Emmanuel Gyamfi credits good pre-season for his explosive start at Aduana Stars

Emmanuel Gyamfi has said good pre-season is the reason behind his fine start with Aduana Stars.

The pacy winger joined the two time Ghana Premier League champions from Asante Kotoko.

Following his move to the Dormaa based club, Gyamfi has been on red-hot form after 6 games into the ongoing 2021/22 campaign.

Gyamfi has scored 4 goals for the Ogya boys, making him one of their best players this season.

“I had a very good pre-season with Aduana and I think that is helping me much because I think I didn’t start well last season and that was because of the preseason I didn’t get,” the 26-year-old said.

Gyamfi furthered how limited pressure at Aduana as compared to former club Asante Kotoko has made settling down quicker for him.

“The pressure there [Asante Kotoko] is not as the same here. You could see numerous supporters of Kotoko during games as compared to Aduana who are a bit limited and they have given me the maximum support too which has motivated me a lot.”

Emmanuel Gyamfi bagged a brace and provided an assist as Aduana FC thrashed WAFA SC 3-0 over the weekend.

Source: Modern Ghana

Ghana Digital Innovation Fair honors Ecosystem Game Changers

The premier free edition of the GDIW featured over 20 exclusive conversations, plenaries, and presentations under the principle theme; Mobilising Collective Action and Investment to Catalyse Growth in Ghana’s Digital Innovation Ecosystem.

The Ghana Digital Innovation Week was designed to bring together entrepreneurs, investors, researchers, university faculties, venture capitalists, as well as other technical service providers such as accountants, designers, contract manufacturers, and providers of skills training and professional development to provide a common platform for practical conversations on turning innovative ideas into useful reality to address societal problems.

The Vice President, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia was at the opening ceremony on Monday, 22nd November at the Grand Arena to commensurate the week-long event. As part of his speech, he commended the organizers for an “excellent collaborative work done”.

He mentioned that it was imperative that all stakeholders “talk to each other” as the nation strives towards achieving a digital economy fit for the Fourth Industrial Revolution. “This Ghana Digital Innovation Week will serve as a platform to discuss and define a common national vision that drives Ghana’s digital innovation agenda, generates wide interest, and prompts concrete actions in the policy, legislative, regulatory spaces and the needed infrastructure”
The subsequent days of the event witnessed a variety of stakeholders undertaking various discussions that touched on aspects of the digital ecosystem.

One of the most significant days; the closing ceremony saw the Ghana Innovation Ecosystem Game Changers (Gh-IEGC) Honors. It seeks to recognize ecosystem players who have made immense contributions towards the advancement of digital innovation in Ghana and their works have made a visible impact on an economic sector through the use of digital innovation or advancing the use of digital innovation.

Find below the honorees;

Zipline Ghana was honored with the Innovation Ecosystem Game Changer – Digital Inclusion (Financial Inclusion/PWD/Gender/Rural).
ASHESI D: Lab was honored with Ecosystem Game Changer- Academia-Industry Support Programme.

Regina Honu was honored with the Innovation Ecosystem Game Changer – Digital Literacy, Ghana Airports Company Limited was honored with Innovation Ecosystem Game Changer- Industrial Transformation.

Dr. Ernest Addison (Governor of the Bank of Ghana) was honored with Innovation Ecosystem Game Changer – Regulation and Governance.

Professor Elsie Effah Kaufmann (Associate Professor and founding Head of the Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Ghana) was honored with Innovation Ecosystem Game Changer – Advancement of STEM.

Jorge Appiah, Solar Taxi (Founder and CEO of SolarTaxi) was honored with Innovation Ecosystem Game Changer – Smart and Sustainable Society.
GhanaPostGPS (Digital Property Addressing System) was honored with Innovation Ecosystem Game Changer- Infrastructure Development.

