Ridge tigers relocation to take 2 months – Wildlife

The Director of Operations at the Wildlife Division of the Forestry Commission, Luri Kanton has said that the relocation of the two tigers in a residential estate at Ridge in Osu, Accra would take about two months to be fully completed.

He also added that the animals, which belong to business mogul, Nana Kwame Bediako, popularly known as Freedom Jacob Caesar, pose no threats to the life of residents in the estate where the animals are currently being kept.

Some residents had expressed worry over the presence of the tigers in the estate, claiming that their presence made life unsafe for them, adding that all efforts to get the owner or the management of the facility to evacuate the animals had proven difficult.

The Accra Regional Command of the Ghana Police Service issued a statement on Thursday, May 19, 2022 in which it indicated that it had “reached out” to the Wildlife Division of the Forestry Commission to relocate the two animals to “an appropriate facility.”

Officials from the Wildlife Division subsequently visited the estate on Friday May 20, 2022 to inspect the facility and assess the situation.

Leading the delegation, Luri Kanton, Director of Operations shortly after the inspection acknowledged that “a new structure would have to be constructed at a new location before the relocation of the animals could be done.”

This, he stressed, would take about two months to be completed.

On the safety of residents, he claimed that the tigers were well protected enough and that they would be relocated after investigations.

Owner of the tigers, Mr. Bediako on his part, had in an interview with journalists, admitted that indeed he had two tigers in his estate and that he brought them in a bid to boost Ghana’s tourism sector.

“First, it is right, I have two tigers that I bought in a bid between Ghana and Dubai…

“I went in to buy these animals to add to the value of tourism in our country. I wanted to go into the Safari world by making sure that Ghana becomes the first country in the whole of West Africa, East Africa, and Central Africa, except for South Africa, to have these animals”, he explained.

Source: Modern Ghana

Regional Border Management: IOM charting the course

Accra, The ability of states to reap the development rewards inherent in migration is conditioned on their migration management capacities, including mainstreaming of migration considerations into evidence-based development policies.

Migration management capacity is especially crucial in West Africa and the African Continent in general, where the development agenda is founded on socio-economic integration, including the existence of a free movement regime, covering the 15 African countries.

Border management in Africa is an integral component not only to promote peace, security, and stability but also to facilitate the integration process and sustainable development of the Continent.

Thus, border management is situated within a border governance approach, which includes norms, institutions, and collaboration between state, society, and civil society to ensure border security.

In West Africa, countries have faced some common perennial challenges in managing borders, for example the inadequate infrastructure and equipment; management of numerous irregular border crossing points; and the existence of cross border trafficking and smuggling networks are to mention but a few.

This situation is exacerbated by contemporary challenges, such as the emergence of violent extremist groups, notably in the Sahel region, and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, which has precipitated the continued closure of most land borders in the region.

To address these challenges for states to harness the potentials of migration, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), in consultation with the littoral Gulf of Guinea countries – Benin, Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana and Togo – has agreed on five strategic areas of engagement to reinforce governments efforts in strengthening border management in these countries.

The IOM is being guided by regional and global frameworks, including the AU Strategy, in its efforts to address these challenges.

These five strategic areas, according to Mr Nnamdi Iwuora, the Senior Project Manager, IOM, are; Improving infrastructure and equipment at existing border posts; Strengthening information management and traveler processing through the deployment and use of the Migration Data Analysis System and fully adaptable and state-owned border management information system; Reinforcing border community engagement; Establishing mechanisms for responding to cross border emergencies, including public health emergencies; and Supporting regional cooperation.

At the just-ended Accra Regional Border Management Workshop by the IOM, with funding from the Federal Foreign Office, the representatives from the border management agencies of the targeted countries reiterated the need to join hands to address the common challenges that make the sub-region susceptible.

The workshop was to bring together border management authorities from the targeted countries and their neighbours in the Sahel Region (Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, and Nigeria) to share experiences and develop recommendations to improve regional and cross border cooperation on border security.

The participants noted that effective response to these multifaceted challenges requires a holistic and strategic approach by all stakeholders, including the state and all its agencies, border communities and civil society, to share a mutual understanding of the historic and emerging challenges and to develop solutions to overcome them.

Ghana, in her quest to address the problem, is responding on both the strategic policy facet as well as operational measures, Mrs Adelaide Anno-Kumi, the Chief Director of the Ministry of the Interior, noted.

These are the development of frameworks such as the National Framework for the Prevention of Violent Extremism, the draft National Border Strategy, Northern Border Security Strategy, Government Security Initiative, and the Accra Initiative, among others.

She, therefore, urged all stakeholders to join hands to address the situation to enable the sub-region in general, and Ghana in particular, to derive the ultimate development results from migration.

