain highways in the nation’s capital were taking bribes from the poor hawkers and allowing them to flout the law.

So Anas went undercover. He became a street hawker selling nkatie burger’ on the street to get the full extent of the problem, and what he found shocked him and galvanised him.

Next, Anas heard that some Ghanaian workers of AfKO Fisheries were maltreated by their Korean employer in the high seas. So Anas went undercover aboard a shipping vessel to get hard-core evidence. What he brought back outraged a nation and thrust Anas in the national limelight.

Next, at the height of the Ivorian crises, Anas got wind that some Ivorian rebels had invaded Ghanaian territories, made incursions into some northern communities such as Walata and Saru, and subjected the inhabitants to constant torture and abuse.

So Anas went undergo as the 'Prince of Walata' and managed to meet the rebel leader, receiving information about the rebels' camp and operations. The government of Ghana secured its border. Anas became a national star and received presidential attention.

Next, Anas heard that there were problems in a popular second cycle school in Ghana. So Anas got a school uniform and a “chop box” and went undercover as a student to gather first-hand information.

Next, Anas went undercover to expose officials within Ghana's passport office who provided Ghanaian passports to non-citizens for a fee. What he found shocked the nation and led directly to the biometric passport for Ghanaians.

Next, Anas heard that Ghanaians and other West Africans were suffering severe maltreatment in Thai prisons in the capital Bangkok. So Anas got a cassock and travelled to Bangkok to infiltrate its prisons as a Catholic Priest. What he brought out shocked the nation and forced the government of Ghana to negotiate with the Thai government for the transfer of all convicted Ghanaian prisoners in Thailand to Ghana.

Next, Anas got hints that a biscuit and confectionery factory in Ghana, Eurofood, was using expired and maggot-infested flour to produce biscuits for public consumption in Ghana and other parts of Africa. So Anas went undercover as a labourer in the factory and brought us all the maggot-infested details. I was a teaching assistant at KNUST at the time when the story hit, and Anas was the hottest thing in Ghana, hailed by politicians and common men alike.

Next, Anas heard that a brothel right in the centre of the capital was hiring teenagers and forcing them into prostitution. So Anas got a broom and got a job in the brothel as a cleaner. When he emerged with the details, the brothel was closed and the teenage prostitutes were taken in by Social Welfare.

Then Anas heard that there were corruption and abuse of children in Ghana’s biggest state-run orphanage – Osu Children Home. Anas went in undercover and brought us the details.

When Anas heard that some security officers and their cohorts were operating a cocoa smuggling syndicate to neighbouring Ivory Coast when the nation was spending a fortune to spray the farms and increase yields, he jumped on a motorbike and followed the trail undercover in the interest of the state and at the peril of his life.

When Anas heard that the nation’s biggest psychiatric hospital was a den of criminals and a safe abode for patient human rights abuses, he went “high” and went “mad” and got admitted there. And he brought us all the gory Babylon details!

Next, Anas heard that the nation’s key point of entry – the Tema Harbour – was a den of thieves. Anas went undercover with his lenses and what he brought out nearly gave a president a heart-attack. It led to several changes in operations at the harbour.

Other high profile investigative works followed, with such interesting titles as the “Messiah of Mentukwa”, “the President’s Assignment – Stealing the People's Power”, “the Spirit Child”, “the Ghana Sex Mafia” and “Ghana’s Soul Takers”.

Anas’ fame, reputation and influence went beyond the boundaries of Ghana and the world began to take notice. So he went international, collaborating with the likes of Al Jazeera and the BBC to investigate stories across the vast land of Africa, from Nigeria to Tanzania.

Then on 23 September 2015, Anas premiered a movie that broke the nation’s heart. Titled "Ghana in the Eyes of God", Ghanaians were treated to unbelievable scenes of the nation’s judges selling justice to the highest bidder and allowing criminals to go free. It led to the sacking of 21 justices of the high court of Ghana and some much-needed reforms in the judicial sector.

