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How sustainable will the cedi gains be?

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Professor Godfred Bokpin is an Economist play videoProfessor Godfred Bokpin is an Economist

An economist, Professor Godfred Bokpin, has attributed the recent appreciation of the Ghanaian cedi to coordinated efforts between the Ministry of Finance and the Bank of Ghana.

According to him, the collaboration between fiscal and monetary policy authorities is reflected in the current gains being observed in the local currency.

However, he cautioned that despite the cedi’s sudden and significant strengthening, sustainability remains a concern.

“The question is whether this appreciation is not sudden and aggressive. I would say the answer is yes,” Professor Bokpin said, as quoted by 3news.com.

“If the strengthening is a result of general improvement in the economy, you’re likely to see a gradual appreciation of the cedi.”

He explained that, in the short term, the optics are favourable, especially as inflation is likely to trend downward.

“Actually, the President was right when he said that by the first quarter of 2026, inflation will come down to single digits. That is largely consistent with projections,” he noted.

Nonetheless, Professor Bokpin stressed the importance of focusing on the long-term outlook.

“The question is also: how do we plan going forward? We will face considerable challenges in sustaining these gains because the government cannot operate the 2025 budget in the same way in 2026 and 2027,” he warned.

He explained that the government will eventually have to loosen its grip on expenditure in order to implement policies, which will introduce liquidity into the economy.

“As the government begins to spend optimally and economic activity picks up, the forces of demand and supply will ultimately determine the cedi’s true position,” he added.

Professor Bokpin also commented on the Bank of Ghana’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), suggesting that it is taking a cautious stance by maintaining a high policy rate.

“You see that the Monetary Policy Rate is 28%, and inflation is around 21%. That gap is quite wide. Meanwhile, the Treasury bill rate has come down to about 15%-16%. The Monetary Policy Rate remains high. We must be mindful of the kind of economy we want to build. The positioning of the exchange rate must align with that vision. What matters most is stability and predictability,” he concluded.

SSD/MA

Gospel Singer Joe Mettle And Wife Causes Stir On Social Media

Joe Mettle is one of the popular gospel musician we have in the country.

Even though we have many popular gospel musicians including the likes of Christiana Love, Celestine Donkor, Gifty Osei, Brother Sammy, Cecelia Marfo, Florence Obinim among others.

Joe Mettle whose real name is Joseph Oscar NII Armah Mettle is a Ghanaian born gospel singer, song writer, brand influencer and an entrepreneur.

Joe mettle has been associated with acts including the likes of Ohema Mercy, Daugthers of Glorious Jesus, Tegoe Sisters, Majid Michel, Jackie Appiah, Emelia Brobbey, Yvonne Nelson, John Dumelo, Van Vicker, Nana Ama Mcbrown, Berla Mundi, Serwaa Amihere, Ceccy Twum, Eugene Zuta, Joe Beecham, NII Okai, Danny Nettey, Abeiku Santana, Kwame Sefa Kyei among others.

Joe mettle is married to Salomey Selassie Dzisa.

He gain immense popularity after hosting gospel programs through out the country in ICGC and Pentecost Churches.

He is one of the gospel musicians who is very active on social media where he usually interacts with with his fans and followers.

See exclusive photos of Joe Mettle with his wife.

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Enhancing Elegance and Personal Style

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Hairstyles are a powerful form of self-expression and can dramatically enhance a lady’s overall appearance. A beautiful hairstyle not only complements facial features but also reflects personality, mood, and sometimes cultural identity. With endless styling options available today, women have the freedom to experiment and find looks that suit their lifestyle, hair type, and preferences.

One of the timeless beautiful hairstyles for ladies is the classic long, flowing waves. This style exudes femininity and softness, perfect for both casual and formal occasions. Soft curls or beach waves add volume and movement, making hair look naturally elegant and effortlessly chic. Achieving this look often involves using curling irons or rollers, followed by light hair sprays to maintain the bounce.

