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Monday, 31 May 2021

High Court orders Achimota School to admit Rasta student, Tyrone Marhguy

High Court orders Achimota School to admit Rasta student, Tyrone Marhguy



The Human Rights Court 1 Division of the High Court in Accra, has ordered Achimota School to admit Tyrone Marhguy, the dreadlock-wearing Rastafarian boy into the school.


The Court in the same spirit directed Achimota School to also admit Oheneba Nkrabea, another Rastafarian student into the school.

The saga has been ongoing since March 19, 2021, during which the two students have not been able to start academic work with their colleagues.


What are your thoughts on this?

Champ Bwoy


Sunday, 30 May 2021

This is the current state of Old Adansiman park being developed by Doctor Boakye, the sitting member of Parliament for Obuasi East

 This is the current state of Old Adansiman park being developed by Doctor Boakye, the sitting member of Parliament for Obuasi East, at New Akaporiso, off Stamford Bridge Junction. The second of such facility after Boete. 'PÉ”mpɔɔla' park is his next target and other communities.





The facility is about 90% complete. A bore-hole for constant water supply, reserve stands, fencing, Net, water hoses and sprinklers are all available. The metallic poles are currently being worked on and will soon be erected for official commissioning of the park.

I mowed/cut the grass just a fortnight ago while the Mp himself and other few committed people did the watering, cutlass weeding, removal of stones and unwanted weeds. I touched base last night from Kumasi and this morning I decided to come around to inspect it. That has been the kind of help we have decided to, besides our work, offer in realising his dream of unearthing the pool of football talents we have in Obuasi.

You don't love or play football more than anyone.

These facilities are for the youth, the community and the entire district (not for him) and shall surely be handed over when the right things are put in place. Our poor attitude of maintenance and management of public property has culminated for what you think is delaying the handing over. The right football people who are committed should be seen managing such facilities.

Since the commissioning (Easter Monday), the new Boete Park has witnessed more football matches than Lenclay stadium this year and if care isn't taken, the facility won't last before some people start crucifying the man.

Let's all support people with good intention to help Adansiman.

— with Listowel O Darko Asare and 8 others.



Saturday, 29 May 2021

Taking a look at my life in the last five years, it just occurred to me that we have done close to 50 public speakings

 Taking a look at my life in the last five years, it just occurred to me that we have done close to 50 public speakings

seminars and presentations to a cumulative number of about 2000 audiences. This excludes the audience on social media who read our posts.
I could remember some of the topics as :
1. Dealing with Crisis.
2. Self-Discovery.
3. Character formation and development.
4. The psychology of learning.
5. The psychology of writing.
6. Parenting - Common mistakes parents make.
7. The 4 prerequisite of successful marriage.
8. The true measure of life.
9. Starting and growing a small business.
10. Temperament.
11. Emotional connection.
12. Emotional intelligence.
13. Building sustainable relationships.
14. The lady and what she reads.
15. The search for the right life partner.
16. Enjoying your singlehood.
17. Building your self-esteem.
18. Developing the right self-confidence.
19. Effective public speaking skills.
20. Managing an online love relationship.
21. Time Management.
22. Hierarchy in marriage.
23. Marital Health.
24. Developing the right skills for today's job market.
25. Choosing the right career.
26. Overcoming the frustrations of unemployment.
27. Understanding the psychology of children.
28. Effective Learning Strategies.
29. The Do's and Don'ts of Courtship.
30. The Principles of marriage.
31. Love and Lust - Understanding the Nuances.
And many others.
If your group is interested in any of these topics, you can book appointment for a seminar or a workshop.
Our organization is officially launched : Love and Purpose Global Outreach (LaPGO) : Redefining Purpose with Love and Insight.
Our main focus is on :
1. Love and Relationships.
2. Marriage.
3. Parenting.
4. Purpose and Self-Discovery.
5. Personal Development.
6. Managing People.
7. Learning.
Stay blessed.



