Adaklu DCE nominee finally confirmed


Mr. Walter Wogbemase Zuh, the President’s nominee was on Wednesday confirmed as District Chief Executive for Adaklu.

He garnered 14 yes votes representing 73.68 yes votes out of the 19 votes cast.

There were four no votes whilst one ballot was rejected.

Mr. Archibald Letsa, Volta Regional Minister, addressing the Assembly members before the voting asked them to consider the greater interest of Adaklu before making their decisions.

He said the negative effects of a district without a DCE were enormous and hoped their decision would go a long way to impact positively on the district.

Mr. Zuh, in his acceptance speech, thanked the Assembly members for the confidence reposed in him.

He pledged to run an open-door administration and work with the Assembly members to build on the achievements of his predecessors.

Mr. Zuh called on traditional authorities and other stakeholders to come on board to build ‘the Adaklu that we all cherish.’

Present were Mr. Sylvanus Plaha, Adaklu District Coordinating Director,
traditional authorities, and party executives of the two main political parties in the district.

The election was supervised by the Adaklu district office of the Electoral Commission.

Mr. Zuh swore the official oath, the oaths of office and secrecy administered by Mr. Christian Affuflu, District Magistrate for Agortime-Ziope and Adaklu districts.

Source: Ghana News Agency

2024 SONA: Keta residents express varying views, calls for action


Mr Anthony Dagudu, an economist and governance expert, has commended the Government for the reduction in the inflationary rate from 54.1 per cent in December last year to 23.5 per cent in January 2024.

He said government should focus on improving on some other key areas including agriculture, employment, energy, and the flagship programmes such as the 1D1F and Planting for Food and Jobs to mitigate the plight of the citizenry.

Mr Dagadu was commenting on President Akufo-Addo’s State of the Nation Address (SoNA) in Parliament in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on Tuesday.

He urged the government to share the country’s resources equitably to enable all to benefit.

He, however, commended the President for performing his mandatory and constitutional obligations as per Article 67 of the 1992 Constitution.

Meanwhile, some other residents within the Keta Municipality of the Volta Region have expressed varied views on the SoNA.

Madam Abigail Mensah, a food vendor, told the Ghana News Agency that she was
disappointed at the level at which the government had tackled food security and the high price of goods on the markets.

‘You can see the price of a bowl of maize, a bag of rice, oil, tomatoes, fertilizer, among others, which went up, and l was thinking he would address the causes and the possible solutions,’ she said.

She said the address was full of projections that did not reflect real life situations with the numerous taxes that affected businesses.

Madam Mensah lamented the President’s failure to comment on the flood disaster that rendered several residents in the Volta, parts of the Eastern and Greater Accra regions homeless.

Joseph Abui, an ‘Okada’ rider at Keta, said the President did not touch on measures to curb the increasing unemployment rate in the country.

‘Fuel prices continue to increase, electricity bill is something else. The President should have given us some hope in the areas of employment, health, agriculture, and others,’ he said.

Meanwhile, other residents were of the opinion that
Ghanaians should relax and give the government enough room to fix things.

Source: Ghana News Agency

LGBTQ+ Passage: Sam George calls on President to assent


Mr Samuel Nartey George, a lead sponsor of the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, 2021, has urged President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to assent to the Bill following its passage by Parliament on Wednesday, February 28.

‘We want the President to walk his talk by appending his signature to the bill to enable it to come into force,’ he said.

Addressing the Parliamentary Press Corps after the passage of the Bill, the National Democratic Congress Member of Parliament (MP) for Ningo-Prampram, said there was considerable support among MPs for the passage of the Bill.

He, therefore, expressed appreciation to colleague MPs, and particularly Mr Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, a former Majority Leader, for their commitment to ensuring the bill was passed.

‘We want to thank Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, who played a pivotal role in passing this bill,’ the MP told the media.

Mr George also underscored the unity among MPs in the House during the whole process, adding: ‘The overwhelming majority from both sides of the ais
le have endorsed this bill.’

He pledged the collaboration of members of Parliament with the media to ensure extensive public education on the bill.

The object of the Bill is to provide for proper human sexual rights and Ghanaian Family Values, which proscribes lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer (LGBTQ+) and related activities.

The Bill currently proscribes lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) activities and criminalises their promotion, advocacy and funding.

Persons caught in these acts would be subjected to six months to three-year jail term with promoters and sponsors of these acts bearing a three to five-year jail term.

The Bill would now require presidential assent to come into force.

