Ambiq Propels Remote Healthcare Monitoring Sector Growth with New Ultra-Low Power Processors

The Apollo4 Lite and Apollo4 Blue Lite System-on-Chips (SoCs) Help Enhance Devices’ Functionalities and Battery Life to Accelerate the Adoption of Remote Monitoring

Apollo4 Lite and Apollo4 Blue Lite: Anyone, Anytime, Anywhere

Ambiq introduces Apollo4 Lite and Apollo4 Blue Lite

News Highlights:

  • The new Apollo4 Lite and Blue Lite SoCs offer feature-rich capability, optimized memory, powerful graphics performance, and secureSPOT® for robust security in a lightweight solution
  • Ideal for digital health applications, such as digital stethoscopes, patient monitoring, and continuous glucose and blood pressure monitoring
  • The Apollo4 Blue Lite offers secure Bluetooth® Low Energy connectivity for communication to handheld devices, host equipment, and the Cloud

AUSTIN, Texas, July 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ambiq®, a technology leader in ultra-low power semiconductor products and solutions, introduces the Apollo4 Lite and Apollo4 Blue Lite SoC to its expanding portfolio of SoCs for IoT endpoint devices, especially the remote monitoring products of the healthcare sector. This announcement follows Ambiq’s release of its Heart Kit™, an optimized open-source AI model utilizing multi-head neural networks (MH-NNs) to enable a variety of real-time heart-monitoring applications.

The Apollo4 Lite and Blue Lite product line is the latest generation system processor solutions built upon Ambiq’s proprietary Subthreshold Power-Optimized Technology (SPOT®) platform, enabling new features while reducing devices’ overall system power consumption to extend their battery life. Both SoCs are embedded with an ultra-low power Cortex-M4 core that can operate at up to 192 MHz with turboSPOT, an audio subsystem, GPU, and ample MRAM and SRAM. They are also conveniently pin-compatible with Ambiq’s Apollo4 Plus and Blue Plus¹, providing developers with optimum flexibility for innovation.

“Today’s patients are more empowered to monitor and advocate for their own health, and healthcare providers require more data analytics to prescribe holistic treatment,” said David Priscak, VP of Technical Solutions at Ambiq. “With bold graphics and long battery life, state-of-the-art health tracking is now more affordable and accessible thanks to these new additions to our Apollo4 SoC family.”

Apollo4 Lite / Blue Lite Chart

Apollo4 Lite / Blue Lite Chart

“The global remote patient market in terms of revenue was estimated to be worth $53.6 billion in 2022 and is poised to reach $175.2 billion by 2027, growing at a CAGR of 26.7% from 2022 to 2027,” said Ms. Anu Dhiman – Lead Healthcare Analyst – MarketsandMarkets Research Pvt. Ltd. “The predominant factors influencing the growth of the market include the benefits of remote patient monitoring to reduce the burden on medical resources, the monitoring benefits of telehealth and remote patient monitoring services, advancements in telecommunications, as increasing geriatric population, and the growing need to expand healthcare access.”

The Apollo4 Lite and the Apollo4 Blue Lite are designed for extended battery life, advanced security, and powerful graphics in small form factors, which are critical for the continued adoption of these devices. Both are now in mass production, targeting digital health products, smartwatches, fitness bands, animal trackers, voice-activated remotes, industrial maintenance, and smart home IoT devices. For more product information, visit www.ambiq.com/apollo4-lite and www.ambiq.com/apollo4-blue-lite.

¹ – Apollo4 Lite is pin-compatible with Apollo4 Plus (AMAP42KP-KBR); Apollo4 Blue Lite is pin-compatible with Apollo4 Blue Plus (AMA4B2KP-KXR.)

About Ambiq

Ambiq’s mission is to develop the lowest-power semiconductor solutions to enable intelligent devices everywhere by developing the lowest-power semiconductor solutions to drive a more energy-efficient, sustainable, and data-driven world. Ambiq has helped leading manufacturers worldwide develop products that last weeks on a single charge (rather than days) while delivering a maximum feature set in compact industrial designs. Ambiq’s goal is to take Artificial Intelligence (AI) where it has never gone before in mobile and portable devices, using Ambiq’s advanced ultra-low power system on chip (SoC) solutions. Ambiq has shipped more than 200 million units as of March 2023. For more information, visit www.ambiq.com.