Friday, 28 May 2021

Brief History Of Ghana formerly Gold Coast

According to oral traditions, the ancestors of the Akan people, today the largest ethnic group, entered the country from the north and spread southwards between CE 1200 and 1600. The Fanti State of Denkyira was at that period already established on the coast. By 1400 the Akan had established their Bono and Buida kingdoms in the forested central region.
Their highly developed culture was centred on the city-state, surrounded by vassal villages, and rule by a court where the queen mother was often a more powerful figure than the king who, being sacred, was hidden from the people and consequently often politically isolated. The Akan traded gold and kola nuts for salt and cloth, in the west and north, and were also involved in the slave trade.
In the 15th century, the Ashanti people waged war against the Denkyira Kingdom and by 1700 had gained control of the slave trade. They developed a powerful army and a centralised state, ruled by the Asantehene (king of the Ashanti nation).
Portuguese traders, arriving after 1450 in search of gold and ivory, named the country Gold Coast; appropriately since, by the end of the 16th century, it produced ten per cent of the world’s gold.
From the middle of the 16th century other Europeans began arriving; in the mid-18th century there were Dutch, Danish and British settlements.
The British became involved in internal conflicts when they backed the Fanti against the Ashanti who were extending their power into the coastal areas. There were four wars in the 19th century.
The Bond of 1844, entered into by Britain and the Fanti chiefs, endorsed British control of small pockets of settlement; six years later Britain set up a legislative council to govern these areas. The British took over abandoned Danish settlements in 1850 and the Dutch settlements in 1871. By Orders in Council (1901) Britain declared the southern territory a colony by settlement, the northern territory a protectorate and Ashanti a colony by conquest.
In 1922 a part of the adjoining German territory of Togoland was placed under British administration by a League of Nations Mandate and after World War II it became a UN Trust Territory. The principle of elections was introduced under the 1925 constitution.
During the first half of the 20th century, there was growing national pressure for self-determination, and the UK gradually surrendered control.
The 1946 constitution required the legislative council to have an African majority. Following civic disturbances in 1948, the UK agreed that a committee consisting entirely of Africans should examine the structure of the country’s government.
In 1949, Kwame Nkrumah set up the Convention People’s Party (CPP) to campaign for independence.
Elections took place in 1951, and the following year Nkrumah became the country’s first Premier. The 1954 constitution provided for a legislative assembly of 104 directly elected members, and an all-African Cabinet; the UK kept responsibility for foreign affairs and defence. The CPP campaigned for full independence. The general election of 1956 returned the CPP with a big majority.
Modern-day Ghana was formed when the British-administered part of Togoland voted to join the Gold Coast in an independent state, in a UN-supervised plebiscite in May 1956. Ghana achieved independence within the Commonwealth on 6 March 1957.
In 1960 Ghana became a republic, with Nkrumah as President, and in 1964 a one-party state, the CPP being the sole authorised party.
However, less than a year later, Nkrumah was removed by military coup, the first of four coups.
The army and police set up a National Liberation Council, which dissolved the legislative assembly and suspended the constitution while a new one was drafted.
Political activity was permitted again in 1969; a general election followed in August. It returned the Progress Party; its leader Dr Kofi Busia became Prime Minister, with the National Alliance of Liberals as the opposition.
Two weeks before the elections were to be held in June 1979, a military coup led by junior officers ousted the government. Flt-Lt Jerry J Rawlings and the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council declared that they had assumed power, in order that an honest election could take place. Elections were held as scheduled; they returned the People’s National Party, whose leader Dr Hilla Limann took office as President in September 1979.
Another coup, in 1981, put Rawlings back in power. He suspended the constitution and banned political parties. From December 1981 until November 1992 Ghana was ruled by a Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC). In May 1991 the PNDC government set up a 260-member consultative assembly to oversee the restoration of multiparty democracy.
A committee of constitutional experts was appointed to draft a new constitution for submission to this assembly. In April 1992 the draft constitution was overwhelmingly approved in a referendum; political associations were unbanned; and six opposition movements were granted legal recognition.
The National Democratic Congress (NDC) was formed to contest the elections on behalf of the PNDC. The November 1992 presidential election (witnessed by Commonwealth observers, and considered ‘overall free and fair’) returned Jerry Rawlings (with 58.3 per cent of the vote).
The parliamentary elections of December 1992 returned the NDC with 189 of 200 seats in the new Parliament. The NDC united with the National Convention Party (NCP) and the Every Ghanaian Living Everywhere Party to form the Progressive Alliance.
In January 1993 Rawlings was sworn in as President, and the Fourth Republic was inaugurated. In May 1995, the NCP left the coalition. In the December 1996 elections, President Rawlings was re-elected with 58 per cent of the votes. Turnout was 75 per cent. His party, the NDC, won 133 seats.
The opposition alliance of the New Patriotic Party and the People’s Convention Party won 66 seats, just reaching the level at which they could successfully oppose constitutional changes (which need a two-thirds majority).
The elections were seen as a step towards full multiparty democracy; the opposition had boycotted the 1992 parliamentary elections, but accepted defeat the second time round.
Ghana thus acquired a significant legislative opposition for the first time in 15 years. After Rawlings was chosen as ‘life chairman’ of the party in December 1998, the NDC suffered a serious split in its ranks with the formation by some of its founding members of the National Reform Party, which was registered in July 1999. In 1972, another military coup led by Colonel Ignatius Acheampong overthrew Busia’s government and set up a National Redemption Council. In 1978 Acheampong was replaced by General Frederick Akuffo, who promised civilian rule by the middle of the following year.
 

