Over 30,000 passports yet to be collected – Foreign Affairs

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration has asked applicants whose passports are ready to pick them up at the various Passport Application Centres.

According to a statement on January 30, 2023, the ministry noted that over 30,000 passports are yet to be collected at various Passport Application centres.

The Ministry said “that even though applicants have been informed through text messages that their passports have been printed and sent to the various Passport Application Centres, most of them are yet to be collected. Accra and Kumasi Passport Application Centres alone have about thirty thousand (30,000) uncollected passports.”

Last year, applicants expressed worry over the delays in the acquisition of their passports. The Ministry noted that even though there was a shortage of papers it had completed a lot of the passports.

Source: Ghana Web

GRA arrests managers of Sneda, China Mall over tax non-compliance

The Manager of the Spintex Road branch of China Mall has been arrested over non-payment of taxes.

The exercise was done by a joint task force of police and officials of the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) on Monday morning, Citinewsroom.com reports.

The amount owed was however not stated.

The manager of Sneda Mall on the Spintex Road was also arrested by the taskforce for the non-payment of taxes.

In October 2022, the GRA shut down some branches of China Mall over non-compliance with Ghana’s electronic VAT system.

GRA has embarked on a special operation to clamp down on companies defaulting on their tax commitments.

According to the GRA, a number of taxpayers have failed to file their returns through the authority’s certified invoicing system thus dwindling the revenue collection for the state.

Speaking ahead of an exercise to arrest business owners who have defaulted in the payments of their VAT, the Commissioner of the Domestic Tax Revenue Division (DTRD) of the authority Edward Appenteng Gyamerah said they will continually embark on such swoops to ensure that companies do the needful.

Source: Ghana Web

Planting for Food and Jobs is a completely failed project – Senyo Hosi

Former CEO of the Chamber of Bulk Oil Distributors, Senyo Hosi has slammed President Nana Akufo-Addo and his government over the state of Ghana’s agriculture sector.

Speaking to Kwami Sefa Kayi on Peace FM’s morning show “Kokrokoo”, Mr. Senyo Hosi stated emphatically that the President’s ‘Planting for Food and Jobs’ policy aimed at improving the agriculture sector has failed abysmally.

“After all these years, show me one agriculture sector that has been well-structured. It’s zero,” he exclaimed.

To him, it shouldn’t be difficult for the government to develop the agriculture infrastructue to assist farmers to be productive and to check the nation’s dependence on foreign imports.

“How much irrigated fields do we have? Have we invested in our irrigated fields to march our needs as a country? But when you look at the billions we have spent on this Planting for Food and Jobs which we can’t see any particular thing that’s sustaining the industry. I think that it’s a failed project. It’s a totally failed project.”

Mr. Senyo Hosi asked the government to concentrate more of her efforts on improving the agric sector which he believes is the country’s engine of progress.

“We have the capacity to progressively grow and then eventually fully supply Ghana. It’s possible for us to feed our own self,” he stated.

Source: Ghana Web

Awareness on sexual, reproductive health will enhance safe sexual life – Prof Amoatey

Koforidua– Professor Charles Amoatey, the Director, Academy of Leadership and Executive Training, Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA), said with proper sexual and reproductive health awareness, people will have a satisfying and safe sexual life.

“They will have the capability to reproduce and the freedom to decide if, when, and how often to do so, to improve their well-being ” he said.

Prof Amoatey said this at the closing ceremony a four-day training in Koforidua for political and social actors on the importance of sexual and reproductive health to national development.

It was organised  by GIMPA, in collaboration with the Planned Parenthood Association of Ghana, to achieve broad-based improvements in good sexual and reproductive health (SRH) among women and adolescents.

This would ensure they contribute more effectively to national development.

Participants included members of parliament, traditional and religious leaders, and leaders of educational institutions.

Prof Amoatey said lawmakers could influence and prioritise sexual and reproductive health issues in Parliament, while influential community members engaged women and adolescents on the importance of SRH to development.

“Lack of access to sexual and reproductive health undermined individual control over decisions concerning education, health, and participation in social and economic life,” he noted.

“We, the collaborating partners, hope to organise similar training for other groups on a quarterly basis across the country to widely spread information on the impact of sexual and reproductive health on national development.”

Mr Caesar Kaba Kogoziga, the Programmes Coordinator at Planned Parenthood Association of Ghana, said: “Just as we preach Ghana beyond aid, there’s the need to also preach or advocate families and societies beyond aid.”

He noted that if SRH needs and rights were not met and individuals were denied the right to make choices about their own bodies and future, it would have negative impacts on their families’ welfare, future generations, and the entire nation.

Dr Leticia Appiah, the Executive Director, National Population Council, and a facilitator, led participants through topics including Ghana’s population history, development growth and impact, and understanding the global perspective of reproductive health.

“We are situating reproductive health education and services as part of our economic intervention because if we do not situate it well, and there is a lot of expenditure, then we cannot reap the benefit of our investment,” she said.