The IOM is active among all ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States) members and has long-standing partnership with the governments to support capacity development to improve immigration and border management.

Source: Ghana News Agency

A profile on Rwanda’s Salima Mukansanga, the first African woman to officiate at the World Cup?

Accra. May 20, GNA – Rwandan referee Salima Mukansanga has become the first African woman selected to officiate at the Federation of International Football Association (FIFA) World Cup.

Born on July 25, 1988, the 33-year-old international referee hails from the Rusizi district in the Western Region of Rwanda. 

Although a basketball player, she was thought to be too small to join the national under-17 team, which made her shift focus on football instead. 

Focusing on football, the referee targeted a different side of football, not to be a footballer, but a referee to officiate games. 

The 33-year-old had the desire to officiate during her early stage of life, as she showed more interest in watching the one making decisions on the field of play than the ones playing the game. 

She was rejected by the Rwandan Football Federation (RFF) to join a referee course to begin her career due to her age. 

Mukansanga kept her head up till she officiated her first match during her final year in St Vincent de Paul Musanze secondary school which unlocked her career path of greatness. 

After completing secondary school, the international referee took time to get to know more about the game called football, its rules before being given the opportunity to study with other referees. 

She began to officiate matches in her hometown before moving to amateur players, and then eventually worked her way up through the local football, starting with second division men’s games. 

However, in 2004, she was assigned the centre referee, her first time to take up the role during the Confederation of Africa Football (CAF) Women’s Championship battle between Zambia and Tanzania.

Due to her outstanding performance, she was promoted to become a CAF licensed referee in 2012 to begin officiating all over Africa, officiating most of the men league matches in Rwanda as a fourth referee. 

Mukansanga’s growth in her field was quite tremendous as she rose to the highpoint of her career in 2014, after she got the chance to officiate her first international match as a centre referee in the 2014 African Women’s Championship match between Zambia and Tanzania. 

The Rwandan referee aside officiating the Women’s 2014 African Championship, went on to officiate other men’s tournaments, that was the 2016 African Women’s Cup of Nations and the Women’s World Cup in France in 2019 which gave her the recognition she had been waiting for, putting Rwanda on the world map. 

The female referee handled the opener of the 2015 All African Games between Nigeria and Tanzania in Brazzaville, Republic of Congo and was also in charge of the semi-final clash between Ghana and Ivory Coast. 

She made history once again in January this year of becoming the first woman to officiate at the men’s African Cup of Nations tournament (AFCON), officiating the Zimbabwe and Guinea game which ended 2-1. 

Referee Salima Mukansanga would be among the 36 referees and 69 assistant referees who would journey to the 2022 Federation of International Football Association (FIFA) Men’s World Cup tournament in Qatar. 

Being the only African Woman among the three selected women, the international referee is now a household name in Rwanda with most male and female referees now looking up to her. 

Source: Ghana News Agency

Funding Not Enough to Meet Rising Humanitarian Needs in Syria, Top Official Tells Security Council, as Members Diverge Over Delivery Methods

Permanent Representative Stresses Cross-border Operations Violate Sovereignty

Current funding is insufficient to meet increasing humanitarian needs in Syria, the senior United Nations official in that country said in a briefing to the Security Council today, as members diverged on the appropriate modalities for delivering existing aid to help the millions suffering across the country.

Martin Griffiths, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and United Nations Emergency Relief Coordinator, said that, whereas pledges totalled nearly $6.7 billion at last week’s Brussels Conference, those commitments represent less than half of the total funding requirement for 2022.

He emphasized that the underfunding will force humanitarian partners to make difficult choices in their responses, citing the World Food Programme’s (WFP) warning that further cuts to its programme could materialize by July due to rising food prices and stagnant funding. “It is now critical that the generous pledges announced in Brussels be converted into early disbursals of funding.”

Outlining conditions on the ground, he reported that civilians continue to be affected by air strikes, shelling, detainment, critically low water levels, electricity shortages and eroding purchasing power. He noted that on 16 May, the fourth cross-line convoy delivered food assistance to people in north-west Syria, adding that plans for a fifth delivery are under way. However, cross-line humanitarian access cannot replace the size or scope of the massive cross-border operation, he stressed. With the Council’s authorization of cross-border assistance expiring in just over six weeks, failure to renew it “will disrupt life-saving aid for the people living in north-west Syria, including more than a million children”, he warned.

Also briefing was Farida Almouslem of the Syrian American Medical Society, who detailed her experience working as an obstetrician-gynaecologist in Aleppo from 2011 until 2016. “Syrians throughout the country are suffering, and every one of us has an obligation to help,” she emphasized. Humanitarian needs continue to grow while funding decreases, and additional funds are needed to prevent further hospital closures and provide critical nutrition assistance. Calling upon the Council to renew the cross-border resolution so that doctors and humanitarian workers have the medicine and tools they need to help their patients, she said it must also require proper monitoring and oversight “so that what resources do go into Syria are properly utilized”.