Businesses & People who make the city move! Advertise here for only ₵10/Week!

 


Businesses & People who make the city move! Advertise here for only ₵10/Week! 

We introduce your small or large business products/Services to the world markets. Adansiweb.xyz Networks (Global Online Business Opportunities Web) is the ultimate best social Networking and Marketplace. Membership is Free, Join today! 

At OBUASI Online you participate in your city community engagement and marketplace web portal within OBC Networks. Post your events FREE to the event calendar and more...
If you are in business, simply click the Businesses tab to add your business listing(FREE) to the global database enabling Obuasionline.ga Network members worldwide to view your listing and contact you directly for business. Welcome and enjoy Obuasionline.ga Network a Global Market Sales Co., Ghana publication.


W/R: Operation Halt II destroys about 20 excavators, several other equipment

 

Operation Halt II takes anti galamsey fight to Western Region; destroys about 20 excavators


Operation Halt II has begun its Western Region operation with a bang

- It destroyed several excavators and other illegal mining equipment along Ankobra, Bonusu, and Bonsa Rivers

- It comes a day after President Akufo-Addo declared his full support for the operation

Operation Halt II has destroyed several excavators along the Ankobra, Bonusu, and Bonsa Rivers in the Western Region.

Made of three units of the Ghana Armed Forces—the 2nd and 5th Infantry Battalions and the 64th Infantry Regiment, Operation Halt II began its Western Region operation on Thursday, May 27, 2021.

The team is being supported by personnel drawn from the Ghana navy, air force, Southern Command, 48th Engineers’ Regiment, and the Support Service.

The operation is expected to end on Saturday 29 May.

According to a report sighted on Asaaseradio.com, the team destroyed two washing machines and floating platforms on the Bonusu River, and 18 excavators along the Rivers Ankobra and Bonsa.

“Ten changfans and two water pumping machines sited along the Bonsa River were also destroyed,” the outlet reported citing a source close to the operation.

“The Operation Halt II team, led by Lieutenant Colonel Prince Tandoh, located and destroyed one excavator, 100 changfan machines, 20 water pumping machines, four motorbikes, and other illegal mining equipment on a site close to the Ankobra River,” the source added.

Operation Halt II’s latest invasion of illegal mining sites in the Western Region comes a day after President Akufo-Addo endorsed the burning of excavators and other equipment confiscated at these mining sites.

“The presence of ‘changfans’ in water bodies is illegal, as is the unlawful use of excavators in protected forest zones,” President Akufo-Addo said on Wednesday, May 26, 2021, during the sod-cutting ceremony for the construction of the first phase of the “Law Village”.

“The devastation caused by this equipment is nothing short of evil and we should not compromise in our efforts to protect our environment, forest reserves, and water bodies.”

In other news, uneasy tension is brewing at Amanase, a community near Suhum along the Accra-Kumasi highway.

News reaching  adansiweb.xyz indicates that some irate youth of the community have blocked the highway in protest of reckless driving after a speeding vehicle crushed an elderly man to death.

They burnt tyres during the spontaneous protest, causing massive vehicular traffic.

According to a report sighted on Starrfm.com.gh, the speeding vehicle crushed the man to death whilst he was crossing the road at about 7:30 pm.

The “man’s mortal remain was shredded and littered on the road,” the report noted.

The irate youth created unbearable gridlock on the highway for close to an hour until the arrival of armed police to the scene.