Contact

Charlene Wan
VP of Branding, Marketing, and Investor Relations
cwan@ambiq.com
+1.512.879.2850

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Ambiq Impulsiona Crescimento do Setor de Monitoramento Remoto de Saúde com Novos Processadores de Energia Ultrabaixa

Apollo4 Lite e Apollo4 Blue Lite System-on-Chips (SoCs) Ajudam a Melhorar as Funcionalidades e a Vida Útil da Bateria dos Dispositivos para Acelerar a Adoção do Monitoramento Remoto

Apollo4 Lite e Apollo4 Blue Lite: Qualquer Pessoa, Qualquer Hora, Qualquer Lugar

Ambiq introduz Apollo4 Lite e Apollo4 Blue Lite

Novos Destaques:

  • Os novos SoCs Apollo4 Lite e Blue Lite oferecem recursos ricos em funcionalidades, memória otimizada, desempenho gráfico potente e secureSPOT® para segurança robusta em uma solução leve
  • Ideal para aplicações de saúde digital, como estetoscópios digitais, monitoramento de pacientes, e monitoramento contínuo de glicose e pressão arterial
  • O Apollo4 Blue Lite oferece conectividade segura Bluetooth® de baixa energia para comunicação com dispositivos portáteis, equipamentos host e a nuvem

AUSTIN, Texas, July 10, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Ambiq®, líder em tecnologia de produtos e soluções de semicondutores de potência ultrabaixa, incluiu o SoC Apollo4 Lite e Apollo4 Blue Lite no seu portfólio de SoCs em expansão para dispositivos de endpoint IoT, especialmente produtos de monitoramento remoto do setor de saúde. Este anúncio dá seguimento ao lançamento da Ambiq do seu Heart Kit™, um modelo otimizado de IA de código aberto que utiliza redes neurais de múltiplas cabeças (MH-NNs) para viabilizar uma variedade de aplicativos de monitoramento cardíaco em tempo real.

A linha de produtos Apollo4 Lite e Blue Lite é uma solução de processador de sistema de última geração criada com base na plataforma proprietária Subthreshold Power-Optimized Technology (SPOT®) da Ambiq, que viabiliza novos recursos e reduz o consumo geral de energia do sistema dos dispositivos para prolongar a vida útil da bateria. Ambos os SoCs são incorporados com um núcleo Cortex-M4 de potência ultrabaixa que pode operar a até 192 MHz com turboSPOT, um subsistema de áudio, GPU e ampla MRAM e SRAM. Eles também são convenientemente compatíveis com o Apollo4 Plus e Blue Plus¹ da Ambiq, proporcionando aos desenvolvedores a flexibilidade ideal para a inovação.

“Os pacientes de hoje estão mais capacitados para monitorar e defender sua própria saúde, e os profissionais de saúde exigem mais análise de dados para prescrever tratamento holístico”, disse David Priscak, VP de Soluções Técnicas da Ambiq. “Com gráficos ousados e longa duração da bateria, o rastreamento de saúde de última geração agora é mais em conta e acessível graças a essas novas adições à nossa família Apollo4 SoC.”

Gráfico Apollo4 Lite/Blue Lite

Gráfico Apollo4 Lite/Blue Lite

“O mercado global de pacientes remotos em termos de receita foi estimado em US$53,6 bilhões em 2022 e deve chegar a US$175,2 bilhões até 2027, crescendo a um CAGR de 26,7% de 2022 a 2027”, disse a Sra. Anu Dhiman – Analista Líder de Saúde – MarketsandMarkets da Research Pvt. Ltd. “Os fatores predominantes que influenciam o crescimento do mercado incluem os benefícios do monitoramento remoto de pacientes para reduzir a carga sobre os recursos médicos, os benefícios de monitoramento de serviços de telessaúde e monitoramento remoto de pacientes, avanços em telecomunicações, como o aumento da população geriátrica e a crescente necessidade de expandir o acesso à saúde.”

A Apollo4 Lite e a Apollo4 Blue Lite são projetadas para uma vida útil prolongada da bateria, segurança avançada e gráficos potentes em pequenos formatos que são essenciais para a adoção contínua desses dispositivos. Ambos estão agora em produção em massa e voltados para os produtos de saúde digital, smartwatches, pulseiras de fitness, rastreadores de animais, controles remotos ativados por voz, manutenção industrial e dispositivos IoT domésticos inteligentes. Para mais informação sobre o produto, visite www.ambiq.com/apollo4-lite e www.ambiq.com/apollo4-blue-lite.

¹ – Apollo4 Lite é compatível com pinos com Apollo4 Plus (AMAP42KP-KBR); Apollo4 Blue Lite é compatível com pinos com Apollo4 Blue Plus (AMA4B2KP-KXR.)

Sobre a Ambiq

A Ambiq tem por missão desenvolver soluções de semicondutores de nível mais baixo de energia para habilitar dispositivos inteligentes em todos os lugares, desenvolvendo soluções de semicondutores de nível mais baixo de energia para impulsionar um mundo mais eficiente em termos de energia, sustentável e orientado por dados. A Ambiq ajudou os principais fabricantes em todo o mundo a desenvolver produtos que duram semanas com uma única carga (em vez de dias), ao mesmo tempo em que oferecem um conjunto máximo de recursos em designs industriais compactos. O objetivo da Ambiq é levar a Inteligência Artificial (IA) a áreas nunca alcançadas em dispositivos móveis e portáteis, com o uso de soluções avançadas de sistema em chip (SoC) de energia ultrabaixa da Ambiq. A Ambiq entregou mais de 200 milhões de unidades até março de 2023. Para mais informação, visite www.ambiq.com.