In May 2023, Uganda signed one of the world’s toughest anti-LGBT laws, including the death penalty for ‘aggravated homosexuality.’

Activists said it unleashed a wave of abuse and the World Bank suspended new funding to the country.

The United Nations said in 2021 that the proposed law, Human Sexual R
ights and Family Values, would create ‘a system of state-sponsored discrimination and violence’ against sexual minorities.

Source: Ghana News Agency

2024 Elections: Execute your duties with united front – Dr Bawumia charges Campaign, Manifesto Committees


Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, Flagbearer of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), has charged members of his Campaign and Manifesto teams to execute their duties with a united front to ensure victory in the 2024 General Election.

He said unity was crucial to the success of the Party in the elections, rallying all members to contribute their quota towards victory.

‘We are very aware that one of the keys to victory for NPP in 2024 is unity. It’s the most important key to victory. And so, putting together these committees we have taken cognizance, listening to advice of our elders to make sure that we do not leave anyone behind,’ the Vice President said when he officially unveiled the committees, in Accra, on Wednesday.

The Campaign Committee is chaired by Mr Dan Kweku Botwe, a former Minister of Local Government, Decentralisation and Rural Development, while Mr Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, Member of Parliament for Suame, chairs the Manifesto Committee.

Dr Bawumia said the NPP had the ingredients to win the electi
ons come December 7, indicating that the Party had the message, and the vision to propel the country towards economic growth.

He explained that, since the Party assumed office in 2017, it had outperformed its main opponents -the National Democratic Congress, in every sector.

‘In terms of record, our record is superior, and we are going to put it out there for public scrutiny,’ he said, adding that the vision of the Party had been ‘clearly laid out and it will be reinforced by the manifesto’.

‘We know where we want to take the country. We have the vision, and we have the idea, and we are trying to implement them,’ he added.

The Vice President said the NDC had a ‘very blurred vision that they really don’t know where they want to take us that they are announcing promises of things that we have already done’.

Dr Bawumia said the formation and inauguration of the Campaign and Manifesto teams indicated the Party’s commitment to hit the campaign ground running.

‘We have not wasted time in putting together our
campaign team, we have not wasted time in putting together our manifesto teams and we are not going to waste any time in getting to campaign around the country,’ he said.

Mr Botwe, Chairman of the Campaign Committee, said the goal of the team was to execute a campaign that would win the NPP the majority seat in Parliament and elect its Flagbearer as the President for the next four years.

To achieve that, he assured the Flagbearer and leadership of the Party of their commitment to work together with discipline and in a coordinated manner.

He also promised that they would use all resources available, both internally and externally, to ensure a successful campaign.

Mr Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, Chairman of the Manifesto Committee, urged members to put the interest of the Flagbearer and the Party above any personal.

‘We are here to contribute our quota to shaping his (Dr Bawumia) own vision, and to work towards a common cause of winning the presidential and general election of December 7, 2024.

‘Let everybody be pa
rt of this enterprise, a very noble one,’ he urged.

Mr Stephen Ntim, Chairman of NPP, tasked the committees to remain focused and avoid squabbles to ensure the Party achieved its objectives.

He pledged the Party and the Flagbearer’s readiness to provide support, logistically to ensure successful execution of their mandates.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Don’t deny adolescent people Family Planning services – public health nurse


Health workers have been urged to welcome and provide the best Family Planning (FP) options for adolescent people who would visit their facilities.

Mrs Esther Adjei, a Public Health Nurse at the Bono Regional Directorate of Health, gave the advice in an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in Sunyani.

She stated the adolescents had every right to access FP services, and therefore reminded health workers as a matter of importance to protect the confidentiality of those teenagers who would access such services.

Though she could not immediately provide statistics, Mrs Adjei indicated teenage pregnancy and sexually-transmitted infections (STIs) were recording disturbing figures among young people in the region.

Mrs Adjei said because of an increasing trend of cases, parents must encourage their sexually- active adolescents to access the FP services as there were several best FP options safe for teenagers.

She mentioned poverty, lack of sexual education, child marriages as some of the remote causes of t
eenage pregnancies in the region, and called for intensified sexual reproductive health education in schools to address the challenge.

Mrs Adjei said many of the adolescents were into active sexual behaviours, adding it was only through public sexual education that they would understand their sexual rights to protect themselves.

In a related interview, Mr Richmond Atta-Kwasi, the Bono Regional Health Promotion Officer, said besides health facilities, the Regional Health Directorate had set up adolescent corners, where teenagers could visit and access sexual education and FP services.