They reportedly had to resort to the firing of warning shots to disperse the raging youth and clear the road to traffic.

HAS OBUASI BOETE PARK BEEN SEIZED OR MANHANDLED


 

Obuasi which is situated In the Ashanti region has been one of the breed of footballers for decades now.

The likes of John Mensah, Jonathan Mensah, Inkoom are some of the product of Obuasi.

Football in Obuasi is equivalent to fishing at the coastal areas.

For the past decades, a suburb of Obuasi which is Boete has seen massive contribution to the football family in Ghanaian 1st Division and premiere league.

Tijani Joshua(Aduana), Adono Godfred (Bechem), Kanyiri Samad (Wa suntaa), Nurideen Abdulai (Former Wa Allstars), Kuzuma Ebenezer (Former Dreams FC) ,Kuzuma Emmanuel (Former inter allies) many to mention but few...

Most of the youth depend on the colts and Division 3 sides.

But for the past 3 years what Boete used to produce which was football has decreased to 10% and 90% of drug addiction.

This as a result of good gone wrong. The MP for Obuasi East Hon. Dr. Boakye Yiadom did a great but bad call. He reconstructed Boete park but took years to complete leaving the youth to wander in bad and maintained attitude.

But nothing good came out of it.

From sources, Hon. Dr Boakye Yiadom keeps the field keys and opens it anytime he feels like.

Currently there's no team in Boete out of the two (Newcastle and Monaco) playing the colts league on the same field due to lack of training grounds when the one at their disposal is been worshipped.

The youth can't train

There are no colts teams again due to this act.

Was he helping secure better football or he was helping to destroy talent.

The youth of Obuasi Boete are fedup and needs the field for what the love doing.

# FreeBoetePark

# ReduceDrugAddiction

# BringBackTheLove

Rasheed Ramos Jnr (Concerned citizen)

WORTH SHARING

Happy Birthday to the Man who is pleased to be leading that brings such positive and exciting changes


 Happy Birthday to the Man who is pleased to be leading that brings such positive and exciting changes to our communities and also his mission the championing of the poor and dispossessed. 

Through Galaxy foundation Ghana, 310 lives living with various deformities and anomaly’s requiring plastic surgery has been changed and 8,000 lives have been touched through the journey from despair to hope project.

God bless David

God bless Galaxy Foundation Ghana

Obuasi is proud to have you

# Galaxyfoundationghana

# Mtnhereosofchange

# Humanitarianawardsghana

Pls let's wish him well

Tuesday, 25 May 2021

Water under fire | UNICEF - The role of water in conflicts around the world.


 

Water under fire | UNICEF

The role of water in conflicts around the world.UNICEF’s water under fire change agenda

The right to safe drinking water and sanitation is rooted in the Convention on the Rights of the Child, United Nations resolutions and the Geneva conventions. It is a right that is as critical to the survival of children as food, medical care, and protection from attack. But from Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh to Ukraine to Yemen, it is clear that crises have become increasingly protracted and conflict threatens interconnected urban service systems.

To improve children’s access to clean drinking water, and to save lives in conflicts and crises, UNICEF calls for three major changes:

Stop attacks on water and sanitation infrastructure and personnel.
Deliberate and indiscriminate attacks on water and sanitation – and power supplies required for them to function – can be a violation of international humanitarian law. So, too, is the intentional denial of services.

Build a water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) sector capable of consistently providing high-quality water and sanitation services in emergencies.
The WASH sector needs to build technical, operational and personnel capacity to address increasingly complex and protracted crises.

Link life-saving humanitarian responses to the development of sustainable water and sanitation systems for all.
This requires building systems that can ensure the right to safe water and sanitation and prevent outbreaks of disease. And it demands that humanitarian and development organizations collaborate from the start to establish systems that will remain resilient.

UNICEF launched the Water Under Fire campaign in March 2019 to draw global attention to three fundamental areas where changes are urgently needed to secure access to safe and sustainable water and sanitation in fragile contexts. As part of the campaign, it has launched three reports.

Vol. 1: Emergencies, development and peace in fragile and conflict-affected contexts
Syria. Boys and a man collect water from UNICEF-supported water point.