Contato

Charlene Wan
VP de Marca, Marketing e Relações com Investidores
cwan@ambiq.com
+1.512.879.2850

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Ambiq propulse la croissance du secteur de la surveillance des soins de santé à distance avec de nouveaux processeurs à ultra-basse consommation

Les systèmes sur puces (SoC) Apollo4 Lite et Apollo4 Blue Lite contribuent à améliorer les fonctionnalités et l’autonomie des appareils afin d’accélérer l’adoption de la surveillance à distance

Apollo4 Lite et Apollo4 Blue Lite : n’importe qui, n’importe quand, n’importe où

Ambiq lance l’Apollo4 Lite et l’Apollo4 Blue Lite

Faits saillants de cette actualité :

  • Les nouveaux SoC Apollo4 Lite et Blue Lite offrent de nombreuses fonctionnalités, une mémoire optimisée, des performances graphiques puissantes et secureSPOT® pour une sécurité renforcée dans une solution légère
  • Il s’agit de produits idéaux pour les applications de santé numérique, comme les stéthoscopes numériques ainsi que les appareils de surveillance des patients et de contrôle de la pression artérielle et de la glycémie en continu
  • L’Apollo4 Blue Lite offre une connectivité Bluetooth® à basse consommation sécurisée pour la communication avec les appareils portatifs, les périphériques hôtes et le Cloud

AUSTIN, Texas, 10 juill. 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ambiq®, un leader technologique des solutions et produits à semi-conducteurs et ultra-basse consommation, ajoute les SoC Apollo4 Lite et Apollo4 Blue Lite à son portefeuille en expansion de SoC pour les périphériques de point de terminaison de l’IdO, en particulier les produits de surveillance à distance du secteur de la santé. Cette annonce fait suite an lancement par Ambiq de son Heart Kit™, un modèle à IA open-source optimisé utilisant des réseaux neuraux à têtes multiples (multi-head neural networks, MH-NN) afin de permettre une variété d’applications de surveillance cardiaque en temps réel.

La gamme de produits Apollo4 Lite et Blue Lite se compose des solutions de processeurs système de la toute dernière génération s’appuyant sur la plateforme exclusive Subthreshold Power-Optimized Technology (SPOT®) d’Ambiq, permettant d’accéder à de nouvelles fonctions tout en réduisant la consommation énergétique globale des appareils afin de prolonger leur autonomie. Les deux SoC intègrent un cœur Cortex-M4 à ultra-basse consommation pouvant fonctionner à une fréquence qui peut atteindre 192 MHz avec turboSPOT, un sous-système audio, un processeur graphique ainsi qu’une MRAM et une SRAM importantes. Très pratiques, ils sont aussi compatibles avec les broches des Apollo4 Plus et Blue Plus¹ d’Ambiq, offrant aux développeurs une flexibilité optimale pour innover.

« Les patients d’aujourd’hui sont davantage habilités à surveiller et à protéger leur propre santé, et les prestataires de soins de santé requièrent davantage d’analyses des données pour prescrire un traitement holistique », a déclaré David Priscak, VP des solutions techniques chez Ambiq. « Avec des graphismes audacieux et une longue autonomie, il est désormais plus facile que jamais d’accéder à un suivi abordable de la santé à la pointe de la technologie grâce à ces nouveaux ajouts à notre gamme de SoC Apollo4. »

Tableau sur l’Apollo4 Lite / Blue Lite

Tableau sur l’Apollo4 Lite / Blue Lite

« Le chiffre d’affaires du marché mondial de la surveillance des patients à distance a été estimé à 53,6 milliards USD en 2022 et devrait atteindre 175,2 milliards USD d’ici 2027, en se développant selon un TCAC de 26,7 % entre 2022 et 2027 », a commenté  Mme Anu Dhiman, analyste de santé en chef chez MarketsandMarkets Research Pvt. Ltd. « Les facteurs prédominants qui influencent la croissance du marché comprennent les avantages de la surveillance des patients à distance afin de réduire la fardeau pesant sur les ressources médicales, les avantages en termes de contrôle de la télésanté et des services de surveillance des patients à distance, les avancées des télécommunications, l’accroissement de la population gériatrique et le besoin grandissant d’étendre l’accès aux soins de santé. »

L’Apollo4 Lite et l’Apollo4 Blue Lite sont conçus pour une autonomie accrue, une sécurité avancée et de puissants graphismes au sein de petits facteurs de forme, qui sont des aspects cruciaux pour l’adoption continue de ces appareils. Les deux solutions sont maintenant produites en masse, ciblant les produits de santé numérique, les montres connectées, les bandes d’exercice, les localisateurs d’animaux, les télécommandes à activation vocale, la maintenance industrielle et les appareils employant l’IdO pour l’habitation intelligente. Pour plus d’informations sur les produits, veuillez consulter les pages www.ambiq.com/apollo4-lite et www.ambiq.com/apollo4-blue-lite.

