Published articles by BENJAMIN XORNAM GLOVER, Journalist @ GRAPHIC COMMUNICATIONS GROUP LTD
Thursday, 30 November 2023
Wednesday, 29 November 2023
Free health screening goes to Afienya (Daily Graphic, Wednesday, November 29, 2023 Page 37)
Some residents of Afienya and its environs in the Greater Accra Region have taken part in a free health screening exercise.
The screening which was organised by a pharmaceutical retailer, Top Up Pharmacy, last Monday saw the participants being screened for various ailments such as blood pressure, cholesterol, typhoid, blood sugar, Hepatitis B, as well as Body Mass Index (BMI).
Health experts were on hand to answer questions from the participants about their health to help them to improve their overall well-being.
There were a variety of educational resources available to help people learn more about healthy living and preventive care.
The Head of Sales and Marketing of Top Up Pharmacy, Dr Isaac Buabeng Nyantakyi, explained that November had been designated as diabetes awareness month and his organisation thought it necessary to bring attention to diabetes and its impact on the population.He said the health screening was the company’s way of giving back to the community and helping people take control of their health, saying people in the community who suffered serious ailments would be referred to see a doctor.
Avoid self-medication
Dr Nyantakyi, who is also a pharmacist, advised the public to avoid buying medications from drug peddlers in markets.
He said antibiotic self-medication had been found to contribute to the phenomenon of resistance and associated risk of failure to cure communicable diseases and advised the citizenry to avoid self-medication, overuse and misuse of medication to help control the rising rates of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR).
via: https://www.graphic.com.gh/news/general-news/ghana-news-free-health-screening-goes-to-afienya.html
Overflowing stream banks flood Dawhenya - Residents displaced(Daily Graphic, Wednesday, November 29, 2023 Page 29)
Most of the residents, who reside in the lowland areas of the community, woke up to the sight of water on their premises on Monday morning.
The stream, which flows from the mountains upstream and feeds the Dawhenya Irrigation Dam was said to have overflowed its banks in the early hours of Monday and caused severe flooding.
During a visit to some parts of the flooded community on Tuesday, the Daily Graphic observed there was widespread flooding in the community.
The water, which residents said had shown signs of receding, had submerged a number of houses and kept extending towards dry land in the area.
A resident in the community, Charles Nartey, said some residents fled their homes due to the flooding as the water kept increasing and entering their rooms.
He said they noticed the increasing levels of water in their community around 4 a.m. last Monday and some residents had to evacuate their houses immediately.
He added that some of the affected residents, whose houses got flooded, had to move out to nearby communities such as Prampram, Miotso, Tema and Ashaiman to seek refuge.
Displaced persons
Richard Mohammed, the assembly member for Lalluekpo Electoral Area, one of the affected areas, said over 200 houses had been affected adding that they could no longer sleep in their homes.
He said some of the affected people have had their property destroyed while others had been displaced.
via: https://www.graphic.com.gh/news/general-news/ghana-news-overflowing-stream-banks-flood-dawhenya-residents-displaced.html
Monday, 27 November 2023
Court dismisses contempt application against EC Chair, 2 deputies - But applicant files appeal (Daily Graphic, Monday, November 27, 2023 Page 19)
The High Court in Tema has dismissed an application brought against the Chairperson of the Electoral Commission (EC), Jean Mensa, and her two deputies for contempt of court over the limited voter registration exercise.
The applicant, Precious Ayitah, had prayed the High Court to commit Mrs Mensa, Dr Eric Bossman Asare and Samuel Tettey for contempt of court for going ahead with the limited registration exercise in the district offices of the EC despite an injunction application she filed that sought to put the exercise on hold.
Ruling
The court, presided over by Justice Patricia Quansah, last Friday dismissed the contempt application against the respondents on grounds that it was without basis and awarded a nominal cost of GH¢2,000 against the applicant.
The judge in announcing the decision said the applicant was unable to establish a case against the respondents and also unable to prove that the respondents were personally served with the order of the court.
The allegation that the application was served on one Daniel Addae Nyamekye, designated as a Legal Secretary at the Head office of the EC could not also be proved.
The court said the EC argued that there was no such position as Legal Secretary and no such person known as Daniel Addai Nyamekye is in the employment of the EC.