In the ensuing debate, many Council members stressed the need to use all modalities to deliver aid to the millions of Syrians in need, citing the critical, irreplaceable nature of the cross-border aid mechanism. Others called for expanded cross-line deliveries to complement and eventually replace that mechanism. Speakers also detailed national aid commitments made at last week’s Brussels Conference, even as others underscored the need to avoid politicizing the humanitarian issue and to delink development assistance from political progress.

The Russian Federation’s representative, noting that the anaemic support for four cross-line convoys from Damascus over the course of a year “can hardly be called a success”, said the main problem is that implementation of early recovery and reconstruction projects are contingent on the political considerations of donor countries. Meanwhile, efforts to safeguard the cross-border mechanism at any cost increasingly resemble the parents of a lazy, negligent student facing suspension from school. “Nothing good comes of such spoiled children,” he said, emphasizing that the United Nations continues to ignore the devastating effects of the unilateral sanctions imposed on the Syrian people by the United States and the European Union.

Brazil’s representative echoed that point, calling for a thorough, permanent review of the consequences of unilateral sanctions on civilians amidst the acute economic crisis and escalating hunger. The international community must continue to work for predictable, regular delivery of aid, both through cross-line and cross-border operations, he said, emphasizing the need for detailed monitoring of all humanitarian operations.

The representative of the United States, however, pointed out that whereas the 16 May cross-line delivery provided food for 43,500 people, United Nations cross-border aid through Bab al-Hawa provides food for 1.4 million people in a typical month. “There is just no comparison,” she emphasized, urging the Council not only to renew the cross-border mandate, but also to increase the number of crossing points to meet the rising demand for humanitarian aid. The United States will provide $800 million in new humanitarian assistance to Syria, she said, while stressing that no amount is enough if it cannot reach those in need.

Syria’s representative emphasized that, whereas the Government looks forward to enhancing cross-line aid delivery, the so-called cross-border mechanism continually violates Syria’s sovereignty and is gravely defective. He went on to spotlighted his country’s 30 April presidential decree of amnesty, saying it seeks to improve the humanitarian situation, consolidate national reconciliation and facilitate the return of refugees and displaced persons to their homeland. Calling for an objective, balanced consideration of the Government’s measures in that regard, he urged “some countries” to abandon their erroneous policies and engage with the Syrian Government.

Also speaking today were representatives of Norway (also speaking for Ireland), Ghana (also speaking for Gabon and Kenya), United Kingdom, France, Albania, India, China, Mexico, United Arab Emirates, Iran and Turkey.

The meeting started at 10:14 a.m. and ended at 12:06 p.m.

Briefings

MARTIN GRIFFITHS, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, welcomed the pledges totalling nearly $6.7 billion at the recent sixth Brussels Conference for Syria and the region, while noting that those commitments represent less than half of the total funding requirement for 2022. Underfunding means that humanitarian partners will need to prioritize their response and once again make difficult choices, he said. Recalling the World Food Programme’s (WFP) warning that further cuts to its programme could materialize by July, driven by the global rise in food prices and stagnant funding levels, he said that would have a devastating impact, with 1.9 million more people likely to slide into hunger conditions. “It is now critical that the generous pledges announced in Brussels be converted into early disbursals of funding,” he emphasized.

Outlining conditions on the ground, he said air strikes and shelling in north-west Syria continue to affect civilians, adding that insecurity also continues at the Al Hol camp for displaced persons in the north-east. So far in 2022, 13 murders and four attempted murders have been reported in the camp. “The situation in Al Hol is a disgrace for the 56,000 civilians living there, the vast majority women and children,” he stressed, noting that nearly 10,000 children and their mothers are detained in prisons and prison-like camps. Calling for the Council to act, he underlined that children should not be detained on the sole basis of alleged association with armed groups. They should be released into suitable care with protection and access to basic services, he said, reiterating his call upon all Member States involved to urgently fulfil their responsibility to repatriate their citizens.

“We are fast approaching summer and its scorching heat in most parts of Syria,” he continued, pointing out that the coming high temperatures will lead to increasing demand for water. Already, water levels in the Euphrates River — on which some 5.5 million people in Syria depend — are dropping to a critically low point, he said. Officials have warned that due to low water levels, the Tishreen Dam is only operational six hours a day, compromising the water and electricity supply. “Without electricity, irrigation pumps cannot function, hospitals and other critical services cannot be supported, and residents must purchase drinking water, further eroding their purchasing power,” he noted. The Alouk water station continues to work intermittently, and pumping has been interrupted several times in the past month due to electricity shortages, he said, adding that Hassakeh city continues to receive supplies through water trucking, which is not a sustainable solution.