Focuses on the need for immediate action to accelerate water and sanitation service delivery in fragile and conflict-affected contexts; prevent water-related tensions between groups and political entities; and ensure the right to water and sanitation for every child.

Vol. 2: Strengthening sector capacity for a predictable, quality humanitarian response
Yemen. A woman carries a water container.

Is dedicated to the water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) sector’s capacity to deliver a predictable, quality humanitarian WASH response, and provides a change agenda and road map towards strengthening this capacity.

Vol. 3: Attacks on water and sanitation services in armed conflict and the impacts on children
Syria. A girl, carrying jerrycans of water, walks past a pile of debris.

Focuses on attacks on water and sanitation during armed conflicts and highlights issues children face in accessing water in times of war. The report demonstrates the humanitarian impact on children through case studies from Iraq, the State of Palestine, Syria, Ukraine and Yemen.

Attacks on water are attacks on children


Water resources and the systems required to deliver drinking water have been attacked for centuries. All too often, the human dependence on water has been exploited during conflict. Nearly all of the conflict-related emergencies where UNICEF has responded in recent years have involved some form of attack hindering access to water, whether directed against water infrastructure or through incidental harm or tactic used by a party to the conflict to limit water supply to conflict-affected populations. Where there has been conflict, water has been part of the battleground – whether explicitly targeted or incidentally affected by actions or conduct during armed conflict.

When a community’s water supply is cut off, children and families are forced to rely on unsafe water, or leave their homes in search of a new source. At times this may mean families have to reduce or ration their water supplies, other times it means drinking water that is clearly contaminated and dangerous.

For children, the consequences can be deadly, as water and sanitation related diseases remain among the leading causes of death in children under five.

There are different ways that water can be used as a weapon, which include attacking water infrastructure and workers, or denying access.

For example:

  • Attacks on water and sanitation infrastructure: this includes both intentional attacks, such as targeting pipelines or pouring concrete into wells, and inadvertent attacks, where reckless bombardment with no attempt to avoid critical civilian infrastructure results in damaged or destroyed water and sanitation systems.
  • Stopping the flow of water: this can include turning off water pumping stations so pipes run dry, or even shutting down electrical systems so that water pumping station cannot operate.
  • Contaminating water: when water sources are poisoned, the water has been turned into a weapon. This includes throwing dead human or animal bodies in a well to contaminate the water supply as a tactic to deny a community safe water.
  • Attacks on water and sanitation workers: humanitarians and local workers around the world are often at risk when working in conflicts. Many have come under attack, been injured or killed while repairing critical civilian infrastructure. Even the threat of attack can deter maintenance or repair, leaving a community without safe water.
  • Denial of humanitarian access: often in conflicts, humanitarian workers and supplies are denied access to reach communities or areas that need assistance.

But attacks on infrastructure and personnel are just two of the numerous threats affecting children’s access to water and sanitation. In many protracted conflicts, water and sanitation systems aren’t just targeted, but are left either undeveloped or in a state of disrepair. In some cases, there was not an adequate water or sanitation system to begin with, and the onset of conflict simply exacerbates the problem.

Ultimately, children caught up in conflict should not live in fear of bullets and bombs. And nor should they die or suffer for a lifetime by being denied access to water and sanitation services because the water source was attacked or cut off.

Thursday, 20 May 2021

Sad News-Ayow reported death at Prestea

 


Sad News-Another hard working and respectful youth reported at Prestea.

Ayow is a boy who used to live in Sikafour-Abantem(a suburb of Tutuka- Obuasi East Municipal).Informations and comments gathered around town and social medias confirmed that indeed this young guy is dead..

Gweede Baakop3 one on one with Bindiga(Ridwan) a member of those who traveled to Prestea early Thursday 20 of May 2021 morning to help burry our dear brother Ayow ...

Bindiga(Ridwan) said "the dead body had swallowed and so getting bigger and bigger all the time

So the only help to rescue the corpse is to buried him immediately but Police wont allow them to burry him."

The Police Division at Prestea also said "they want better investigations...Until the corpse will be released to Ayow family members for burial..

WHO IS AYOW ?

Ayow is a boy who used to live at Sikafour-Abanten a suburb of Tutuka-Obuasi.

He aged around 25 to 28 years.He completed Ibrahimia Islamic and English J.H.S.Reports say he also completed Obuasi S.H.S. He was a single boy with no child.