¹ – L’Apollo4 Lite est compatible avec les broches de l’Apollo4 Plus (AMAP42KP-KBR) ; l’Apollo4 Blue Lite est compatible avec les broches de l’Apollo4 Blue Plus (AMA4B2KP-KXR).

À propos d’Ambiq

Ambiq a pour mission de développer les solutions à semi-conducteurs les moins gourmandes en énergie pour permettre l’utilisation d’appareils intelligents sur toute la planète en vue de favoriser un monde plus éco-énergétique, durable et piloté par les données. Ambiq aide des fabricants de premier plan du monde entier à développer des produits ayant une autonomie de plusieurs semaines (au lieu de quelques jours) tout en offrant un ensemble de fonctions maximal dans des conceptions industrielles compactes. L’objectif d’Ambiq est d’amener l’intelligence artificielle (IA) là où elle n’a jamais été auparavant au sein de dispositifs portables et mobiles en utilisant ses solutions avancées à système sur puce (SoC) et ultra-basse consommation. En mars 2023, Ambiq avait déjà expédié plus de 200 millions d’unités. Pour tout complément d’information, veuillez consulter le site www.ambiq.com.

Contact

Charlene Wan
VP du branding, du marketing et des relations avec les investisseurs
cwan@ambiq.com
+1.512.879.2850

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British AI Firm, Quantexa, Commits to Over £200M in AI Research and Development Investment by 2027

AI in Context

How Quantexa Augments and Automates Decision Intelligence with AI

Quantexa CEO outlines vision for investment in support of UK Government’s plan to make UK an AI Hub, which includes:

  • £125M in new global investments aimed at accelerating enterprise and government agency’s ability to use trusted AI-enabled Decision Intelligence solutions
  • £85M in dedicated UK investment will create over 170 new jobs in London AI Innovation Centre team
  • Preview of Generative AI assistant shows how world-leading institutions will unlock the full potential of data to investigate risk and identify opportunity

LONDON and NEW YORK, July 09, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Quantexa, a global leader in Decision Intelligence (DI) solutions for the public and private sectors, announced today that it will invest an additional £125M in the global artificial intelligence (AI) industry over the next three years to help clients advance the use of AI to protect, optimise, and grow their organisations. By 2027, Quantexa’s total global investment in AI will reach more than £200M.

The investment marks Quantexa’s continued advancements in AI with the preview of its Generative AI technology, Q Assist. Quantexa also furthered its commitment to advancing the company’s existing AI Stack to enable its growing global ecosystem of clients and partners to unlock new industry-specific use cases for financial services, insurance, telecommunications, healthcare, and in the public sector. Quantexa’s Decision Intelligence platform and suite of solutions for data management, customer intelligence, KYC, risk, fraud, and financial crime have been deployed in over 70 countries.

Analysis from University of Washington suggests this investment will boost the global AI industry by £600M as the multiplier effect is realised.

AI in Context: How Quantexa Augments and Automates Decision Intelligence with AI

Quantexa Limited

Preview of Generative AI Assistant Breaks New Ground
Built on Quantexa’s Decision Intelligence Platform, the technology preview of Q Assist, a generative AI assistant, demonstrates the potential of using LLM’s to create an intuitive and conversational interface bringing new efficiencies for analysts working with data to identify risks as part of investigations. For organisations, the potential benefit is significant – as the AI assistant allows all analyst staff to become as effective as the most experienced investigators.

Q Assist is LLM agnostic and will allow clients to use their own proprietary, open source, or commercially available models including ChatGPTTM, a leading LLM from OpenAI. Quantexa’s market-leading entity resolution, graph analytics, and scoring capabilities become turbo-charged when they can be queried with natural language questions and prompts in Quantexa’s Decision Intelligence Platform.

Today, in a video showcase, Quantexa demonstrated one of what could become many potential use cases for Q Assist. The financial crime investigation scenario was chosen to show the potential in using natural language to query vast amounts of structured and unstructured data at scale, allowing even junior analysts to understand the complex data behind graph analytics and alerts. The preview also showed the ability to automate the generation of Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) and investigative summaries – possible in close to 100 languages – driving further efficiency in what is typically a manually intensive process and allowing more time to be redirected to strategic activities.

AI Throughout Quantexa’s Decision Intelligence Platform Delivers Business Value
Enterprises and government agencies are using Quantexa’s Decision Intelligence to become more effective and efficient at organising siloed, messy data to obtain 360-degree views of customers and suppliers to identify fraud, qualify eligibility for services, stop dangerous goods at borders, or optimise supply chains.