He went on to report that the United Nations and its partners are currently supporting more than 12,000 students in crossing between areas of control to take school exams at the end of May. Emphasizing their right to education, he declared: “These children are the only hope for Syria’s future.” It is the responsibility of relevant parties to respect their right to travel safely, he said, adding that the United Nations continues its efforts to expand cross-line humanitarian access and is planning a cross-line mission to Ras al Ayn, in the north-east, to provide COVID-19 vaccines, early childhood vaccines and other medication, he added. On 16 May, meanwhile, the fourth cross-line convoy delivered food assistance to more than 40,000 people in north-western Syria, and plans are under way for a fifth delivery, he said.

Pointing out that the Council’s authorization of cross-border assistance into the north-west expires in just over six weeks, he said that, while the United Nations is doing its utmost to expand cross-line access operations, those cannot currently replace the size or scope of the massive cross-border operation. “Failure to renew the authorization will disrupt life-saving aid for the people living in north-west, including for more than a million children,” he warned. Deputy Relief Coordinator Joyce Msuya is currently completing a visit to Syria and Jordan to identify strategies that will meet the challenges of the coming months, which will be part of the humanitarian briefing to the Council in June, he said.

FARIDA ALMOUSLEM of the Syrian American Medical Society detailed her experience working as an obstetrician-gynaecologist in Aleppo from 2011 until 2016. “I witnessed hundreds of atrocities which are still stuck in my mind,” she said, recalling a tearful plea from a woman begging for help getting pregnant again after losing her four children to a barrel bomb. She said her hospital was repeatedly targeted by air strikes, cluster munitions, barrel bombs and “bunker-buster” bombs. Under such heavy bombardment, operating rooms were moved to the basement and, after the bunker-buster bombs failed to penetrate, a munition containing chlorine gas was dropped directly on the hospital, she added. Following another such incident the following day, she noted, the hospital was evacuated and she was forcibly displaced from Aleppo to Idlib. “My family and I lost everything,” she said, demanding: “Where is the accountability?”

She went on to state that she continued to work in hospitals throughout northern Syria after that displacement, summarizing her experiences in Syria as “tremendous human suffering”. She added: “Syrians throughout the country are suffering, and every one of us has an obligation to help.” Humanitarian needs continue to grow while funding decreases, she said, emphasizing the need for additional funds to prevent further hospital closures, provide critical nutrition assistance and increase the health system’s capacity throughout Syria. Furthermore, the enormous humanitarian needs require access by all modalities, especially the cross-border mechanism, she noted, stressing that, whereas cross-line access must be improved through greater planning and coordination, it cannot replace the enormous cross-border operation currently taking place.

After more than a decade of brutal conflict, the entire population is suffering from psychological wounds, she continued, citing her own daughter’s experience of siege, starvation, bombardment, chemical weapons and forced displacement by the age of eight. More resources must be committed to provide quality mental-health services throughout Syria, as the lack thereof has resulted in increased rates of suicide, domestic and gender-based violence and substance abuse, she emphasized. Against that backdrop, she called upon the Council to renew the cross-border resolution so that doctors and humanitarian workers have the medicine and tools they need to help their patients, and to require proper monitoring and oversight “so that what resources do go into Syria are properly utilized”.

Statements

MONA JUUL (Norway), speaking also on behalf of Ireland, urged all parties listed in the Secretary-General’s Annual Report on Children and Armed Conflict to develop and fully implement action plans to end and prevent violations against children. Given the overwhelming and increasing humanitarian needs, the Council must stand unified in its resolve to mitigate them, she said, pointing out that her country and Ireland, as facilitators of the Syria humanitarian file, strongly support the use of all modalities to deliver aid to millions of Syrians in need. While welcoming this week’s arrival of another humanitarian convoy across the conflict line into the north-west, she stressed that more can and must be done. She called upon all parties to support cross-line deliveries to all parts of Syria, de-politicize aid deliveries, and grant the necessary security guarantees to ensure the safe passage of cross-line convoys and their personnel. With several hundred trucks every month, the cross-border mechanism remains the critical lifeline, and without it, millions of lives would be at even greater risk, she warned.