He played for Positive Youth F.C formerly Chelsea

Thanks to Bindiga(Ridwan) and the general public for this information. Keep the good work bro.

My greatest condolence goes to the youth of Sikaduase, Libya Parliament, Ayow's family,Friends of Ayow,Bindiga, Gweede Baakop3, Zaid,Tarzan, Slow Rapper Antwi,Ibrahimia school,Muslims worldwide and to the general public..

Don't forget to sign the book of condolence with the comments section below this post.

Adansihene denies allegations he is neck-deep in galamsey

 


Adansiman Progressive Association (APA), a pro-development group aimed at driving home infrastructure for the well-being of locals within the Adansi enclave, has accused the Paramount Chief of involvement in galamsey.

The group says its claims are pivoted on the current state of water bodies in Adansi as it explains the major river that serves as the only source of water for people of Adansi, River Gyemi, has now been destroyed.

This situation, the group fears, could lead to a looming acute water crisis.

Speaking on Akoma FM‘s current affairs and political show GhanAkoma on Thursday, May 20, Organiser for APA Akwasi Aboagye told host of the show that “our investigation and series of checks have revealed that Adansimanhene Opegya Kotwere Bonsrah Afiyie II is neck-deep in the very menace Otumfuo and President Nana Akufo-Addo have been preaching against”.

He further indicated that “on March 22, a team of police together with section of the Adansi Progressive Association arrested some artisans at a mining site”.

“After the arrest, the miners alleged that the site they are working belongs to Adansimanhene. Aside that incident, we have factual proof that point fingers at the Omanhene for his involvement in galamsey. So we will call on the Overlord of Ashanti Kingdom Otumfuo Osei Tutu II to swiftly intervene and save the water bodies in Adansi and its adjoining communities.”

Meanwhile, Adansimanhene Opegya Kotwere Bonsrah Afiyie II has refuted the allegations.

He made this clear at a press conference at the his palace in Fomena.

Public interest advocate Frank Aboagye Danyansah, who is also a native of Adansi, has also shot down the allegations.

He goes on to allege that the convener of APA, Akwasi Aboagye, is alien and should not be taken seriously.

Mr Danyansah explained that “I am not sure this so-called Akwasi Aboagye is a true native of Adansi because he won’t have tarnished the image of his paramount chief. Again, he is even an embattled member of the Adansi Progressive Association because the executives have expelled him on grounds of extortion and impersonation, a man without credibility. Why must you even give him such a big platform to perpetrate lies?” he quizzed.

Mr Aboagye Danyansah urged the public to disregard the palpable lies of Akwasi Aboagye and treat it with the contempt it deserves because Adansimanhene is a true patriot who wouldn’t go against the orders of Asantehene and the president.

Galamsey fight should be within the law – Yao Graham



 Coordinator of the Third World Network (TWN) Dr. Yao Graham, has questioned government on the rules of engagement in the crusade against illegal small-scale mining(galamsey), saying it is not an armed conflict in the way that the rules of engagement in war is for the soldiers to kill anyone they see on site.

He said this in an interview with Komla Adom on the Mid Day News on TV3, Thursday, May 20.

Dr. Graham was speaking on the back of the statement by the Minister of Defence that the safety of the perpetrators of illegal small-scale mining cannot be guaranteed in their engagement with the Task Force mandated to fight the canker in the country. And also the destruction of excavators seized on site by the security officials involved in the crusade against illegal small-scale mining.

He said “the campaign against galamsey is not an armed conflict in the way that the country’s border is being threatened and therefore the rules of engagement that the soldiers should operate under are to kill any enemy force that is crossing the boundary. So one of the questions that arises for me, in relation to the minister’s pronouncement that people’s safety cannot be guaranteed is, what are the rules of engagement? Is it that the military are empowered to shoot anybody they see on site at night because there is a fear that the people are armed? Do we know if they are armed?

“These are all questions that people should be interested in, all of us are interested in the security and safety of our water bodies. I think it is very, very important that we keep this thing within the parameters of the law so the approach to dealing with galamsey can be differentiated from how lynch mobs operate”.