For ladies who prefer shorter styles, the bob cut remains a popular and stylish choice. Whether it’s a sleek, straight bob or a textured, layered one, this haircut frames the face beautifully and gives off a modern, confident vibe. The bob is low maintenance but versatile, allowing for different parting styles and even color highlights to add dimension.

Braided hairstyles are another stunning option, combining tradition and trendiness. From intricate cornrows and fishtail braids to elegant crown braids and box braids, braids offer creativity and cultural richness. They can protect natural hair from damage while providing a unique, eye-catching look suitable for everyday wear or special events.

For more formal or special occasions, updos such as buns, chignons, or twisted styles provide a polished and sophisticated appearance. These hairstyles keep hair neatly in place while allowing for decorative accessories like pins, flowers, or jeweled clips to add glamour.

Finally, embracing natural hair texture has become a celebrated trend. Whether curly, coily, or wavy, natural hairstyles highlight beauty and authenticity. Using moisturizing products and defining curls enhances natural patterns, making the hair look healthy and vibrant.

In conclusion, beautiful hairstyles for ladies are as diverse as the women who wear them. Whether opting for classic waves, bold braids, chic bobs, elegant updos, or natural curls, the right hairstyle boosts confidence and showcases individuality, making every woman shine in her own unique way.

Rejected baby diapers repacked, sold in Ghana out of greed

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The Consumer Protection Agency (CPA) has sounded the alarm over the influx of fake and substandard baby diapers into Ghana, many of which have been rejected in their countries of origin due to safety concerns.

According to the CPA, weak enforcement of regulations is enabling unscrupulous importers to flood local markets with these hazardous products, posing serious health risks to infants.

The warning follows a recent crackdown by the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA), which led to the confiscation and incineration of over one million pieces of substandard diapers. The action came after increasing complaints from parents, particularly mothers, about diaper-related rashes, infections, and discomfort.

Speaking on the Citi Breakfast Show on Wednesday, May 28, Nana Prempeh Aduhene, Executive Director of Mediation and Arbitration at the CPA, revealed disturbing findings from their investigations.

“Our investigation shows that some of these diapers are rejected in their home countries. When they are going through production, some of these diapers are rejected, and they end up in the trash can. But because of greed, somebody goes there, picks them up, bags them into a container, brings them to Ghana, and then repacks them into plain poly bags, and then they sell them on the market,” he said.

Aduhene explained that the CPA alerted the FDA upon receiving the information. The FDA had allowed importers to store the products in designated warehouses, but later shut down some facilities upon discovering improper practices.

“We do not have a problem with importing diapers into the country, but they have to go through rigorous tests that have been confirmed with the FDA and the Ghana Standards Authority,” he noted.

“All these diapers we are talking about, FDA told us they were banned from coming into the country, so we are surprised that they have found their way into the country,” he added.

Aduhene further indicated that their investigations point to China as the likely source of the rejected products.

Consumer Protection Agency commends FDA for destroying over 1m fake diapers

We’ve discovered some politicians hiring people to dispose waste indiscriminately at CBD in Kasoa – MCE

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Seth Sabah Serwonoo-Banini, the Metropolitan Chief Executive for the Awutu Senya East Municipality, says the major issue in the area is sanitation, especially at the Central Business District (CBD).

He stated that although the municipality is large, the focus has always been centered around the CBD because it is the entry point to the municipality.

Assembly member donates water system to community

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By Opesika Tetteh Puplampu

Big Ada, May 28, GNA – Mr Ebenezer Anderson Ayiku Akuaku, Assembly Member for the Lomobiawer electoral area in the Ada East District, has provided a potable water system for residents of Caesar Puornya.

The assembly member extended the pipe-borne water to the area and provided a 5,000-litre tank for storage as part of his birthday celebration.

Mr Akuaku, who is visually impaired, has undertaken some developmental projects, including the extension of electricity, toilet facilities, sanitation, free National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) enrolment, among others for the electoral area, since he was elected as the assemblyman.

Handing over the facility to the elders of the community, he disclosed that the residents had one week to fetch the water for free, after which it would be regulated by the elders to raise funds for maintenance.