He advised sexually active young people to feel free to access information at the adolescent corners to improve their sexual reproductive health conditions.

Mr. Atta-Kwasi added parents and guardians must endeavour to draw, especially their teenage girls closer, to provide them with basic sexual education to protect them against teenage and unwanted pregnancies.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Northern Development Authority constructs 32 boreholes at Bunkpurugu


A total of 32 communities in the Bunkpurugu-Nakpanduri District of the North East Region now have access to regular supply of water for their various activities following the construction of boreholes in the area.??

The boreholes were constructed by the Northern Development Authority (NDA) to ensure residents’ access to water for their domestic activities as well as promote improved sanitation and hygiene practices to prevent outbreak of diseases.

The beneficiary communities are Tojin Dauk, Tojin Dickson Kuan, Pagnatiik, Bamong, Nanyiar, Kauk Jagouk, Nabauk, Jabdawuur, Chintilung No2, Kpentaung, Nakpeuk, Najong No1, Nasiabok, Konmoung Gberuk.

The rest are Kunkwadan No1, Gberukkunkook, Kpemale Kpinkpamu, Janandel No2, Balinfiuk, Tangkuan, Langobik Nakpanduri, Gumsuka Nakpanduri, Naadaari, Konbong Kuan.

?????Mr Sulley Sambian, Chief Executive Officer, NDA, who visited the communities to open the boreholes for use by the residents, assured that the NDA was making efforts to drill more boreholes in other comm
unities to ensure their access to water.

?????Mr Sambian said, ‘water remains a critical need of the people’ adding upon assumption of office, he put in a mechanism to get approval from government to drill some boreholes for various communities.’

?????He said approval was given to procure 120 boreholes for all the five regions in the north hence the drilling of the 32 boreholes at Bunkpurugu, adding, ‘Same can be said about Sagnarigu, same can be said about the Upper West Region.’

?????He mentioned other districts where the boreholes had been constructed, saying 10 were constructed at Chereponi, 10 at Yunyoo, 15 at Gambaga, and one at Walewale.

?????He assured the people that ‘We will put in place measures to ensure that we get more boreholes this year.’

?????Mr Joseph Louknaan, District Chief Executive for Bunkpurugu-Nakpanduri, who accompanied the NDA CEO to open the boreholes in the communities, expressed gratitude to the NDA for addressing one of the critical needs of the people.

?????Mr Louknaan ap
pealed for more water projects, including solar-powered mechanised boreholes appealing to other development partners to join efforts at improving sanitation and hygiene practices in the area to eradicate diseases in the area.

?????He said, ‘The population of the area is increasing but we do not have small town water system. We need more boreholes for the people and even our animals.’

Source: Ghana News Agency

Hypertension is a silent killer of teachers – GNAT cautions


The Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT) said hypertension and its related diseases were a major cause of some recent deaths among teachers in the Central Region.

It said the precarious working conditions of teachers, coupled with the harsh economic conditions had brought untold pressure on teachers, with debilitating health outcomes.

Consequently, ‘many teachers are dying at younger ages due to lifestyle changes and troubling working conditions. The situation has forced many to live and reason beyond their capabilities.’

‘The no money syndrome, high dependency ratio, and rising inflation without commiserate salaries have risen the blood pressure of many teachers,’ Mr Isaac Asante Frimpong, the Cape Coast Metro Chairman of GNAT, said on Tuesday.

He was speaking at the GNAT Wesley Local Meeting in Cape Coast to educate teachers on the benefits of good and healthy practices to increase productivity in the classrooms.

The meeting was arranged by the GNAT Wesley Local, in collaboration with ‘Yes We
Cann Foundation,’ a non-governmental organisation dedicated to supporting and educating people on how to avoid kidney related diseases.

Mr Frimpong urged all teachers to adopt healthy lifestyles to reduce the risk of contracting the ailments.

They should do regular exercises and go for medical check-ups for early detection of diseases for prompt treatment.

He, however, did not understand why some Ghanaians preferred to see some disease symptoms before reporting to the hospital, by which time it may have reached an advanced stage.

With the harmattan still lurking, he urged Ghanaians to ensure they were always hydrated, and eat fruits with vitamin C to reduce the chances of contracting upper respiratory tract Infections (URTI) such as common cold.

‘Successfully controlling blood pressure through medication and healthy lifestyle is key to avoiding its negative effects such as stroke, heart and kidney diseases,’ he said.