The court agreed with the EC and held that if there was any doubt it ought to go in favour of the respondents, and that the applicant had failed to prove that the three commissioners were duly served, thus the application was without basis.
The court indicated that the evidence adduced by the applicant was not strong enough to enable the court to commit the respondents to contempt.
Appeal
Meanwhile the applicant, who was dissatisfied with the ruling of the High Court, filed an appeal at the Court of Appeal to overturn the ruling.
The Lawyer for the applicant, Nii Kpakpo Samoa Addo, told the Daily Graphic that the appeal was filed last Friday.
Background
In her contempt suit against the EC Chairperson and her deputies, Ms Ayitah, a resident of Otsebleku, near Afienya in the Greater Accra Region, which is about 44.3 kilometres from the district office of the EC in Prampram, said the originating motion on notice and interlocutory injunction was served on the respondents on September 8, 2023, to restrain them from going ahead with the limited registration exercise in the district offices of the EC.She argued that the respondents disregarded the said injunction application and proceeded with the limited registration exercise in the district offices of the EC.
Ms Ayitah, in her affidavit in support of the application, said the respondent’s intention to proceed with the limited registration exercise at the district offices jeopardised the outcome of the initial interlocutory injunction application and the substantive suit that was brought to the court, hence contemptuous of the court.
via : https://www.graphic.com.gh/news/politics/ghana-news-court-dismisses-contempt-application-against-ec-chair-2-deputies-but-applicant-files-appeal.html
Friday, 24 November 2023
Ashaiman Constituency: Bustling town, home of migrants (Daily Graphic, Friday, November 24, 2023 Pages 24/25)
Life goes on 24 hours without a blink of the eye by most of the residents.
The market, car parks/lorry stations, entertainment joints and homes are usually a beehive of activity.
Due to the influx of people from the West African sub-region, many refer to the community as the “United States of West Africa”.
The Ashaiman municipality was carved out of the Tema Municipality (now Tema Metropolitan Authority - TMA), as one of the newly created districts in 2008 by LI 1889 and Local Government Act of 1993 (Act 462).
It is one of the 34 assemblies in the Greater Accra Region.
It was weaned from the TMA during the tenure of former President John Agyekum Kufuor with the view to bring governance to the doorsteps of the people and accelerate development in the area.
The Municipality shares boundaries with the TMA to the east, Ledzokuku Municipal Assembly to the south, Adentan Municipal Assembly to the north and La Nkwantanang Madina Municipality to the west.
The 2021 Population and Housing Census put the population of the area at 208,060, comprising 103,410 males and 104,650 females.
Migrants
Traditionally, Ashaiman falls under the Tema Traditional Council.
But from its small beginnings, the constituency has increasingly become the haven of a large number of migrants from all over the country and some West African countries.
The constituency has expanded, giving birth to many suburbs which bear both local and foreign names.
Localities like Tulaku, Market Square, Fitter Line, Taabo Line, Tsinai Agbe, Zongo Laka, Roman Down, Night Market, Asensu Bar, Official Town, Taifa, Newtown, Valco Flats, Afariwaa, Christian Village and Atadeka are spiced up with exotic flavours such as Middle East, Jericho, Lebanon Zone 1 to 5, New York and Washington, among others.
Political dynamics
With the exception of the 2000 parliamentary elections when the New Patriotic Party (NPP) candidate, Emmanuel Kinsford Kwesi Teye, won the seat, Ashaiman has been a National Democratic Congress (NDC) stronghold.
Albert Boakye Okyere — MCE for Ashaiman
But for infighting in 2000, the NDC would have won the seat as has been the norm since the creation of the constituency in 1992.
Pundits believe the internal wrangling prior to the elections gave the NPP an easy passage, but that view has been rejected by the NPP supporters in the constituency on the grounds that the presidential election in the same year favoured the NPP candidate, John Agyekum Kufuor, who polled 28,393, representing 58.20 per cent, as against NDC’s John
Evans Atta Mills, who polled 17,603, representing 36.08 per cent.
To prove their case, the NDC reclaimed the seat in 2004 when Alfred Kwame Agbesi returned to the fold to win the seat with 53,559 votes after beating Emmanuel Kinsford Kwesi Teye of the NPP who secured 36,044.
Since then, the NDC has repeatedly retained the seat.
The current Member of Parliament (MP) for Ashiaman is Ernest Henry Norgbey of the NDC, who won the seat in the 2016 general election and went ahead to retain it in 2020.