When asked if according to the interpretation of the law of the Minerals and Mining(Amendment Act 2020) LI 2404, anybody can challenge the Ministries of Lands and Forestry and Defence in court for unlawful destruction of properties, he responded that “the best interpretation of the law routinely is the common sense interpretation, so there is no ambiguity in this provision. And I think the first people with the responsibility to uphold the constitution and the law are the officers of the republic, ministers, public servants, public employees of various organizations, including the military”.

According to his assessment of the operation to end the activities of illegal small-scale mining, he applauded the hierarchy of priorities that has been created in the operational apparatus. However, he said “beyond sending the troops in to clear the water bodies, we need to have a sustainable approach to keep the water bodies clean because the troops will not be there always, therefore how do we build a constituency based on consensus? The pronouncement made by the Small Scale Miners Association complaining about basically a misdirected application of force points to some of the challenges to be addressed”.

NDC shoots down all EC’s proposed reforms May 20, 2021



 The National Democratic Congress (NDC) has punched holes into all the proposed electoral reforms by the Electoral Commission, Ghana (EC), calling them a “sham”.

At a press conference addressed by the party’s Director of Elections Elvis Afriyie Ankrah on Thursday, May 20, the party subjected all the four reforms to scrutiny and called for wider consultations.

The Commission on Tuesday, May 18 after a two-day workshop of the Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC) announced reforms agreed upon by stakeholders.

The first is to close polls at 3:00pm instead of the usual 5:00pm.

The Commission, secondly, wants an all-round system where citizens who turn 18, or persons who have not previously registered, may visit any district office with their Ghana Card or passport and register as voters instead of the system of periodic nationwide registration.

“This will help us do away with nationwide registration exercises and go a long way to reducing cost of elections,” the Chair of the Commission, Jean Mensa, added at the press conference.

The Commission also wants an all-year round exhibition exercise through smart phones and other mobile devices by texting to a short code.

Lastly, the EC wants collation done only at the constituency level and transmitted to the regional and national level.

“By adopting this system, the problem of minor inaccuracies with the collation process and unnecessary delays will be reduced significantly,” Mrs Mensa said.

But Mr Afriyie Ankrah said any move to implement reforms ahead of the 2024 elections must begin with the Commission itself.

He said the Commissioners must first of all purge themselves of all the wrong doing which characterised the 2020 elections.

On the first proposal about the poll closing time, for instance, the NDC said it is needless and only going to create chaos.

On the last proposal, Mr Afriyie Ankrah said: “The proposal to have the entry point of data done only at Constituency Collation Centres will introduce another set of opportunities for rigging and manipulation of the election through hacking and other means.

“The way to build further efficiencies into the collation process and eliminate minor inaccuracies is to hire and train competent EC staff to ensure accurate data entry and collation and not to throw away the time-tested practice of collation at the national level.”

He concluded that the EC can never undertake reforms without considering the views of the NDC.

To this end, the former Youth and Sports Minister described all that has been put in the public domain by the EC as a “sham”.

“What is going on in this country is frightening. The EC is the institution that is supposed to ensure that the laws governing political parties are obeyed. So for purposes of achieving whatever agenda, entities that they know will ordinarily not qualify to be political parties they recruit and mobilise and bring them and they all say ‘We agree, We agree’ and they sign. And the NDC which is the biggest opposition party, we are wiped. Is this for real?”

The Assembly member for Gauso East electoral area Hon. Dauda Tahiru has presented GH10,000 worth of shoes to pupils of the Saqquafiya M/A JHS .



Dauda Tahiru, the Assembly member for the Gauso East Electoral Area in the Obuasi Municipality, has donated a GH¢10,000 worth of shoes to pupils of the Saqquafiya Islamic School, the only Islamic school in Obuasi.

Presenting the items to the school, Mr Tahiru, who is also the CEO of YAA-LATIF Engineering, said the donation forms part of his personal commitment to enhance teaching and learning in the school and motivate other stakeholders to contribute to the development of the school.

He advised the school children to learn hard to obtain higher grades to encourage other benevolent persons to assist them to improve on their education and become responsible adults in society.

Himself an old student of the school, Mr Tahiru appealed to parents to prioritize the education of their wards and implored other stakeholders especially the Islamic community to come to the aid of the school.

The Assistant Headteacher of the School, Owusu Boateng, who received the items on behalf of the school, expressed gratitude to Dauda Tahiru and pleaded with other well-meaning Ghanaians and non-governmental organisations to come to the aid of the school.