Anas became the darling of the nation, the standard bearer of impeccable journalistic ideals. So much so that a major politician told a cheering nation in a televised presidential debate that when he wins power as president, he will deploy what he called the Anas’s style to expose and punish corruption and wrong-doing in Ghana. Every politician wanted to be associated with Anas. Every politician wanted to claim ownership of a piece of Anas. Anas had arrived. Anas had achieved what no other journalist in Ghana had achieved.

But Anas was not satisfied. Anas could not be satisfied. Anas realized that the real trouble with our society was the politicians and those who controlled large sums of money in the affairs of the nation. So Anas tested the waters by turning his lenses towards the football administrators of our land, and hell broke loose.

Ghanaians were treated to scenes of the president of the Ghana Football Association telling a supposed corrupt Arab businessman that he had the President of the Republic of Ghana in his pocket and that some ministries were created by the president as “chopping avenues” for some powerful party financiers and businessmen.

That the President of the Republic of Ghana, Commander-in-Chief of the Ghana Armed Forces, that handsome, romantic, some-may-even-say-sexy, man, who had told Ghanaians in broad-daylight during the campaign that anyone who was interested in graft and money-making had no place in his government, was in the pocket of a football administrator! Anas had gored a sacred cow!

You don’t expose the ruling class that way and get plaudits. So naturally, the heat was turned on Anas. They started questioning his methods; they said he was trapping people and forcing them to accept bribes; they asked who polices the policeman, and they said he was a blackmailer. They started making distinctions between bribes and gifts, but the distinctions couldn’t hold water. You shouldn't fear mouse traps if you are not a mouse.

But Anas would not be cowed. So he followed that by hitting directly at ministers of state and government appointees, and the picture doesn’t look pretty. The government has begun to circle the wagons. Government appointees and spokespersons are in a full frontal attack. They say Anas is now an enemy of the nation and must be silenced.

Does the president still believe that Anas’s method of exposing and fighting crime is the best for our country, or is he deep in the pocket of Kwesi Nyantakyi? Only time will tell!

Shalom!

Written by Dr. Richard Tia, Lecturer, KNUST

 

 

Parliament passes Public Holidays Amendment Bill

 

Parliament of Ghana today passed the Public Holidays Amendment Bill 2018 into law.

The current law scraps AU Day and Republic Day as public holidays and introduces January 7 as Constitution Day and make September 21 Nkrumah Memorial Day.

The minority in parliament who were unhappy with the new development stormed out of parliament in protest.

The Opposition argued that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is seeking to re-write the history of Ghana and glorify his late family members such as J.B. Danquah and Ofori-Atta with the introduction of the new law.

“The Public Holidays Amendment Bill is duly read for the third time and is passed”, The Speaker of Parliament, Professor Mike Aaron Oquaye said.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com

Check out Wendy Shay’s new look

 

Rufftown Records Signee, Wendy Shay has shared a photo of her new hairstyle on her Instagram page, with the hope that her new look will bring her luck.

The singer, who has had critics for keeping her introductory hairstyle, which one could call a crochet, after sometime decided to move to a curly wig.

Currently, she has moved from the bulky hairstyle and has worn a coloured wavy wig which confirms how beautiful she looks no matter the type of hair.

Meanwhile, after posting her new look, the reaction from her fans also indicated they were happy she had changed her looks and still look like what they expected.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com 

"Your juju won’t work again" – Pope Skinny to Shatta Wale

Pope Skinny and former tight pal Shatta Wale are currently at each other’s throats after they quit working together.

In a series of attacks on snapchat, Wale lays out many accusations against Pope Skinny. He alleges that the Asuoden music boss is a rapist and that they only became friends because Pope Skinny wanted to leech off his fame.

He also said Pope owes him $10,000 plus many other allegations against the rapper. This ‘beef’ is really heating up.

Pope Skinny responding to Shatta Wale's rant on snapchat denied taking $10,000 and a car from the SM movement boss.

He also accused him of working with juju which will fail him soon.

Below are shots of Pope Skinny’s snapcharts

Ghana | Atinkaoanline.com | Ishmael Atiemo

Policy framework to guide monitoring and evaluation of MDAs designed

A policy framework that seeks to guide the monitoring and evaluation of ministries, departments and agencies has been designed by the Ministry of Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E).