In the 2020 election, Mr Norgbey polled 73,316 votes, representing 61.59 per cent votes, to maintain the seat for the NDC, while Labaran Yakubu Barry of the NPP, his closest contender, secured 45,730 votes, representing 38.41 per cent.
For the presidential election, former President John Mahama of the NDC secured 76,327 votes, representing 64.17 per cent, while President Nana Akufo-Addo polled 41,506, representing 34.89 per cent.
Mr Norgbey was retained by delegates of the NDC in the party’s parliamentary primaries held in May 13 this year as the NDC parliamentary candidate for election 2024.
Ernest Henry Norgbey — MP for Ashaiman
However, his third term bid to represent the people of Ashaiman in Parliament will be determined after the December 2024 parliamentary election as the constituency awaits the winner of the NPP parliamentary primaries in constituencies where the party has no sitting MPs on December 2, 2023.
The three contestants who have been approved for the NPP primaries are: Essel Justice King, Thomas Abotibala Adongo and Alhaji Labaran Yakubu Barry, who was the NPP parliamentary candidate for the 2020 election.
Like any inner city in Ghana, Ashaiman is one of the economically viable and vibrant communities but with some negatives.
A first-time visitor to the town will notice a plethora of banks, non-banking institutions, as well as other businesses scrambling for any available space to either set up new businesses or open new branches.
However, Ashaiman has over the years been perceived as the citadel of all sorts of crime.
Filth and bad roads have also engulfed the area in recent times.
Roads
One major concern of the people of Ashaiman is bad roads.
The poor state of the road near the Mandela Park intersection after a rainfall
Ashaiman, it is estimated, has a total of 166 kilometres network of roads, with only 28 km representing 17 per cent paved, leaving the remaining 137 km, representing 83 per cent, unpaved.
A civil servant, Richard Avorgbedor, told the Daily Graphic that the roads connecting major suburbs in Ashaiman were so deplorable and that various assurances by the government to fix them had failed to materialise.
He said inner roads such as the Ashaiman Traffic Light to the Presby Junction section of the Ashaiman-Adjei Kojo Road, Ashaiman Main Market to the Lebanon section of the Ashaiman overhead to the Zenu Road, Ashaiman Newtown junction to the Afariwa junction road, and the Community 22 and Lebanon inner roads were among the road networks in a deplorable state.
Demonstration
Moved by the poor road network, a group calling itself Concerned Citizens of Ashaiman embarked on a demonstration on October 3, 2023, to protest against the deplorable nature of roads within the municipality.
The Assembly member for the Naa Amerley Electoral Area, Ayiku Kubutey, bemoaned the poor state of the roads, adding that in spite of numerous promises by the government, the situation remained unchanged, thus having a negative impact on economic activities in the municipality.
The MP for Ashaiman, Ernest Henry Norgbey, in an interview, said the government had ignored the pleas of the people of Ashaiman for long, adding that the demonstration was to serve as a signal to the government that the request of the people could no longer be ignored.
Response
The Municipal Chief Executive, Albert Boakye Okyere, in an interview with the Daily Graphic, gave the assurance of the government’s commitment to reconstruct roads in the municipality.
He said the government had already taken steps to improve the roads by awarding a 10 km drainage contract which was ongoing, adding that once the drains were constructed, the roads would be fixed.
“Roads in the area cannot be completed under one administration.
Government is a continuum; we have done some and we are hoping to do
more for the people of Ashaiman,” he said.
Education/ Health
The constituency is a beneficiary of the E-Block initiative instituted by the NDC government to enhance access to secondary education.
The school was to complement the existing Ashaiman Senior High School.
Unfortunately, the project which is about 80 per cent complete, has been abandoned.
The MP for the area said in spite of efforts to get the government to have the project completed and handed over for use had been totally neglected.
Ashaiman Sewerage Treatment System
The MCE for Ashaiman said the assembly was committed to completing all projects started by previous governments, including the E-Block, adding that the assembly had constituted a team to follow up the project with the relevant agencies towards the early completion of the facility.
In the area of health care, Mr Okyere indicated that Ashaiman had been slated to benefit from the government’s Agenda 111 hospitals to help improve health services in Ashaiman and its adjoining communities.
The 100-bed hospital being constructed under the government's flagship Agenda 111 will be constructed by three contractors at a cost of US$ 12 million.