Quantexa is using three core principles to responsibly build out its AI Stack:

  • Context-Based Learning: Just as humans require full context to make informed decisions, so does AI. Without context, even the smartest machine learning or deep learning algorithms lack accuracy to be deployed reliably. For example, it’s impossible for a person or AI model to know if a single bank transaction in isolation is money laundering. Quantexa builds true context by using data to create single views of people, organisations, places, and other entities and assembles them visually to show complex interactions between entities. This context is what enables a person or AI to make an accurate decision.
  • Composite AI: Quantexa’s Composite AI Stack aggregates the outputs of many different techniques, including machine learning, natural language processing and deep learning. Combining these with input from subject matter experts, organisations can continually use analytics to improve decisioning to protect, optimise, and grow. Quantexa uses exclusive access to huge volumes of structured and unstructured industry data to train its AI and provides out-of-the-box open models, giving clients the ability to modify or create their own.
  • Explainability and Trust: In the highly regulated environments that organisations work in, it is crucial that decisions are transparent and explainable with no suggestion of bias. Quantexa’s technology and governance uses context-based techniques and composite AI to drive adoption of explainable outcomes without privacy concerns. Quantexa publicly maintains its AI ethics and safety guidelines here.

Rishi Sunak, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, said:
“We want to ensure the UK remains the best place in the world to build, test, and use safe AI technology. Quantexa’s new £85M London AI Innovation Centre will help cement this reality. It will create over 170 jobs, harness the extraordinary potential of AI as we grow our economy, and lead the way on responsible AI development around the world.”

Chloe Smith, Technology Secretary, said:
“The Government is serious about AI, which is why we’ve invested £2.5B in AI infrastructure and skills since 2014 and this year set out our plan for AI regulation to drive innovation and build trust. Quantexa’s investment is a huge vote of confidence in those plans and will unlock new opportunities for growth and job creation, enabling us to continue to pave the way as a global leader in the development of AI.”

Vishal Marria, CEO and Founder, Quantexa, said:
“While many companies are talking about AI and machine learning, we have been investing in it since our inception. We are investing our time, money, and resources into the biggest technological breakthrough for generations as it will transform how organizations make decisions. We’re proud to invest in London-based innovation but the impact will be felt by the global economy and will start a ripple effect that will unlock decision intelligence capabilities for our clients and their respective industries.” 

Dr Oren Etzioni, Professor at the University of Washington’s Computer Science and founding CEO of the Allen Institute for AI, said: “An investment of 100 AI jobs will drive economic growth not just in London but around the world. The places most likely to benefit are AI innovation hubs like New York City, Seattle, and San Francisco. Based on my research into the impact of AI on employment and economic growth, the long-term monetary benefits of this announcement will increase significantly because of the multiplier effect from job creation and innovation. An initial investment of £200M is likely to benefit the wider AI industry by £600M globally within three years.” 

To learn more about how your organisation can benefit from Quantexa’s AI investment, innovation, and ethical practices, please visit here.

About Quantexa
Quantexa is a global data and analytics software company pioneering Decision Intelligence that empowers organisations to make trusted operational decisions by making data meaningful. Using the latest advancements in big data and AI, Quantexa’s Decision Intelligence platform uncovers hidden risk and new opportunities by providing a contextual, connected view of internal and external data in a single place. It solves major challenges across data management, KYC, customer intelligence, financial crime, risk, fraud, and security, throughout the customer lifecycle.

The Quantexa Decision Intelligence Platform enhances operational performance with over 90% more accuracy and 60 times faster analytical model resolution than traditional approaches. Founded in 2016, Quantexa now has more than 650 employees and thousands of users working with billions of transactions and data points across the world. The company has offices in London, New York, Boston, Toronto, Malaga, Brussels, Amsterdam, Ireland, Luxemburg, Singapore, Melbourne, Sydney, and the UAE. For more information, please visit www.quantexa.com or follow us on LinkedIn.

Media Enquiries
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E: Quantexa@fightflight.co.uk

C: Adam Jaffe, SVP of Corporate Marketing
T: +1 609 502 6889
E: adamjaffe@quantexa.com
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RapidResponse@quantexa.com

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Ghanaian children taken from home over false trafficking claims

A little after midnight on 6 September, 2022, Musah Mustafa emerged from his thatched-roof hut to relieve himself and saw four cars speeding towards his tiny village.

Mogyigna was barely a village. With just a handful of family homes and two dozen people in total, it was more like a dot in the middle of an expanse of farmland in northern Ghana. Cars were a rare sight during the day, let alone at night. Musah hid behind a tree and watched. When he saw armed men from the cars approach the two homes, he shouted in an attempt to wake the other residents.

But before anyone could act, the men entered the huts and forcibly removed four children, carrying an 11-year-old girl called Fatima by her arms and legs from the room where she had been sleeping with her grandparents.