MacCarthy Mac-Gbathy, Hopin Academy – Tamale (Co-founder and Executive Director) was honored with Innovation Ecosystem Game Changer- Startup Ecosystem Development.

Honorees shall be given, framed honor certificate, citation, and plaque/medal/trophy.

The maiden Ghana Innovation Fair is under the auspicious of the Vice President’s office with support from multi-stakeholders including the Ministry of Communications and Digitalization; the Ministry of Environment, Science, Technology, and Innovation (MESTI) as well as the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MoTI).

The Accra Digital Centre (ADC); the National Entrepreneurship and Innovation Programme (NEIP); the Ghana-India Kofi Annan Center of Excellence in ICT plus the Ghana Chamber of Technology are onboard as private sector stakeholders in addition to Ashesi University College and the University of Ghana.

Source: Ghana Web

Fighting Richard Commey will be interesting – Lomachenko

Ukrainian boxing superstar, Vasiliy Lomachenko, says is expecting an interesting challenge when he fights Richard Commey.

The two face off on December 12 at the Madison Square Garden.

Both fighters lost their world titles to Teofimo Lopez, and are on their individual quests to win them back.

The former dual world champion, Lomachenko, last fought in June, knocking out Masayoshi Nakatani in nine rounds, and will be looking to take down, Ghana’s Richard Commey on Sunday.

“Richard Commey has big power, reach and experience. This is an interesting challenge for me, and I know it’s a fight the fans are excited to watch,” Lomachenko said.

“I am 100 per cent healthy and ready for Saturday night. I can’t wait. Madison Square Garden is like a second home for me. So many great moments in my career have taken place at Madison Square Garden.

“I won the lightweight title against Jorge Linares in that arena, so returning there brings back many great memories.

“My goals keep me motivated, one of which is to become the undisputed champion. Commey is one of the division’s most dangerous fighters, and he is the one standing in my way.”

Source: Modern Ghana

Ghana wins bronze at IWF/Commonwealth Weightlifting Championship

Accra,- Ghana’s Winnifred Ntumi, won bronze in the women’s 49kg bodyweight division at the ongoing International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) World and Commonwealth Weightlifting Championship in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.

Winnifred had a good lift of 56kg and 59kg in her first and second attempt respectively in snatch but missed out her third attempt of 61kg, making her best lift in snatch, 59kg.

In the clean and jerk event, Winnifred, had a good lift of 73kg, 74kg and 76kg in her first, second and third attempts respectively making her best clean and jerk, 76kg. She then made a total of 135kg, adding 2kg to her entry total of 132kg.

Although there are two championships going on concurrently, her medal was a Commonwealth Weightlifting medal. She missed out in the medal place for the IWF Championship.

Ghana’s next lifter, Sandra Mensimah Owusu would take her turn on Thursday, December 9, 2021 in the women’s 55kg Group B.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Piracy in Gulf of Guinea: Ghana to push for international response on UN Council

Accra,- Mr Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, the Minister of Information says Ghana will push for international response to address the incidence of piracy in the Gulf of Guinea (GoG) when it a takes her seat on the UN Security Council in January 2022.

In an interview monitored by the Ghana News Agency, in Accra, Mr Oppong Nkrumah said previous interventions aimed at stemming the menace had not yielded the desired results due to the lack of holistic international response to deal with the problem.

His remarks come on the back of a new report on the Cost of Piracy off the Gulf of Guinea jointly released by Ghana and Norway at the United Nations Headquarters in New York on Wednesday.

The Stable Seas Report revealed that Piracy in the GoG is costing African countries close to $2 billion a year, among other economic losses.

A statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, and copied to the GNA, said the report was co-sponsored by Ghana, Norway, Nigeria and the United Nations Office on Drug and Crime (UNODC).

Mr Oppong Nkrumah said the piracy phenomenon should not be left for countries along the GoG to deal with, stressing that “what affects one region or continent affects the entire world.”