It is scheduled to be completed by the end of the third quarter of 2024.
He explained that although the Municipality boasts of a Polyclinic, which was recently upgraded to the status of a primary hospital to meet the health needs of the growing population of Ashaiman, some residents were compelled to travel to the Tema General Hospital and other private facilities to seek health care.
Mr Okyere commended President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and gave the assurance that the assembly would ensure the effective and efficient implementation of the project.
He also commended the Ghana Armed Forces for releasing part of its lands at Michel Camp, the base of the First Battalion of Infantry of the Ghana Army, for the project.
Mr Norgbey, for his part, welcomed the initiative aimed at improving access to healthcare facilities by the people of Ashaiman.
Sanitation
On sanitation, the MCE said increased population growth and rapid urbanisation had resulted in the generation of large quantities of solid waste but gave the assurance that the assembly was doing its best to address the situation.
In terms of household toilets, he said prior to his assumption of office, the number of people with access to household toilets in the Municipality stood at 1,300, but currently the figure stood at over 9,000.
Mr Okyere said the government had also constructed an ultra-modern Simplified Sewerage Facility in the Municipality, which was connected to over 25,000 low income beneficiaries in the Ashaiman New Town and TDC Quarters area, to help address the sanitation challenges.
via: https://www.graphic.com.gh/features/opinion/ghana-news-ashaiman-constituency-bustling-town-home-of-migrants-2.html
Thursday, 23 November 2023
Freight Forwarders call for increased consultations(GraphicOnline, Thursday, November 23, 2023/ Daily Graphic Mon November 27, 2023 Page 75 ))
Speaking at a press conference in Tema on Tuesday, November 21, 2023, to highlight some critical issues affecting the freight forwarding industry, Mr Akrong said the Ghanaian freight forwarding community plays a pivotal role in the nation’s economic development in both trade facilitation and revenue generation for the country, hence, the need for them to be consulted whenever policies are to be rolled out.
Valuation challenges
The GIFF president listed the valuation of goods by the Customs Division of the Ghana Revenue Authority as one of the issues facing their sector. He said although valuation had been a sore point in doing business at the ports, the situation has been further exacerbated by a recent imposition of a reference price list for the valuation of goods by the Board of the GRA. He argued that this new directive directly contradicted international trade agreements, particularly those under the World Trade Organisation’s (WTO) Trade Facilitation Agreement (TEA).
“As signatories to the WTO, Ghana is bound by principles that advocate for fair and transparent valuation,” he said, adding that the Customs Act 2015, Act 891 clearly and unequivocally states how valuation for goods should be done.
He argued that it was illegal for the GRA to create a certain minimum value or reference price list for valuation purposes, stressing that several importers have been saddled with this imposition even though they have provided all evidence of the genuineness of their values.
Mr Akrong posited that all these policies added to the high cost of doing business at the ports and also had a direct effect on the cost of goods on the market and urged a reconciliation of the policy to align with international standards to foster a conducive environment for trade.
Exemption law
He said the recent passage of the Exemption Act, 2022, Act 1083 by Parliament also did not go through consultation with his outfit before its introduction, adding that the passage and implementation of the law have created obstacles in the clearance process, affecting not only private enterprises but also hindering the clearance of government cargoes at the Ports.
Mr Akrong revealed that data available showed, for example, that Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) and the Cocoa Marketing Board, for the last three quarters in 2023, have a total of over 900 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) on the Uncleared Cargo List mainly due to lack of exemptions.
“The sad part is the accrual of demurrage charges to the shipping lines, which is an enormous burden on the government,” he said. GIFF, therefore, advocated for a review of the legislation to ensure that it served its intended purpose without obstructing the essential movement of goods, particularly those crucial to government operations.
SIGMAT
The GIFF President listed the Interconnected System for the Management of Goods in Transit (SIGMAT), which he described as reminiscent of the Cargo Tracking Note as one of the failed policies introduced, and maintained that his outfit opposes the policy, adding that the government needed to reassess and rectify policies that may inadvertently impede the efficiency of the logistics and supply chain operationsHe said the Government’s recent directive to importers in the cooking oil industry to use only the seaport as the point of entry has created new challenges for players in that sector, adding that the industry players, especially those along the West African sub-region, have to invest more resources in shipping their goods to Ghana’s seaports.