A gun pointed at her neck, Fatima’s grandmother Sana pleaded with the men. She did not understand why the children were being taken away. Two of the children’s uncles were also taken. Sana feared she would never see her relatives again.

In the eyes of Mogyigna’s villagers, a violent kidnapping had taken place.

But this was not a kidnapping.

Officially, it was a rescue operation carried out by Ghanaian police officers, under Ghana’s Human Trafficking Act. The children were transferred into the care of social services.

The operation was instigated by a US-based charity, International Justice Mission (IJM).

With around $100m (£78m) in funding annually over the past two years, IJM is one of the world’s leading anti-trafficking organisations.

In the UK, IJM says it can count on the support of nearly 300 churches, and more than £220,000 ($280,000) was raised last year from churches and other donors by IJM UK to support activities in Ghana.

But according to an investigation by BBC Africa Eye, IJM has removed some children from their families in cases where there was scarce-to-no evidence of trafficking.

According to our reporting, this aggressive approach may have been fuelled by a target-driven culture inside IJM.

We found two documented cases of rescue operations in which children were forcibly, traumatically and unjustly removed and the children’s relatives prosecuted as child traffickers. One of the cases was Fatima’s.

In Ghana, IJM focuses on rescuing children who have been trafficked to work as slave labourers on Lake Volta, one of the world’s largest man-made lakes.

About 300,000 people depend on the lake for their livelihoods, and children work in the local fishing industry under varying degrees of exploitation: some support their families in fishing, others are hired to work under boat masters for little or no pay.

There is very little independent data on how pervasive the child-trafficking problem is on Lake Volta. A 2016 study by IJM indicated that more than half of all children working on the lake were victims of trafficking.

In 2015, the charity began rescuing children who were spotted in canoes on the lake, but in 2018 it switched to night raids of on-shore locations where children were said to be kept overnight.

The raid that night in the village of Mogyigna was one such mission. It was dubbed Operation Hilltop.

Africa Eye began investigating IJM after becoming aware of concerns over their work in Ghana and placed an undercover reporter on the staff at the charity.

As Operation Hilltop unfolded, we were able to monitor what staff were saying to each other on an IJM WhatsApp group. We also gained access to social services’ documents relating to the case, giving Africa Eye an unprecedented insight into the planning, execution and aftermath of the IJM’s rescue mission.

That evidence shows that while IJM was telling their partners in both the police force and social services that the four children had been trafficked, internally the charity had reached a different conclusion.

An IJM legal officer said in an internal message sent after the raid that the charity had already concluded there were “no elements of trafficking” in the case of Fatima and two of the other children taken that night from Mogyigna. Only one of the four cases, Fatima’s cousin Mohammed, included elements of trafficking, according to the legal officer – a conclusion that is disputed by Mohammed’s family.

But the mission to remove all four children, aged between five and 11, went ahead anyway because IJM concluded the children were at risk of being used for child labour, an issue that, although serious, would not have merited such an aggressive raid.

The internal messages said that as the children were not in school and “working between the hours the law states they should not work, and deprived of good health then there was a need to rescue them [as they were] being used for the purposes of child labour”.

Fatima and the other three children were housed at an IJM-partner shelter, separated from their relatives for more than four months, before an investigation by Ghanaian social services concluded the children had not been trafficked and they should be reunited with their families.

Fatima is now back in the village, under the care of her grandmother Sana, while Mohammed’s father decided the boy should live elsewhere, as did the father of the other two children.

When Africa Eye visited Mogyigna, five months after the rescue, villagers there told us they were happy the children had been returned, but they said the after-effects of Operation Hilltop were still being felt.

Fatima said that she was afraid the BBC team had come to take her away again.

“I was terrified and I started crying,” the 11-year-old said about the night of Operation Hilltop. “I thought they were taking us away to kill us. We didn’t know where they were taking us.”

While in the shelter she thought her “grandmother, grandfather, uncles had died”.

“When I was taken away, I cried a lot while thinking about my family,” she added.

Fatima’s uncles, Nantogma Abukari and Sayibu Alhassan, were arrested during the operation.

They were prosecuted on charges of child trafficking and child labour and spent all their savings to attend court and bail hearings. Every return trip to court cost them more than 1,500 Ghana cedis ($132; £104) in travel – the equivalent of almost two months’ work.

Prosecutions are an essential part of IJM’s anti-slavery model, as the charity argues they serve as a deterrent. Court documents show that an IJM lawyer stood in for the state prosecutor in one of the court hearings.

The uncles’ case was eventually dropped and their names cleared, but it continues to dog them. Some members of their family no longer speak to them, they said, driven by a suspicion that they had “colluded” in some way “with the people who took the children away”.

Responding to the BBC’s inquiries about Fatima’s case, IJM maintained that its mission had successfully relocated the four children with their fathers to a safer location.