“As Ghana is about to take its seat on the UN Security Council as a non- permanent member, we intend to make this as one of our four-point agenda and bring greater international attention to the subject and rally greater international support to deal with it,” he said.

Mr Oppong Nkrumah expressed concern that piracy the GoG “is getting gradually worse,” citing poverty, insecurity, and weak economy as among the root causes.

He emphasised that the issue must be tackled holistically, taking into consideration the implications of the activities of pirates on the local and global economy.

“If you look at the world recorded number of kidnappings at sea, 27 out of the 28 took place within our region and it is beginning to have a big toll on national budget and economic activities as well.

“…But the bigger effect is that countries are having to look for and spend monies that they don’t traditionally have – about 500,000 dollars per annum for naval and non-naval interventions to try and provide some more safety on the high seas,” he said.

During the launch of the report in New York, Mr Kan-Dapaah, the Minister of National Security underscored the significant threat posed by piracy and robbery at sea to security in the GoG.

He said tackling maritime piracy formed part of Ghana’s priorities to advance sustainable development through enhanced global peace and security, during her tenure on the United Nations Security Council.

Ms Anniken Huitfieldt, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Norway, emphasised that the menace be dealt with in order to achieve the common goal of unleashing the full potential of the economies of the states in the GoG region.

The Gulf of Guinea has been identified as the most dangerous shipping route in the world, accounting more than 90 per cent of all kidnappings at sea last year.

The International Maritime Bureau (IMB), which has been tracking the piracy incidents in the GoG for more than a decade reported last year that the region accounted for 95 per cent of all kidnappings at sea, with a record 130 crew members kidnapped during 22 separate incidents.

The GoG is a vast and diverse region stretching from Senegal to Angola, covering approximately 6,000 km of coastline.

It is estimated that about 1,500 fishing vessels, tankers and cargo ships navigate the GoG on a daily basis.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Vaccinate, adhere to COVID-19 protocols as christmas approaches-Ghanaians urged

Accra, Dec. 08,GNA – Dr Franklin Aseidu-Bekoe, Director of Public Health, Ghana Health Service, has called on Ghanaians to get vaccinated and adhere to the safety protocols as Christmas approaches.

He said with the attendant influx of international travelers, increased in-country travels and the emergence of the Omicron variant, it was possible for a surge hence, the need for all to protect themselves.

Dr Aseidu-Bekoe made the call at the joint launch of two projects, dubbed, “Pandemic management in catchment communities in times of COVID-19 and beyond” and “Comprehensive Pandemic Management for Employees, Families and Communities”.

The projects, being implemented by GIZ, seeks to strengthen the existing health systems in Ghana against the pandemic.

“We need industry players to enforce adherence to the safety protocols and also get staff vaccinated. We need to save ourselves, our families and the nation”, he stated.

Recounting the various measures undertaken by government, Dr Aseidu-Bekoe, noted that the country had experienced three waves since March 2020 like most other countries with a threat of a fourth wave.

According to him, the relative low burden of COVID-19 in Ghana had the collective effort of all including the government machinery, the private sector, development partners, nongovernmental organizations, civil society, traditional and organized groups, and the media.

He said with the increasing emergence of new virulent strains and poor adherence to safety protocols, further increased the risk of COVID-19 in the country however, the availability of vaccines had been helpful.

He urged Ghanaians to sustain the momentum to the end as the fight was not over until the pandemic fizzled out.

The projects, implemented with local partners is, funded by the German government, through the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development and implemented by G1Z through the developed programme.

The two projects were implemented in parallel with a lot of synergies but a stronger focus on companies, employees, families and their communities in the beverage as well as other industries.

It is aimed at contributing to an immediate response to the pressing needs of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the sustainable strengthening of the Ghanaian health system in order to be better prepared for future pandemics.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Mentally challenged persons invade Anaji M/A school

Anaji (W/R),– A large presence of mentally challenged persons is threatening academic work at the Anaji Municipal Assembly Kindergarten and Primary School in the Western Region.