Mr Akrong argued that in an environment characterised by volatility, uncertainty, complexity and ambiguity, the frequent changes in policies without consultation with key stakeholders posed significant challenges to the operations of GIFF members.
He, therefore, called for a collaborative approach between the government and industry stakeholders in the formulation of policies that were not only responsive to current global dynamics but also supportive of the growth and sustainability of the freight forwarding sector.
https://www.graphic.com.gh/business/business-news/freight-forwarders-call-for-increased-consultations.html
Saturday, 18 November 2023
KOICA, Volunteers mark day at Dawhenya (Daily Graphic, Saturday, November 18, 2023 Page 21)
The Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) and other volunteers have organised an event to sensitise children at Dawhenya to sanitation and hygiene to commemorate this year’s International Volunteers Day 2023.
The event, targeted at children in the Dawhenya Methodist Basic and Dawhenya D. A. schools, saw the volunteers, who are currently serving in Ghana, engage the children in activities on sanitation and hygiene.
Other partners of the event included the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), the United States Peace Corps and UN Volunteers.
World Volunteer Day
International Volunteer Day, observed annually, is a United Nations initiative designed to inspire volunteer-involving organisations and individuals to champion volunteerism.
The day is also used to encourage governments to actively support volunteer efforts and acknowledge the invaluable contributions of volunteers towards the attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) on local, national and international scales.
The theme for this year’s celebration, “If everyone did” was a
clarion call that if everyone played their part in improving lives by
responding to challenges facing the world, it would be a better place
for peace and development.
Commitment
The Country Director of KOICA Ghana Office, Dong Hyun Lee, emphasised the special significance of this year's commemoration for KOICA.
He highlighted the ongoing commitment of KOICA to deploy volunteers to developing countries under the World Friends Korea (WFK) Programme.
Mr Lee further underscored KOICA's belief in the pivotal role of a hygienic learning environment and healthy students as the bedrock for inclusive, high-quality education.
That, he said, prompted the collaboration with partner agencies to impart knowledge on proper oral hygiene and handwashing practices to students at the Dawhenya Cluster of Schools.
Mr Lee expressed KOICA's enduring support for Ghana's education system and commended the global community of volunteers for their outstanding efforts in addressing the development needs of countries such as Ghana.
Importance
The acting Country Director of Peace Corps Ghana, Jo Anne Yeager, reiterated the importance of volunteerism stressing it helped create positive change in the society.
She said Ghana held a special place in the history of Peace Corp because it was the very first country to host volunteers in 1961.
She said over the past 62 years, Ghana had hosted close to 5,000
volunteers who had worked in underserved communities under agriculture,
health and education with a special focus on science, technology,
engineering and mathematics by providing valuable instruction to Junior
High School students.
Behavioural Change
A Senior Representative of JICA Ghana Office, Kohei Takimoto, commended the partners for coming together to offer support for education and health for the children at Dawhenya which he expressed the hope would go a long way to change behaviours in the community.
The Partnership and Mobilisation Officer, UN Volunteers, Francis Ofosu, said the selflessness exhibited by the volunteers would leave a lasting impact on the children and urged all to embrace volunteerism in order to make a difference in their communities.
The Headteacher of Dawhenya Methodist ‘B’ Basic School, Rita Arhin, said in addition to teaching, the schools in the cluster strongly believed that health was wealth.
Hence from Kindergarten to JHS, the school authorities intentionally and diligently inculcated healthy lifestyle living to promote good health among the learners and their caregivers outside the school.
via: https://www.graphic.com.gh/news/general-news/ghana-news-koica-volunteers-mark-day-at-dawhenya.html
Thursday, 16 November 2023
President inaugurates 15 gantry cranes - Cuts sod for phase 2 of Tema Port Expansion (Daily Graphic, Thursday, November16, 2023 Page 16)
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has inaugurated a fleet of new gantry cranes and also cut the sod for the commencement of phase two of the Tema Port Expansion Project.
The inauguration of the 15 additional gantry cranes and the commencement of civil works under phase two of the Tema Port Expansion Project, operated by Meridian Port Services Ltd (MPS), will add 270,000 square metres to the existing one million square metres and set in motion a transformation that will fundamentally alter Ghana's standing in the maritime industry in West Africa.
At the ceremony yesterday, President Akufo-Addo said the project would inure positively to the growth and development of the Tema Harbour.