HAROLD ADLAI AGYEMAN (Ghana), also speaking on behalf of Gabon and Kenya, welcomed efforts to address the growing protection needs in Syria and to provide assistance to areas both in and outside Government control. He condemned all human rights abuses, especially at the Al Hol Camp, where murder cases are rising. He also expressed concern about reported use of laser-guided weapons targeting civilian areas, humanitarian centres and hospitals. Emphasizing the vital need for humanitarian access to all areas where people are in need, he called for continued support for all aid delivery mechanisms, noting the extensive reach of the cross-border system and the complementarity provided by the cross-line system. Humanitarian action anywhere should be guided by the principles of humanity, impartiality, neutrality and independence, he emphasized, while highlighting the grave risks posed by such Council-listed terrorist groups as Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL/Da’esh) and Hayat Tahrir al-Sham.

JAMES KARIUKI (United Kingdom) noted that the Council will be deliberating the future of the United Nations mandate to deliver cross-border assistance into Syria in the coming weeks. “[Against] the backdrop of a growing global food crisis, the ongoing impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and increasing violence, it is clear that the Syrian people need more support from the international community,” he said. He pointed out that the United Kingdom has supported the Syrian people from the start of the conflict, spending more than $4 billion in aid to date and committing nearly $200 million at last week’s Brussels Conference. Emphasizing that there is no alternative to the cross-border mechanism, he cautioned that closing the Bab al-Hawa crossing would mean reduced access to life-saving sexual and reproductive health services for women and girls, severe disruption to early recovery efforts and a devastating hindrance of ongoing efforts to vaccinate Syrians against COVID 19. Without the “gold standard” monitoring mechanism of the United Nations, meanwhile, other options would make it easier for assistance to fall into the hands of terrorists, he warned.

NICOLAS DE RIVIÈRE (France) said the Syrian people continue to pay the price for their country’s long conflict, with air strikes intensifying once again in the north-west in recent months. Meanwhile, the Russian Federation’s war of aggression in Ukraine has had serious impacts on the situation by driving up global food prices. Noting his country’s contribution to last week’s funding conference in Brussels, he emphasized that the cross-border aid delivery mechanism is more important than ever. Whereas progress on cross-line assistance must be pursued, it cannot supplant cross-border operations, as cross-line convoys remain subject to consent by the Syrian regime and have never fully compensated for the closure of the Al-Yurabiya crossing, he said. Only a credible political settlement will end the conflict, he stressed, adding that pending such a resolution, France and its European Union partners will maintain its position on the provision of reconstruction assistance.

DMITRY A. POLYANSKIY (Russian Federation) stated that the cross-border mechanism violates Syria’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Noting that that four cross-line convoys from Damascus over the course of a year “can hardly be called a success”, he said descriptions of lack of the necessary security to justify that small number arise solely in the context of cross-line deliveries, while apparently nothing prevents the passage of goods through the Bab al-Hawa checkpoint. He emphasized that there have been no systematic efforts to “change the picture” despite resolution 2585 (2021), and the main problem is that implementation of early recovery and reconstruction projects is contingent on the political considerations of donor countries. He went on to note that efforts to safeguard the cross-border mechanism at any cost increasingly resemble the parents of a lazy, negligent student facing suspension from school. “Nothing good comes of such spoiled children,” he said, adding that the United Nations continues to ignore the devastating consequences of the unilateral sanctions imposed on the Syrian people by the United States and the European Union.

FERIT HOXHA (Albania), noting that millions of people in north-eastern Syria rely on cross-border assistance, emphasized that aid must reach all in need. He also spotlighted the situation in the al-Rukban camp, in which thousands of people — nearly 80 per cent women and children — are living in squalid conditions. Noting that the Assad regime has blocked United Nations aid from entering the camp for more than three years, he called on that regime to allow unhindered access for humanitarian goods and personnel. He went on to express concern over the humanitarian situation of women and children in detention, and called for the release and familial reunification of all children deprived of liberty. A mechanism and a consultative group on missing persons would provide meaningful support to detainees, he said, warning: “If we do not assist people in need, we inadvertently nourish future conflicts.”

Mr. RAGHORAM (India) emphasized the need to avoid linking humanitarian and developmental assistance with progress in the political process, cautioning that such a position would only exacerbate humanitarian suffering. Stressing the urgent need to scale up assistance, he said humanitarian agencies must receive the necessary funding to fully execute their plans without politicizing people’s basic needs. The international community must constructively seek to promote projects that will bring much-needed jobs and economic opportunities, he said. Noting that external players have contributed to the growth of terrorist groups in Syria, he warned that the international community’s continued neglect of that issue will cause irreparable damage to the collective fight against terrorism. Concerned that humanitarian assistance to Syria was less in 2021 than in the previous year, he requested that the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs comprehensively harmonize data related to early recovery and resilience projects to give the Council a holistic view by the end of June, well before expiry of the cross-border authorization. He went on to say that his country continues to provide developmental assistance and human resource development support to Syria through grants and lines of credit for development projects, supply of medicine and food, camps for fitting artificial limbs, a next-generation information technology centre, and capacity-building training programmes.