Dr Appiah indicated that family planning and contraception were among the measures put in place to help women look healthy, space their births, and limit unplanned pregnancies.

Madam Betty Krosbi Mensah, Member of Parliament for Affram Plains North, described the course content as solid and participatory.

“Gathering people with different points of view and understanding gives us [MPs] a clear direction as to where we are going, where we have fallen short, the benefits of certain programmes that Parliament is implementing, and possibly, how we can finetune some of them to the benefit of the public.”

Adindaa Awamyelum II, Chief of Kodorogo, Bongo District in the Upper East Region, said education on SRH would help minimise child marriage and teenage pregnancies, and encourage girls to stay in school, finish their education, and contribute to more gender-equal societies.

Certificates of participation were presented to participants.

The Leadership and Executive Training programmes are designed to enhance skills in leadership, build a solid foundation in management, sharpen technical skills and competencies, and connect participants to a global network of peers.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Ghana marks World NTD Day, community health workers call for support

Kumasi– Dr Emmanuel Tinkorang, the Ashanti Regional Director of Health Services, has appealed to Ghanaians to support community health workers as Ghana joins the rest of the world to mark World Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD) Day.

He said community health workers and volunteers could help deliver NTD-efficient services, especially to marginalised groups, when given support and encouragement.

Speaking to the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in Kumasi on the importance of the NTD Day, he noted that informed communities could help prevent, control and eliminate NTDs.

Neglected Tropical Diseases are a diverse group of 20 communicable diseases prevailing in tropical conditions in 149 countries.

Populations living in poverty without adequate sanitation and in close contact with infectious vectors, domestic animals, and livestock are those worst affected.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has set January 30, every year, as World NTD Day to mobilise political will and secure commitments to eliminate these diseases in support of its Roadmap 2021-30, to eliminate at least one NTD from 100 countries by 2030, among others.

Globally, it is estimated that about 1.7 billion people continue to suffer from NTDs.

This year’s celebration is being marked on the theme: “Act Now. Act Together. Invest in Neglected Tropical Diseases.”

In Ghana and specifically Ashanti Region, diseases such as leprosy and lymphatic filariasis can be found in virtually all the 43 districts.

Others such as Onchocerciasis (river blindness), Yaws, Buruli Ulcer and Schistosomiasis are also endemic in some of the districts.

That, according to Dr. Tinkorang, required action and collaboration across sectors such as health/ mental health, education, and nutrition in line with WHO’s new roadmap on integrating approaches to combat NTDs.

He called for a comprehensive universal care for everyone affected adding that fighting NTDs required a collective responsibility, hence all hands must be on deck.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Minority reshuffle: We didn’t consult Caucus for good reasons – Asiedu Nketia

Accra– Mr Johnson Asiedu Nketia, National Chairman, National Democratic Congress (NDC), says the Party’s leadership did not consult the Minority Caucus in Parliament over the decision to change its leadership “for good reasons”.

Speaking to Members of the Party at a press conference in Britain, United Kingdom, on Sunday, January 29, 2023, Mr Nketia said it was not “practical” to inform the Caucus beforehand given that the decision would have led to changes in their leadership.

At the press conference, which was monitored by the Ghana News Agency, Mr Nketia said apart from the Minority Caucus, “everybody who needed to be consulted was consulted”.

“The only group we didn’t consult was the Parliamentary caucus and it was for good reason. If the exercise was going to be done after an election, then there was nobody in charge. But if you are going to take a decision, which would result in the removal of leadership, how are you going to call them and say come and help me to remove you?

“It wasn’t practical; so in such matters you take the decision and inform them and justify it,” he said.

Mr Nketia said the Party would meet the Parliamentary Caucus on Tuesday, January 31, 2023, to explain to them the reason for the Party’s decision.

The NDC on Tuesday, January 24, made some changes to its leadership in Parliament.

Ranking Member of the Finance Committee and Member of Parliament for Ajumako-Enyan-Esiam Constituency in the Central Region, Dr Cassiel Ato Forson has replaced Tamale South MP, Haruna Iddrisu as the Minority Leader.

Mr Emmanuel Armah-Kofi Buah, MP for Ellembelle has also replaced Ketu North MP, James Klutse Avedzi as the Deputy Minority Leader while Kwame Governs Agbodza, MP for Adaklu has also replaced Asawase MP, Muntaka Mubarak as the Minority Whip.

The decision has since sparked outrage among some sections in the Party, with some NDC Members of Parliament publicly opposing the move.

Mr Nketia took full responsibility for the decision, saying the changes were in the best interest of the Party.

He told members of the Party in the UK to dismiss reports that the move had divided the Party, adding that the decision had rather “brought some new excitement on the front of NDC”.

Reacting to concerns about the timing of the move, Mr Nketia said the Party should have reshuffled its Parliamentary leadership in March 2021 but did not do so due the Presidential Election Petition case it had filed in court among other considerations.

“The old leadership was selected based on what was needed at the time and they have discharged their work creditably.