“The school, with a population of more than 700 pupils, is forced to make room for these mentally challenged people due to how easily accessible the facility is,” Ms Margaret Buabeng, the Headmistress, has said.

“Our school has become a sleeping place for madmen, and our compound is gradually becoming their home, a big threat to the lives of pupils and teachers here.”

The Headmistress said the school compound was also exposed to “weed smokers”, aside it being used as a place of convenience.

Passers-by also distract academic work by their movement.

Ms Buabeng made the challenges known to the Ghana News Agency during the Fourth Graduation and Speech and Prize Giving Day of the school.

She, therefore, pleaded for urgent assistance to build a gate to prevent such harmful intrusion.

She appealed for additional classrooms for the Kindergarten two pupils to reduce overcrowding.

“We are appealing to the government to expedite action to solve the challenges of large enrolment and prevent all intrusions.”

The theme for the day: “Education, A tool to Eradicate Poverty, Our collective Responsibility” was adopted to ginger all stakeholders in education to continue to give their best towards the disciplining, nurturing and moral upbringing of the child.

Mrs Believe Baidoo, the Guest of Honour, charged societies to raise godly children with sound academic, moral and ethical background whose education could pass the test of time.

She said though formal education was important, holistic education should be the order of the day to develop quality human resources for the country.

Mrs Baidoo prayed that all stakeholders would dedicate themselves to training, coaching, guidance, and counselling through the art of teaching to nurture great minds beyond the four walls of the school.

Dr Nkrumah Akomani, the Director, Nhyirakesi Wellness Centre, who presided, entreated the pupils to be serious with their studies in order to climb higher the academic ladder.

“In life, you need your class mates to connect and help you in the journey,” he said.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Subversion of democracy can become pandemic in West Africa

Accra,- The subversion of basic democratic tenets by some political actors in the West African sub-region can afflict ‘influential’ democracies on the continent, Major General Francis Ofori, Commandant of the Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC), has noted.

He said the recent successive coup d’états in Mali and Guinea, among others, were indicative of the decline of the state of democracy in the region and must be watched.

“If the situation is not confronted with the seriousness it deserves, it can embolden some political systems to intensify their practices and engage in ever more brazen attempts to distort the workings of democracies,” he said at the opening of the Kofi Annan Peace and Security Forum in Accra, on Wednesday.

It was organised by the KAIPTC in collaboration with the Kofi Annan Foundation from Geneva.

The Forum assembled political leaders, diplomats, and experts for policy dialogue on evolving trends in peace and security on the continent.

Maj. Gen. Ofori, noted that despite the limitations inherent in Africa’s political transitions since the 1990s, several countries had made the difficult transition from full-blown military/civilian authoritarian regimes to various shades of multiparty democracies.

Those expectations, he said, may have been short-lived as some states and people on the continent were yet to experience the benefits of consolidated democracy and good governance.

“The decline in democracy is manifested by a clamp down on civil liberties in such instances, which pose a threat to the stability and security of the region.

“…From our bespoke research, we understand that the authority and credibility of regional institutions in enforcing the norms and values on democracy and good governance are increasingly being questioned,” he said.

Mr Daniel Krull, German Ambassador to Ghana, urged ECOWAS leaders to respect the agreed-on term limits in office to promote peace and security in the region.

“Leaders play to the rules so when rules are agreed, they have to be implemented,” he said.

Mr Krull commended President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo for his skilful leadership as Chairman of ECOWAS and urged the Community to continuously dialogue with political actors in countries facing democratic challenges to forestall escalation of the problem.

Madam Ingrid Mollestad, Norwegian Ambassador to Ghana, called for the active involvement of women in the democratic and peace-building process.

She said women constituted about half of the population and for that matter, should be offered the opportunity to fully participate in activities to promote peace and security on the continent.

Source: Ghana News Agency