XING JISHENG (China) expressed concern that the humanitarian needs in Syria are currently at their highest level ever. Urging the international community to take stock of their actions, tailor their responses and avoid politicizing the humanitarian issue, he noted the progress made in cross-line aid delivery while spotlighting the need to respect Syria’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Cross-border mechanisms should gradually give way to cross-line operations, he said, emphasizing the international community should increase their efforts to remove obstacles facing the latter. He emphasized the need to alleviate Syria’s economic suffering, including by funding early recovery projects. Meanwhile, unilateral coercive measures continue to devastate Syria and must be lifted as soon as possible, he stressed, condemning the continued pillaging and smuggling of Syria’s oil.

JUAN GÓMEZ ROBLEDO VERDUZCO (Mexico) drew particular attention to the risks posed by mines and unexploded ordnance and called for prompt demining action. He went on to state that the situation of more than 56,000 inhabitants of the Al Hol camp remains deplorable, affecting women and children most, calling for the urgent repatriation of third-country nationals still inside Syria. While welcoming the successful delivery of a fourth cross-line convoy, he emphasized that such deliveries cannot substitute the more than 800 trucks entering Syria through the Bab Al-Hawa border crossing point each month. As such, there is an absolute need for the Council to renew the authorization of that single crossing point as a “last hope for survival for millions and millions of Syrians”.

LANA ZAKI NUSSEIBEH (United Arab Emirates), while noting that providing basic humanitarian assistance remains critical, called for broadening the scope of current discussions to include how to restore security, stability and prosperity. To move beyond short-term solutions, the international community must take concrete steps to end the humanitarian crisis in a sustainable manner and ensure dignified living conditions for the Syrian people. She called upon the Council to consider renewing the cross-border aid mechanism, noting that although it is not perfect, it remains necessary to ensure delivery of aid to those in north-west Syria. The United Arab Emirates supports delivery of humanitarian aid, including cross-line assistance, through all means, she said. Expressing concern about the dire security and deteriorating humanitarian situation in the Al Hol camp, she said that addressing the humanitarian conditions there will not succeed without also addressing the security conditions in the camp, which impede the delivery of drinking water and halt life-saving activities.

RONALDO COSTA FILHO (Brazil) said international agencies must be adequately equipped and financed so that food supplies can continue to reach those most in need. Also, there must be a thorough and permanent review of the consequences of unilateral sanctions on civilians amidst the acute economic crisis and escalating hunger. As humanitarian assistance remains indispensable for millions of people across Syria, the international community must continue to work for predictable and regular delivery of international aid, both through cross-line and cross-border operations, he emphasized. Calling for close and detailed monitoring of all humanitarian operations, he said ways must be sought to facilitate more cross-line operations, while stressing that a nationwide ceasefire and a political solution pursuant to resolution 2254 (2015) is still the only way out of the decade-long conflict.

LINDA THOMAS-GREENFIELD (United States), Council President for May, spoke in her national capacity, saying her country will provide more than $800 million in new humanitarian assistance to Syria, including essential health, food, water, shelter and other critical relief. She pointed out, however, that no amount of aid will be enough if it cannot reach those in need, while emphasizing her country’s commitment to implementing all aspects of resolution 2585 (2021), including both cross-line and cross-border assistance. While welcoming the fourth cross-line delivery on 16 May, she stressed that such cross-line convoys cannot replicate the size and scope of cross-border operations. The May cross-line delivery provided food for 43,500 people, whereas United Nations cross-border aid through Bab al-Hawa provides food for 1.4 million people, in a typical month, she pointed out, stressing: “There is just no comparison.” She went on to urge the Council not only to renew the cross-border mandate but also to increase the number of crossing points to meet the rising demand for humanitarian aid.

BASSAM SABBAGH (Syria), spotlighting his country’s 30 April presidential decree of amnesty — which grants general amnesty for terrorist crimes committed by Syrians before that date except those that led to the death of a human being — emphasized that it excludes foreign terrorists. Their countries of origin remain responsible for repatriating such individuals and their families, he said. The decree falls within the framework of Government measures to improve the humanitarian situation, consolidate national reconciliation and facilitate the return of refugees and displaced persons to their homeland, he explained. Calling for an objective, balanced consideration of the steps the Government has taken, he urged “some countries” to abandon their erroneous policies and responsibly engage with the Syrian Government. He went on to note that Damascus recently facilitated the passage of a fourth United Nations convoy from Aleppo to north-west Syria and looks forward to enhancing cross-line aid delivery. However, the so-called cross-border aid mechanism continually violates Syria’s sovereignty and is gravely defective, he emphasized.