The headteacher asked parents to guide their children once they come home from school and not engage them in trading and other jobs.

He also appealed to government to extend the Ghana School Feeding Programme to the Saqquafiya School.

“Due to the absence of school feeding in our school, we have lost most of our children to other schools who enjoy school feeding. This has really affected enrolment in Saqquafiya. We need government to intervene.”

Sunday, 16 May 2021

[video]Funny moment Stonebwoy’s daughter introduces her baby to her father and uncle


 

Jidula Catherine the first Born daughter of Ghanaian popular reggae dancehall musician Stonebwoy is fully grown as intelligently introduces a baby to her father and her uncle as her baby .

The video is trending everywhere as netizens wonder how she is so fluent in speaking the English language.

She boldly called Daddy and uncle to come and see her baby.

 

Watch the video below.

[video] An old man caught chopping a young girl, video goes viral

 


An old man who is as old as 70 years or above has been caught having sex with a small girl in a viral video.

In the video, the old man is seen kissing the young girl very passionately . The video is trending on Twitter and many are wondering why a small girl as she is has allowed someone who could be her grandfather to do such a thing with her.

[video] Nana Aba Anamoah finally secures job and scholarship for “Washing bay university graduate.


Ghanaian broadcast journalist Nana Aba Anamoah has shown her love for humanity for several occasions and this is one of a such, she has find a job and scholarship for the washing bay university graduate who went viral two days ago .

Antwi Boasika is a graduate from the University of Ghana legon , he completed with second class upper degree in political science but after his national service has been the house for some years now without a job . So he decided to join the washing bay operation .

Luckily on his part the 28 year old man meet and washed Nana Aba Anamoah’s car where he got the opportunity to spell out his problem to her and God being so good she has find him a job and scholarship abroad.

The young chose to work for some time before he can think of traveling.

 


Kweku Flick reveals how he got money to record his first song [video]



Kumasi based Ghanaian singer who rose to fame with his popular song ” money” has revealed how he got money to record his first song.

He was interviewed in one of the entertainment shows on Okay fm where he says despite the struggles he was going through he sacrifice the little he gets from mom and dad to stake bet . So whenever he wins he uses the money on his studio bills

He revealed that he won like Gh400 several times but he used all the money to record his song

Check out the latest Obuasi Review by Wikipedia

 Obuasi is a Mining Community and town in the southern part of Obuasi Municipal of the Ashanti Region of Ghana.[3] Obuasi is the capital of the Obuasi Municipal which lies south of Ashanti capital city Kumasi 39 miles (59.4 kilometres) away south-west of Kumasi or 1 hour 2 minutes road-drive from Obuasi to Kumasi.[3] Obuasi has a settlement population of 175,043 people.[2] Obuasi gold bar mining community has delicate mosaic from the Ashanti people culture of Ashanti and the semi-island exclave Ashantiland.[3] Obuasi wears a ring of hills as its adornment and Obuasi sits quietly albeit industriously on the soil that births the top-9 single richest bullion gold bar gold mining mining|mine on Earth the Obuasi Gold Mine.[1][3]

Obuasi
Mining Town & Municipality Capital
Obuasi is the location of the 9 largest gold mines on Earth: the Obuasi Gold Mine at the Obuasi Gold bar Mining community in the Ashanti.[1]
Obuasi is the location of the 9 largest gold mines on Earth: the Obuasi Gold Mine at the Obuasi Gold bar Mining community in the Ashanti.[1]
Nickname(s): 
Sikakrom, Gold Town
Motto(s): 
Unity in Development
Obuasi is located in Ashanti
Obuasi
Obuasi
Location of Obuasi within City-state Ashanti
Coordinates: 06°12′00″N 01°41′00″W
City-state Ashanti
MunicipalityObuasi Municipal
Government
 • TypeAbsolute monarchy
 • BodyManhyia Palace
Obuasi Municipal
 • Emperor AsanteheneOsei Tutu II
Elevation
331 ft (101 m)
Population
 (2012)
 • Total175,043[2]
 • Ethnicity
Ashanti people
 • Nationality
Ashanti
Demonym(s)Ashanti
Obuasian
Time zoneGreenwich Mean Time
 • Summer (DST)GMT

Gold Coast region was named after the vast amount of bullion gold bars found in Obuasi and Ashanti.[3]