The President recalled his visit to Tema on November 8, 2017, during a regional tour of the Greater Accra Region when the CEO of MPS presented to him a vision of what Terminal Three of the Tema Port would become and, six years on, that vision had been realised in its full glory.
President Akufo-Addo said through collaboration with international partners, Ghana had established a world-class trade infrastructure that did not only meet global standards but also signalled to investors, both local and international, that Ghana was open for business.
This achievement, the President said, was no small feat and it reflected the immense potential that the nation held.
“The substantial investments made in this vast land space and the state-of-the-art equipment we see today have tripled the port's capacity. This indicates that Ghana is poised for unprecedented trade growth. “Our strategic location, situated at the crossroads of the world, gives us a distinct advantage, offering a welcoming gateway for trade in our region and beyond,” the President said.
President Akufo-Addo said since taking office, his government had placed a high priority on the development of the agricultural sector through various initiatives, including the Planting for Food and Jobs and the Economic Enclave Project, under the Ghana CARES programme.
He said in the face of global population growth and disruptions in world food supply systems, Ghana had remained resilient due to the measures his administration had put in place.
Potential
He was of the firm belief that Ghana had the potential to become the world's leading exporter of agricultural produce, thanks to the abundant resources, including favourable weather conditions, ample water, and fertile land.
The President, however, said what the nation lacked over the years was modernisation and the robust logistics chain required to realise that potential.
He said the MPS Terminal 3 infrastructure was a good example of a logistics platform that would drive that vision to reality.
He stated that it was not prudent for Ghana to continue importing when the country had the capability to create jobs for its vibrant youth population by supporting developments and investing in critical port infrastructure that provided the foundation for industries to create the much-needed jobs and foster the export-driven economy that the nation wanted to develop.
AfCFTA
President Akufo-Addo said the emergence of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), whose secretariat is hosted by Ghana, represented an opportunity for Africa to strengthen immeasurably intra-African trade as a powerful avenue to develop the continent’s vast economic potential.
The President expressed his optimism that, despite the challenges Ghana might be facing, the nation would once again prove its resilience as it continued to invest in vital sectors of the economy.
The Minister of Transport, Kwaku Ofori Asiamah, said to facilitate and enhance trade, the road from the port to the Tema Motorway was receiving urgent attention.
He added that the Ministry, in collaboration with its partners, was going through the necessary legal regime and documentation.
He gave an assurance that by the first quarter of 2024, construction
works on the road from Community Three to the Tema Motorway would start.
Economic growth
In his welcome address, the Chief Executive Officer of MPS, Mohamed Samara, said the gantry cranes represented an additional investment of over $50 million in Ghana's maritime sector, a testament to the commitment of MPS to foster economic growth.
He added that the high-tech ship-to-shore cranes, classified as Super-Post Panamax, boasted the capability to service the world's largest vessels, featuring an impressive outreach of 66 metres and the ability to handle containers up to the 23rd row of vessels.
These cranes also offer the unique ability to stack containers over 10 units high on deck, equipped with twin-lift spreaders capable of handling loads of up to 65 tons.
The Director General of the Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority (GPHA), Michael Achagwe Luguje, said Terminal Three at the Tema Port stood as a testament to successful business partnerships between GPHA and its investment partners at MPS, and added that the impressive world-class facility was a model of what could be achieved when like-minded entities came together with a shared vision.
Present at the ceremony were the President of Africa Global
Logistics, Philippe Labonne; Regional Managing Director of APM
Terminals, Igor van den Essen; Chairman of the MPS Board, Dr Edmund Osei
Tutu Prempeh; Director of the Port of Tema, Sandra Opoku; MCE of Tema,
Yohane Amarh Ashitey, among others.
Thursday, 9 November 2023
ECG, JICA builds capacity of electrical engineers, technicians from selected West African countries(Graphic Online, Thursday, November 9, 2023)
Electrical engineers and technicians from four West African countries have started a training course at the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) Training School in Tema in the Greater Accra Region with the aim of enhancing their capacities.
The course funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency
(JICA) forms part of JICA's electrical engineers training for African
countries project, under its technical cooperation support for Africa.
24
participants were selected from the Electricity Distribution and Supply
Authority of Sierra Leone, Liberia Electricity Company, National Water
and Electricity Company in The Gambia and Northern Electricity
Distribution Company (NEDCo) of Ghana.