MAJID TAKHT RAVANCHI (Iran) said, whereas resolution 2585 (2021) supports early recovery and reconstruction projects well as the provision of basic services, unfortunately, continuing unilateral sanctions have stymied its implementation and even delayed the return of refugees and displaced persons. Those “irresponsible, immoral and illegal” measures have also hampered the Syrian Government’s ability to realize economic and social stability and to improve the living conditions of Syrians, he added. Expressing support for the Syrian Government’s full cooperation with the United Nations and other actors involved in cross-line aid, he described that mechanism as a safe legal method to help people in need. While underlining Iran’s support for Syria’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, he strongly condemned Israel’s continuing occupation of the Syrian Golan as well as its repeated violations of Syria’s sovereignty and territorial integrity — particularly its targeting of civilians and civilian objects — and called for an end to all illegal foreign presences in Syria.

FERIDUN HADI SINIRLIOGLU (Turkey), joining other speakers in noting the conflict’s growing humanitarian scale, emphasized that behind each statistic mentioned in the Council is a human being. He noted that, like other countries, Turkey has rightly been supporting civilians in need in Europe since the start of the war in Ukraine. However, the international community must not forget the plight of Syrian civilians, he stressed, declaring: “This war is still the primary breeding ground for one of the most serious humanitarian crises in the world.” However, funding for humanitarian assistance to Syrians has fallen at a time when needs are rising, he pointed out. Noting that the Council is now weeks away from renewing the cross-border aid delivery mechanism, he said cross-line operations from within Syria simply cannot replace the size and scope of cross-border operations. The latter’s renewal is therefore a moral and humanitarian imperative which should be guided solely by humanitarian considerations and must not be politicized, he stressed.

Responding to Syria’s representative, he said he does not consider that delegate a legitimate counterpart and will therefore not respond to his delusionary statement.

Source: UN Security Council

Eyeglasses may play a critical role in proper vision development in children -GOA

Tema, May 20, GNA- The Ghana Optometric Association (GOA) has reiterated that glasses may play a critical role in the proper vision development of children at their early ages.

“Children may need glasses for several reasons, some of which are different from adults.

“Because a child’s visual system is growing and developing, especially during the first 5-6 years of life, glasses may play an important role in ensuring normal development of vision,” Dr Alfred Gardemor, GOA Public Relations Officer has revealed.

He was speaking on the theme: “Children’s Vision and Eye Health,” at the fifth Ghana News Agency-Tema Regional Office and the Ghana Optometric Association fortnight public sensitization initiative “GNA-GOA: My Eye! My Vision!”

The GNA-GOA: My Eyes! My Vision! The initiative also seeks to challenge the public and policymakers to focus on vision as a health issue, which forms a critical component of mankind’s wellbeing but is often neglected

Dr Gardemor who is also a Principal Optometrist and Head of the Optometric Center at the Nsawam Government Hospital said children may need glasses to ensure better vision.

According to him, it would help straighten the eyes when they are crossed or misaligned otherwise known as strabismus.

“This may occur when there is a difference in prescription between the two eyes anisometropia. For example, one eye may be normal, while the other eye may have a significant need for glasses caused by near-sightedness, far-sightedness, or astigmatism,” he noted.

According to him, the optometrist would then advise parents whether there is a need for glasses, or whether the condition can be monitored.

He said excessive gadget use and close work had shown to increase the risk of eye power increase hence it was equally important to cut down on screen time as much as possible.

On signs of vision problems, Dr Gardemor said children born with preterm had a higher risk of developing vision issues including children with developmental concerns and reading difficulty.

Others were parents or siblings with eyeglasses, visual complaints such as squinting, squeezing, and constant rubbing of eyes, going closer to the television or bringing objects closer to see, redness, watering, and itching of eyes.

The rest were abnormal head position to see objects, complaints of headache, eyestrain and seeing double, and eyes appearing to drift outwards or inwards.

Source: Ghana News Agency

People’s Hope Foundation donates 20 dual desks to St. Nicholas RC Primary

Accra, May 20, GNA – People’s Hope Foundation Africa, a Non-Governmental Organisation has donated 20 dual desks to Laakpale St.

Nicholas RC Primary School in the Tatale-Sangule District of the Northern Region under its One child, One desk initiative

The NGO in 2021 identified the challenge of the school as pupils sat on the bare floor to read and write, a story that was subsequently published by the Ghana News Agency, soliciting for support.

The NGO has the objective of supporting deprived communities with educational infrastructure (tables and chairs, books, and school uniforms) in the northern part of Ghana, West Africa.

Mr. Kpachin Abdulai Ibrahim, Executive Director of the NGO, who, on behalf of the foundation donated 20 pieces of dual desks for 40 pupils said it formed part of their mobilization to support deprived communities.