During Africa Eye’s investigation into Operation Hilltop, a second problematic rescue came to our attention. A 2019 operation had removed a boy and his sibling from their family and led to the children’s mother, Mawusi Amlade, being sentenced to five years in prison for child trafficking.

The most painful aspect of prison, Ms Amlade said, was to be separated from her children, unsure about what had happened to them.

“I had no idea where my children had been taken, I kept thinking about them, more than anything else,” she told Africa Eye.

Two years later, in a bizarre turn of events, Ms Amlade’s conviction was quashed after an intervention by another US NGO, the Sudreau Global Justice Institute – a partner of IJM.

Sudreau not only freed Ms Amlade through an appeal process, but also advertised her case in a fundraising campaign as a miscarriage of justice.

In an Instagram post that was later deleted, Sudreau’s official account described Ms Amlade as a “mother of two falsely convicted of a serious crime”.

Four years on, Ms Amlade has still not been reunited with her children.

Sudreau told the BBC that it acted independently from IJM, despite the partnership, and that there was no conflict of interest.

In a statement, IJM said that it “does not decide whether a possible child trafficking case is pursued or whether any individual is arrested or prosecuted with offences”.

The undercover Africa Eye reporter joined several conversations that may help explain what was going wrong in a charity whose mission was to help the poor.

In a secretly filmed conversation with a senior IJM staff member, the reporter was told IJM staff needed to rescue a set number of victims and secure a set number of prosecutions every year. Another staff member said that IJM staff were denied pay rises or were at risk of being sacked if they did not reach these targets.

In a separate conversation, the reporter asked an IJM investigator what would happen if staff on a mission were unable to take the children away. “We can’t say we didn’t get even one, we need to get some,” the staff member replied.

Dr Sam Okyere, a senior lecturer from the University of Bristol who worked on Lake Volta conducting field research into child rescue operations, reviewed the secretly recorded conversations and expressed concerns about the apparent target-driven culture.

He told the BBC that jobs at IJM are well paid and sought after.

“The fear of losing a coveted position would mean that people would go the extra mile to meet the targets,” Dr Okyere said.

With regard to the claims of a target-driven culture, the charity said: “IJM Ghana sets targets in order to evaluate impact so that we can provide the most effective support to authorities to stop child trafficking.”

IJM denied that staff were penalised if they failed to meet targets.

It said the charity’s Ghana’s team was “led and staffed by Ghanaian nationals who support the Ghanaian authorities to bring trafficked children to safety, help restore survivors’ physical and mental wellbeing, and stop those responsible for illegally exploiting children”.

It added: “Our approach always has the welfare of the child at its core. The 76 operations that IJM Ghana has supported have led to hundreds of children being brought to safety by the Ghanaian authorities.”

IJM has released cinematic promotional videos for its work in Ghana. In one, actors play out the emotional moment when a boy is reunited with his grandfather after being rescued from the lake. In its marketing material, the production company which made the video said it helped raise about $1.25m in donations to IJM.

But when Fatima, a real child with real people caring for her, was allowed back to her village, there was no such embrace.

Fatima’s grandfather, who had watched as armed men burst into his home and took his granddaughter away, died while she was in the shelter.

“My grandfather was very loving, he used to give us gifts,” Fatima said. “When I came back, I was crying and wondering, since my grandfather has left us, where would we see him again?”

Source: BBC

Social stigma is impeding progress of depression?treatment, Staff Nurse

Mrs.??Esther Adjei,?a?nurse and staff of the Bono?Regional Directorate of the Ghana Health?Service (GHS),?says social stigma associated with mental disorders is affecting?treatment of people with such conditions.

Mrs. Adjei stated depression?could happen?to?anyone, but people who had lived through abuse, severe losses and other stressful?events were?more?expected to?develop depression.

On the probability of the level of gender effect, she stated women were?more?likely to have depression than men because?women experienced?dramatic hormonal changes during menstruation,?pregnancy, child birth?and menopausal stage.

Mrs. Adjei made the observation when she was speaking on the topic ‘Depression’ at the 2023 National Ladies’?Conference of the Living Grace Ministry International?at Berlin?Top, Fiapre in the Sunyani West Municipality.

She said?researchers were still not?sure?of the causes of depression, but experts considered gut bacteria, family history, personality, environmental and social factors and upbringing to be several contributory factors that?influenced depression.??

Mrs. Adjei however, said?depression was treatable?by making appointment to see a doctor or a mental health professional immediately upon detection.

But if someone felt reluctant to seek treatment because of stigmatization, he/she?could talk to a friend, loved one or any health care professional for advice and necessary assistance, she added.

Mrs. Adjei said people with persistent feeling of sadness,?loss?of?interest might be having depressive disorder?or?clinical?depression, saying the?thinking,?feeling and behavior?of such people could?cause emotional and physical?problems.