The training programme is in two parts, namely Engineering Training and Technicians Training Courses. It will end on November 24, 2023 and December 15, 2023 respectively.
The training for technicians would cover maintenance methods for power equipment including overhead lines and underground cables, while the course for the engineers will cover power system protection and control, distribution system planning and network design.
Professionalism
Opening the training session on Monday, October 30, 2023, the Deputy
Managing Director of the ECG, Kwadwo Ayensu Obeng admonished the
engineers and technicians to take the course seriously adding that the
participants were expected to apply the lessons learnt to address the
challenges with power supply and distribution in their respective
countries.
He said the ECG Training Centre has trained a lot of
foreign nationals including personnel from our sister ECOWAS countries
and others across the globe including Afghanistan.
“Quite
often, when we undertake training in other European or Asian countries,
the case studies and challenges presented are different from what
pertains in our home countries. For choosing ECG you stand to gain from
examples and case studies similar to challenges in your home countries,”
he said
He commended the JICA Ghana Office and the Japanese government for their continuous support to the ECG, including helping the transform the facility into a training centre of excellence.
The Director of the ECG Training School, Godfred Mensah said the ECG Training Centre has a close partnership with JICA since 2010 and both institutions have collaborated to implement a Technical Assistance Project on Electrical Engineers Training for African countries from 2013 to 2016.
This, he explained has contributed to enhancing the training capacity of the ECG Training Centre adding that the centre has been accredited by the National Board for Professional and Technician Examinations (NAPTEX) of Ghana and was recognized by the West African Power Pool (WAPP) and Japan International Co-operation Agency (JICA) Ghana, as one of their centres of excellence used for capacity building of engineers within the West African Sub-Region.
“The centre has evolved to become the beacon for engineering training in the sub-region and provides trainings and consultancy services for other corporate institutions, serving such entities as NEDCo,VRA, GRIDCo, Bui Power Authority, as well as electricity distribution and supply Institutions of Liberia, Sierra Leone, Gambia as well as Afghanistan.” He said adding that facility also serves other industries in the mining, oil and gas industries.
He charged the trainees to be diligent and interested in what they would be taught, to be able to manage the electricity supply system of their respective countries
Power distribution
The Chief Representative of JICA Ghana Office, Suzuku Momoko, said her organisation was committed to continuing its support for the sub-region in power production, supply and distribution systems.
She said for 60 years, JICA had cooperated with Ghana, Liberia, The Gambia and Sierra Leone, using Japanese technology to contribute to the economic and social development of the beneficiary countries.
Ms Momoko said in the energy sector, JICA strives to realise a society in which all people have stable access to affordable, clean energy and resources.
She said in Ghana, JICA has supported the reinforcement of substations in the reinforcement of power supply to Accra Central area as well sas improvement of the power distribution system in Tamale and Sunyani area through a grant aid scheme adding that in September this year, JICA has concluded a preparatory survey for a grant aid project for the construction of a new substation in Tamale.Ms Momoko said in Sierra Leone and Liberia JICA has supported power distribution improvement in these countries and developed the capacities of engineers and technicians to formulate and implement proper operations of their power supply systems.
Ms Momoko said JICA through the ECG Training Centre have implemented the Electrical Engineers Training for African countries project since 2016 where ECG in collaboration with Japanese expects to develop comprehensive and structured textbook and other training materials to enhance the capacity of trainees.
“We are happy to observe that even after seven years from the project completion, ECG Training Centre continuously provides training to engineers and technicians using the training materials developed by the project.” She said
Tuesday, 7 November 2023
A.M.E Zion Church supports flooded southern Volta communities( Daily Graphic, Tuesday, November 7, 2023 Page 40)
The Africa Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E) Zion Church has extended its humanitarian gestures to other flood-hit communities in the southern part of the Volta Region.
The church yesterday presented relief items to affected communities, including Agbozume in the Ketu Municipality, Seva, Havedzi and Horvi in the Keta Municipality.
The plight of the flood victims in the southern part of the Volta Region appears to have been forgotten in the national drive to offer relief to flood victims.
The gesture from A.M.E. Zion Church follows an earlier humanitarian gesture extended to the Fiaxor community last week in the Anlo District in the Volta Region.