“Now there are new set of emerging challenges so it is only reasonable to go for leadership that possesses the skills set that would be able to discharge the responsibilities that have emerged because of the changing times,” Mr Nketia said.

Meanwhile, the NDC’s Council of Elders has charged its MPs and the Party’s leadership to be circumspect and refrain from comments that could escalate the seeming divided reactions to the changes made.

This was after some Minority MPs petitioned the Council to intervene in the decision to restore calm.

Source: Ghana News Agency

New Jersey NDC tasked to work towards winning 2024 polls

Newark (New Jersey), Jan 30, GNA – Dr Hanna Louisa Bissiw, the National Women’s Organiser of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) has charged diasporan members of the party to support the party’s campaign to win the 2024 elections.

She said the NDC needed every member of the party on board to wrestle power from the New Patriotic Party (NPP) in 2024 to make Ghana attractive to the International Community.

Dr Bissiw said this at the launch of a Fund Raising Dinner organised by the New Jersey Branch of the NDC at Newark, New Jersey in the United States.

She said the NDC members in the diaspora were important and recognised as major stakeholders of the party and must therefore foster unity among themselves to make meaningful contributions towards the development of the party and Ghana at large.

This the National Women’s Organiser urged diasporan members of the NDC to propose suggestions and make decisions that will benefit the NDC and also defend the party everywhere both locally and Internationally.

She appealed to all members of the NDC to focus on working hard for the party to take over power from the the NPP.

Dr Bissiw said the NDC was doing all it can to increase its 137 members in Parliament in the coming elections to dominate the legislature and appealed to diasporan members to adopt and support some Constituencies which were handicap with resources.

“Elections are won at the grassroots level and so as a party we must support our grassroot base to defend our interest at the polling level where elections are won.”

Mr Moses Oklu, Vice Chairman of the NDC USA Chapter said the economy of Ghana was in Coma and that it was only diasporans who would be the major contributers to save Ghana economy.

He emphasised on the need to reflect in the Party National executive to win power, improve on the living conditions of Ghanaians and promote development.

Source: Ghana News Agency

NPP Ho Central Constituency can annex the parliamentary seat in next election

Ho, Jan. 30, GNA-Mr Ken Ayim, Volta Region First Vice Chairman of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) has said the Ho Constituency of the party has what it takes to annex the parliamentary seat in the next election.

He said in political parlance, you never say never as all things are possible, “if we become determined, united, work hard and persevere.”

Mr Ayim was addressing party members and sympathisers, 29 Electoral Area Coordinators, present and past executives of the Ho Constituency membership in a get-together on Sunday.

The meeting was to celebrate their failures, challenges, and achievements towards forging a spirited common front to galvanise resources and development for the Ho Municipality.

The First Vice Chairman, who made a historical analogy of the governance trends in the Constituency alluded that the National Democratic Congress (NDC) since 1992 and during the military regimes had administered the Municipality the most without corresponding development.

“From the era of District Secretaries to Chief Executives and Members of Parliament have gone the way from the PNDC to the NDC over the years, but the NPP has touched more hearts through social intervention initiatives and flagship programmes than the combined regimes of their political opponents,” Mr Ayim said.

He said the worst scenario is that the Municipality being the heartbeat of the, “political world bank” should depict the microcosm of development across the country but the situation is a complete opposite.

Mr Ayim reminded the meeting that NPP is in power but remained in opposition in relation to the Constituency if they were content with that.

He said the time had come for the party to adopt innovative policies and interventions that would outpace political thinking such as setting aside its conventions and accepting unorthodox measures to hand pick candidates or by acclamation devoid of primaries, could tone down on acrimonies.

“If the Ho Central Constituency believes there’s a candidate that will be the soul of the party, going into the 2024 election, why do we have to wait to go through the mill?”

Mr Ayim, therefore, tasked the Ho Constituency to present a winnable candidate to the party, adding, “we shall rally all the support towards the task.”

Mr Frank Ahaze, Chairman, Ho Central Constituency cautioned the party faithful against disunity in the contest to elect a flagbearer for the party.

He said it is becoming murkier on its social media platforms, where members refuse to contest ideas but wallop in unwarranted insults for no gain.

He said NPP was a democratic party, and each member was free to support any flagbearer candidate of their choice without name-calling and use of abusive language on opponents.

Mr Richard Divine Bosson, Municipal Chief Executive (MCE) said it was highly possible to break-the-eight but not with a disjointed front.

He mentioned respect for one another, hard work, perseverance, unity and love for party and country would forthrightly break the eight.

He said the party continued to satisfy the development aspirations of the people under the auspices of the NPP describing the barely a year plus achievement under his watch as Chief Executive as unexampled.

He mentioned the completion of the MCE’s office in record time in addition to works ongoing on the new Assembly complex, activation of stalled Matse Senior High School, building of a new workers canteen and some road projects.

Dr Archibald Yao Letsa, Volta Regional Minister, who chaired the programme entreated the party members and Ghanaians in general to continue to have faith in the government that God could overturn the current economic crisis for better outcomes in the immediate future.

Source: Ghana News Agency