She cited if one was?prone to anger,?aggressiveness and feeling?as if everyone around was irritating, it could be?a?signal to depression as well as the known factors of?poor concentration, feelings of excessive guilt or low self-worth, hopelessness about the future, thoughts about dying or suicide, disrupted sleep, changes in appetite or weighty feeling,?always feeling very tired or low in energy.

Mrs. Adjei further said many people with chronic?illnesses such as cardiovascular, cancer, diabetes and respiratory diseases might also find themselves experiencing depression due to the difficulties associated with managing their health?conditions.

Mrs. Adjei said there were effective treatments for depression which included psychological treatment and medications and therefore urged depressed patients not to depend on herbal treatment?but must go to the?appropriate health facilities to?see professionals for suitable treatment

She entreated depressed patients to?try to continue with their normal enjoyable activities including maintenance of relationship with friends and family members as well doing regular exercises, maintaining good eating and sleeping habits,?avoiding alcohol and illicit drugs which could worsen?depression?conditions.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Persistent commodity price fluctuations blamed on variations in transport costs

A market survey conducted by the Ghana News Agency in Koforidua Central Market shows prices of cereal and vegetables have been fluctuating over the last six months, a phenomenon marketers blame on transport costs.

Particularly, the prices of maize, rice, millet, and certain vegetables were observed to differ from those of almost every vendor at the market.

Analysts said the trend is expected as the country’s annual inflation trend hit 42.2 per cent in May, up from 41.2 per cent, the month before.

This occurred after four months of declining inflation following a significant increase in food prices (51.8%) as compared to 48.7% in April.

Speaking to the Ghana News Agency, Madam Esi Ahenkorah, who sells cereals, including maize and rice, cited differences in location and surging transportation costs of goods as some of the reasons for the increase in prices.

The GNA survey revealed that a bag (50 kg) of ‘Pragya’ rice was sold for GH? 610.00, while white rice costs GH? 600.00, with ‘Ama’ rice going for GH? 450.00.

Also, while some vendors were selling a paint rubber of maize for GH?35.00 others were going for GH?40.00.

Meanwhile, one olonka of millet costs between 24 and 30 Ghana cedis.

When it comes to vegetable prices, one olanka of tomatoes costs 70 Ghana cedis and others 75 Ghana cedis; one paint rubber of onion costs 50 Ghana cedis; and one olonka of pepper costs 20 Ghana cedis.

Maize, rice, and millet fall under Cereal crops, are grown in greater quantities and provide more food energy worldwide than any other type of crop, according to experts, while tomatoes and onions are equally important for human health because they contain vitamin A, minerals, and dietary fibre.

Whereas, Vitamins A, C, and E play a vital role in human health, the nutrient and non-nutrient molecules in vegetables reduce the risk of chronic diseases, diabetes, cancer, obesity, and hyperactivity.

Source: Ghana News Agency

High cost of building materials affecting quality of work – Engineering Council

Some contractors are using ‘cheaper’ building materials to cut down the high cost of projects in the country, the Engineering Council, Ghana has observed.

The Council said it cannot establish that the use of inferior building materials was the cause of the recent collapse of buildings under construction but acknowledged that some builders had been resorting to cheaper materials which might undermine the quality of work.

In an interview with the Ghana News Agency, Mr Wise Ametefe, Registrar, Engineering Council, said the use of inferior materials was a major concern for the industry and blamed the situation on the high cost of building materials.

‘Some of the materials they use are inferior and that might boil down to the cost of the material. But you cannot sacrifice your life because of cost. Whether expensive or not, we encourage builders to go for the best quality,’ he said.

Prices of building materials shot up significantly in the middle of last year, with industry players attributing the rise to the depreciation of the Cedi against the dollar, high import duties and high cost of production for local manufacturers.

Checks conducted on the market by the GNA indicate that cement is now trading at an average GHS 80 per bag. By the end of 2022, the price of a bag of cement shot up to about GHS96 per bag, representing about 40 per cent rise compared to the beginning of 2022.

A tonne of iron rods is now selling between GHS 7,500 to GHS8, 000. In the beginning of 2022, it was selling at about GHS5, 400 per tonne.

In the last three months, the country has recorded at least five reported cases of collapsed storey buildings under construction, some of which led to loss of lives.

Four of the cases, three of which occurred in the Greater Accra Region and the other in the Northern Region, occurred within a space of two weeks in May this year.

A team of investigators deployed to the sites are yet to conclude their investigations to establish the actual cause of the disasters.

Just last week, another one-storey building under construction collapsed at Amanfrom Assemblies, a suburb of Amanfrom in the Ga South Municipality, killing two people and injuring three others.

Mr Ametefe said a team of investigators were deployed to the site on Monday to conduct preliminary investigations.

He appealed to the public to seek the services of professionals and ensure that that they sourced high quality materials for their projects to avert disaster.

Source: Ghana News Agency