Items
The church presented 80 bags of 25-kilogramme (Kg) rice, six maxi bags of maize, eight maxi bags of gari, 20 cartons of cooking oil, 20 cartons of mackerel, 145 crates of eggs, as well as bales of clothing, worth GH¢125,000 to the affected communities.
The Chairman of the Presiding Elder Council of the East Ghana Conference, Rev. Felix Ernest Kwaku Dodor, presented the items on behalf of the Bishop of the church in charge of the Western West Africa Area of the A.M.E Zion Church, Rt Rev. Dr Hilliard Kwashie Dela Dogbe yesterday.
He said the church was touched by the plight of the people, especially the women and children, hence the intervention.
Rev. Dodor said the disaster required the church to come together to
support the flood victims, irrespective of whether they were members of
the church or not.
He extended the sympathies of the church to the families and communities that had been impacted by the floods.
The Chairman of the Presiding Elder Council of the East Ghana Conference expressed the hope that the items would go a long way to resolve the challenges that had been occasioned by the floods.
He commended members of the church, both home and abroad, for rallying to the aid of the affected persons.
The Resident Minister of the Ebenezer Society of the church at Agbozume, Rev. Wisdom Doyibor, said the community had suffered flooding since May this year due to heavy rains and the impact continued to linger on.
Potable water
The Dumega of Seva, Atsu Amesey, on behalf of the beneficiaries, expressed appreciation to the AME Zion Church for the intervention.
Meanwhile, residents at Seva have bemoaned the lack of potable water.
A resident, Robert Aglago, said the lack of potable water in the area had compelled women and children to walk long distances sometimes to Abor to fetch water despite numerous requests to the government to come to their aid.
He said their plight had been compounded by the recent floods which had also destroyed the access road from Anyako to Seva.
Another community member, Rita Akotey, said the situation had affected every aspect of their lives, adding that the lack of potable water had affected health and education as their children could not get water to bath in the morning before going to school.
She said the only access to potable water was for the townfolks to contribute money to purchase water which was stored in water tanks.
Ms Akotey appealed for boreholes to be constructed for the community to address their needs.
Wednesday, 1 November 2023
Fiaxor community appeals for relief items - AME Zion Church goes to its aid (Daily Graphic, Wednesday, November 1, 2023 Back Page)
Residents of Fiaxor and its surrounding communities in the
Anloga District in the Volta Region have called on the government to
send relief items to the area to assuage their suffering following the
flood that has submerged all communities in the area.
The over 500 residents have had their situation worsened by rising waters in the Keta Lagoon, which is also fed by flood waters from the spillage of the Akosombo Dam.
The road from Kome Junction, Xenui, Alakple, Atito, Kome, Deta, Kodzi to Fiaxor have all been taken over by flood waters.
Churches, schools and the chief’s palace have all been engulfed, with residents marooned in their flooded homes.
Some have been rendered homeless as they are left with nothing to salvage.The Regent of Fiaxor, Togbui Zoiku, made the appeal when the leadership of the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Zion Church presented relief items to the community yesterday.
The items included 1,000 bags of sachet water, 300 packs of bottled water, 100 bags of rice, 10 maxi bags of gari, 10 cartons of tomato paste, 100 crates of eggs, 20 cartons of cooking oil, bales of clothing and treated mosquito nets worth GH¢80,000 in total.
Togbui Zoiku said the community needed the government’s attention to relieve the people of their situation.
The Bishop of the Western West Episcopal Area of the AME Zion Church, Rt Rev. Dr Hilliard Kwashie Dela Dogbey, said the gesture was part of the church's responsibility to assist and support the vulnerable in society.
Responding to the plea for the community to use the church's facility as a temporary classroom facility for the Fiaxor AME Zion Basic School, Rt Rev. Dr Dogbey said as a church that ran 612 schools, they were ready to give out the chapel for use.
He, however, appealed to the GES and the Ministry of Education to support the people with teaching, learning materials and other resources to enable the children to learn.
He also appealed to the Inter Ministerial Committee on Flooding to extend its intervention to communities in the Southern Volta Region, including those along the Keta Lagoon.
Economic impact
The Assembly Member for the area, Freeman Kwame Fiagbe, said the flooding had negatively impacted the fishing activity of the area.
Fishing, he said, was the main economic activity of the people in the area.
He added his voice to the need for the government and philanthropists to come to the aid of the communities.
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