He called for support and collaboration from individuals and organisations to serve more needy communities and schools in the region.

The donation was received by Ubore Tenneno Simon, the chief of Laakpale area in the presence of his elders, opinion leaders, and assemblyman for the electoral area.

Laakpale is a farming community in the Tatale/Sanguli District of the Northern Region, it is located in the southern part of the District capital (Tatale) and about 35 kilometres from the Tatale.

It has five other communities surrounding it and has only one basic school that has a population of 216 and has no tables and chairs to sit on during class hours, making teaching and learning difficult for both teachers and the pupils of the basic school.

Mr. Abdulai Abdul Karim the headteacher of the St. Nicholas RC basic school expressed gratitude to the Foundation for the support and called on other philanthropists to do same.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Agenda 111: Kpone not part of beneficiaries’ districts-MCE clarifies

Kpone (Near Tema), May 20. GNA – Mr. Samuel Okoe Amanquah, Municipal Chief Executive (MCE) Kpone-Katamanso Municipal Assembly, has revealed that the ongoing 40-bed capacity hospital project in Kpone is not part of the Agenda 111 Project promised by the President Nana Ado Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

He said records show that the current Kpone Hospital Project is not part of the Agenda 111 hospitals to be built across the various districts in the country.

The Kpone MCE made the disclosure at a forum of the Municipal Assembly in Kpone.

According to him, the 40-bed hospital was progressing steadily with a call on well-meaning citizens to feel free to visit the site to ascertain for themselves.

Mr. Ransford Nsiah, the Project Site Engineer, confirming the information to the Ghana News Agency in Kpone.

M. Nsiah explained that the project was being executed by Czech Republican company Vamed Health Project for the Ministry of Health with funding from an Australian company ERSTE/CESKA Sporintelna.

Mr. Nsiah added that Vamed was executing the same 40-bed hospital project in the Ashanti, Eastern, and the Greater Accra Region with one polyclinic in the Ahafo region.

According to him, the project was expected to be completed within 18 months and handed over to the Ministry of Health for commissioning.

Source: Ghana News Agency

FDA trains environmental health officers on Street Food Vending Permit

Cape Coast, May 20, GNA – The Central Region office of the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) has trained some 45 environmental health officers from the 22 Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies across the region on the issuance of Street Food Vending Permit (SFVP).

The officers were taken through the guidelines for issuing SFVP to street food vendors and also address food safety concerns in the vending industry to promote safe food and prevent foodborne diseases.

The training, which took place in Cape Coast, was also meant to strengthen collaboration between FDA and the environmental health officers in protecting the public.

The SFVP is a document issued by FDA to street food vendors to approve and legalise their operations in a bid to safeguard public health and safety.

The FDA is by the Public Health Act, 2012 (Act 851), mandated to ensure the safety, efficacy and quality of food, cosmetics, drugs, household chemical devices, blood and blood products and tobacco products.

In furtherance of its mandate, the Authority in November last year, launched the SFVP at the national level to regulate street food industry.

The Permit was later launched at the regional level in Cape Coast on February 11, 2022 on the theme: “No Street Food Vending Permit, no business”, suggesting that it would be unlawful for any street food vendor to operate without a valid permit from the FDA.

Madam Francisca Obeng, acting Regional Head of FDA, who opened the session maintained that the introduction of the policy was not an attempt by the Authority to render environmental health officers redundant, but to enhance their work.

She explained that routine inspections, for instance, would be done in partnership with the environmental health officers, adding that all existing by-laws operated by the officers still held.

“It is a collaboration and I believe we can do this with dedication, having in mind the protection of public health as our priority through safe foods,” she said.

Madam Obeng pointed out that the SFVP was meant to promote the business of street food vendors, urging the environmental health officers to be firm in enforcing the policy.

Mr William Freeman Goku, the Regional Environmental Officer, intimated the collaborative gesture was crucial for the professional synergy between the two entities to promote food hygiene and safety.

“What is being pursued now is to extend the scope to cover street food vending and we believe it is not an attempt to take over medical screening for food vendors’ certificate as currently being carried out in the MMDAs,” he said.

Some of the participants said the training had added to their knowledge and experience and would, therefore, enhance their efficiency.

“This exercise with the FDA will deepen the relations that we have with them.

“Before a permit is issued, food vendors need to meet some environmental standards, which we the environmental health officers will enforce and the FDA will issue the permit and so we are confident of keeping our jobs.,” a participant, Mr Antwi-Mends Festus Junior said.

Another participant, Mr Edem Ayivor, was optimistic that practising what he had learnt would enhance his work.

Source: Ghana News Agency