Taking the participants through the nature of kidney disease, Mr Albert Kusi Tawiah, Se
nior Staff Nurse at the Cape Coast Teaching Hospital, said it was a medical condition in which the kidneys were damaged, making it difficult to filter blood as it should.

Therefore, excess fluid and waste from the blood remained in the body and may cause other health problems such as heart disease and stroke.

The risk factors include tobacco use, use of dietary salt above the WHO recommendation of five grammes a day, and obesity.

Others are unhealthy diets such as those saturated in fat and trans fats, low intake of fruits and vegetables, physical inactivity, and consumption of alcohol.

He said non-modifiable risk factors included a family history of hypertension, age over 65 years and co-existing diseases such as diabetes or kidney disease.

Re-strategising to diagnose all hypertensive cases for effective management was important to avert preventable deaths and disabilities, he said.

Mr Thomas Cann, the Founder of Yes We Cann Foundation, lamented how some prayer camps had become the first port of call f
or most people with health conditions instead of the hospitals.

He urged Ghanaians to seek professional health care for various ailments and not send their relatives to prayer camps, dotted all over the country.

‘Somehow, some have been made to believe that their sicknesses are spiritual,’ Mr Cann said.

‘I’m not by any way suggesting that there are no problems that border on spirituality, which need prayers to solve, but medical attention must first be sought.’

Source: Ghana News Agency

Navrongo Health Research Centre holds scientific review meeting


The Navrongo Health Research Centre (NHRC) in the Kassena-Nankana Municipality of the Upper East Region has organized its annual scientific review meeting to enable the Centre take stock of its activities and strategize for continuous excellent research work.

The meeting brought together health scientists and researchers from the Centre, the Kintampo and Dodowa Health Research Centres, officials from the Ghana Health Service (GHS) and other stakeholders to deliberate and share ideas on how to improve health research in the country.

It was on the theme: ‘Exploring the synergies between health research and academia for development and excellence in tertiary education.’

Dr Patrick Odum Ansah, the Director of the NHRC, in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on the sidelines of the meeting, said the annual scientific meeting was to showcase the work they had done over the year.

‘We have done so many things, some are really impacting on lives and on our own development. It is said that an institution which
does not review itself, is on its way to death. So we do this to keep us on track,’ he said.

Dr Ansah said the review indicated that the scientific content of the Centre had improved, as more Social and Biomedical Sciences took centre stage.

‘I was actually very impressed with the Biomedical Scientists, especially with their presentations. It was a joy watching them relate to us what they have done over the year. Our drive is to build more capacities of young Scientists,’ he said.

The Director disclosed that the Centre had started new initiatives for the year 2024, ‘We are working on a study on anti-malaria developed by Novartis. We got approval last year, and recruitment has just started.’

He said even though malaria was not at its peak season and the Centre found it difficult to recruit cases, they would engage facilities beyond Navrongo to get some cases to put the drug to test.

He said the Centre, through its work, would continue to contribute its knowledge to the cause of severe malaria.

On challen
ges of the Centre which affected its smooth operations, apart from the lack of staff, Dr Ansah expressed worry about frequent power surges in the area, and said the Centre had spent huge sums of money to secure its equipment, which frequently broke down, due to the unstable power situation.

He said laboratory equipment was expensive, and management of the Centre continued to spend huge sums to replace such equipment to keep the Centre running.

Dr Samuel Kwabena Boakye-Boateng, the Upper East Regional Director of the GHS, said the theme for the meeting was appropriate within the larger context of Ghana’s Ultimate Health System Goal and the GHS goal of Universal Health Coverage.

He said bringing together health researchers and academics from various disciplines could foster innovative research and teaching approaches, adding that ‘Collaboration between NHRC and Education Institutions can lead to the development of new, evidence-based teaching methods for health-related subjects.’

Dr Boakye-Boateng noted the
need for integration of latest health research findings into curricula that could provide students with up-to-date knowledge and practical skills.

That, the GHS Director said, could help prepare them for careers in health-related fields and contribute to the overall excellence of tertiary education programmes.

‘Engaging students in health research projects can provide valuable hands-on experience and mentorship opportunities and inspire the next generation of health researchers and practitioners to contribute to the development of a culture of research excellence within tertiary education institutions,’ he added.

Dr Boakye-Boateng appreciated the works of the NHRC across the Region and the effective collaboration with the District Health Directorates, hospitals and Health Centres in the Region.

He said the GHS in the Region would continue to work with the NHRC to harmonize its work plans per service delivery and importantly in the light of its mandate in research.

Source: Ghana News Agency