Known as the National Monitoring and Evaluation Framework, the structure will inform decision making for all development programmes, projects and public investments when approved.

Meanwhile, the M&E system will also become the requirement to establishing good governance and value for money in all state projects and programmes, including those implemented by local assemblies.

The Deputy Minister of Monitoring and Evaluation, Mr William Kwasi Sabi, who spoke at the opening of the final validation workshop in Accra on Friday stated that monitoring and evaluation has a strong relationship with policy formulation, planning and budgeting.

However, he identified the fact that there was no uniformed regulations on M&E in the country to provide valuable feedback and lessons for continuous progresses in development policies, plans and budgets.

He attributed the above fact to fragmentation of M&E systems which has brought about inadequate reports which only complied with requirements, but were rarely used for decision making.

“Most evaluations conducted are donor-driven and culture of using evaluations to assess the relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, impact and sustainability of government programmes and projects is non-existing,” he said.

Mr Sabi also made it known that the limited capacity for monitoring and evaluation practice compromised the quality of reports produced.

Moving forward, he said the policy would deepen the monitoring and evaluation knowledge in Ghana.

“It will enhance the demand and utilisation of M&E results in policy formulation and decision making at all levels, promote evaluation culture and use it as a tool to ensure prudence use of public funds for all development interventions,” he added.

Meanwhile, the Deputy Greater Accra Regional Minister, Mrs Elizabeth Sackey, added that the framework would help to assess whether proposed targets are being met or not and to identify achievements, constraints and challenges so that improvements could be done to achieve better results.

Public funds

On the other hand, a Senior Lecturer at the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA), Dr Charles Amoatey, who is the Lead Facilitator of the policy framework, said it would be implemented by all government agencies that use public funds.

He said the policy would also mandate all government intervention programmes to prepare M & E plans which will guide institutional heads to support the framework by championing the establishment and operationalisation of the system.

 

Ghana| Atinkaonline.com| Porcia Oforiwaa Ofori

Bleoo 99 year group to hold health walk

As part of activities to celebrate their 20th anniversary since their exit from Senior High School, the Accra Academy 99 year group would embark on a health walk from Ayi Mensah to the mountain top at Aburi.

The Event is set to draw as many members as well as other year groups.

President of the group Yao Anani Kuwornu and his executives say they are looking forward to a very successful event.

It’s hard to believe that twenty years have gone by so quickly. We entered Accra Academy with pride as little teenagers and we are delighted to have such an opportunity to get our mates together.

Our working lives have made it quite difficult to congregate for as many events as possible but I can confidently say that as many of my mates have confirmed their participation.

It would be a great opportunity to shed some weight and burn some calories which is extremely good for our health. The Aburi stretch is physically demanding and I am sure it would serve as well, he added.”

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com 

He further added that there would a lot to eat and drink and entreated the various years groups to join in and have some fun.

As part of their celebrations, the group also intends to hold a public lecture on leadership as well as a dinner dance to raise some funds for various projects in their alma mater.

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com 

Cedi fall: Govt’s decision to pump $800 into reserves not sustainable – Currency Analyst

Currency Analyst, Samuel Ampah, says government’s decision to pump $800 into reserves is a short term measure which cannot be sustained.

The Bank of Ghana (BoG) announced that it will add $800 million to the country’s reserves to soothe the cedi against the dollar by the end of the first quarter.

According to the head of Financial Markets at the Central Bank, Mr Steven Opata, the release of more dollars will increase the Net International Reserve (NIR) to around $4 billion, which will be enough to provide confidence in the system and help stabilize the free fall of the cedi.

However, speaking to Ekourba Gyasi on Atinka AM Drive, Currency Analyst, Samuel Ampah said that although the release of $800 into the NIR will stabilize the free fall of the cedi for a while, the act is not feasible.

He attributed this to the fact that the basic fundamentals of Ghana’s economy are not strong enough to hold the cedi against the dollar.

According to him, there used to be some underlined assets, which included Ghana’s gold reserve. He was however quick to add that there are no more

Ghana | Atinkaonline.com | Vivian Adu Boatemaa