He disclosed that he used his funds of about GHS 15,000 in addition to the support he received from others to install the water system, and commended stating that elders of the electoral area have been helpful and positive towards his initiatives and commended them for their continuous assistance and support.

“The Ghana Health Service District Director has been very helpful in this,” he added.

Mr William Okronipa, an elder of the community, appealed to him to get an assembly member’s office to receive complaints, aid and support from the community to facilitate development of the area.

Madam Debora Quarshie, a unit committee member, said the community leaders had met and discussed ways of getting funding for the project when the assembly member took it upon himself to address the challenge, a step she said was commendable.

Some of the community members, who spoke with the Ghana News Agency, (GNA) disclosed that due to the lack of pipeborne water in the area, they used to fetch water from the Volta River at Kpomkpo Panya, which is quite a distance, and the water is also not safe for drinking.

They said the initiative was timely and would help alleviate their sanitation problems.

Madam Bernice Buertey, a resident, told the GNA that “my vote for him as assembly member hasn’t gone to waste.”

GNA

Edited by Laudia Sawer/Christian Akorlie

Two local players to start: Black Stars Probable XI to face Nigeria

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Ghana’s Black Stars are gearing up for a highly anticipated showdown against the Super Eagles of Nigeria in the semi-final of the Unity Cup, set to be staged at Brentford’s Gtech Community Stadium on Tuesday evening, with kickoff scheduled for 19:00 GMT.

Head coach Otto Addo could and two local players in his line up as the Black Stars aim to secure a place in the final.

Despite the big misses in the squad, the team will be counting on the leadership and experience of Jordan Ayew, Mohammed Salisu, and Gideon Mensah to outclass their West African rivals.

A win over Nigeria will see Ghana advance to the final, where Jamaica await, having edged out Trinidad and Tobago in a thrilling 3-2 encounter in the other semi-final.

Probable Starting XI:

Goalkeeper: Benjamin Asare

Defenders: Gideon Mensah, Mohammed Salisu, Razak Simpson, Ebenezer Annan

Midfielders: Majeed Ashimeru, Salis Abdul Samed, Ibrahim Sulemana

Forwards: Jordan Ayew, Thomas Asante, Christopher Baah Bonsu

Deloitte Ghana Boss Urges IMF Programme Continuation

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Daniel Kwadwo Owusu

 

The government has been urged to consider extending the International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme by a year or two following the numerous gains the country has achieved.

Country Managing Partner of Deloitte Ghana, Daniel Kwadwo Owusu, who made the call at the 9th Ghana CEO Summit said the programme has elevated investor confidence, both domestic and external.

“The programme has brought fiscal discipline, which we haven’t done well without the IMF,” he added.

Ghana signed onto an IMF bailout programme in May 2023, securing a $3 billion Extended Credit Facility (ECF) to stabilise the ailing economy. However, the programme is to end in June 2026.

Mr. Owusu mentioned that the Ghanaian economy showed some resilience, particularly in 2024, despite the turbulence in previous years, growing at a rate of 5.7%, driven mainly by the mining and quarrying sub-sector.

To him, the current growth trajectory requires the country to restructure the economy if it’s to create real and decent jobs and significantly increase government revenue and reduce the over dependency on aid.

He lamented that the over-reliance on the services sector could come as a disincentive because it would not generate the needed jobs for the growing labour market, quoting the World Bank estimates that over 150,000 students graduate from the country’s universities annually, and that requires a bold and ambitious plan to create opportunities for them.

He again urged the government to implement its agriculture programmes captured in the 2025 Budget, stating that the ‘Feed Ghana’ and ‘Feed the Industry’ initiatives are very important because they will not only feed the nation but also serve as raw materials for the manufacturing industries, create jobs in the agriculture value chain and the manufacturing sector, and address the high food inflation.

“These policies must be implemented with clear-cut strategies and targeted timelines to enable the government to achieve its vision”, he added.

Increase Reserves

On the balance of payment front, he warned that the positive balance of payment is likely to be impacted when Ghana starts servicing its external debt from May 2026 and beyond which could affect our foreign reserves and consequently the cedi.

He commended the government for the good work done so far on the economy but called for a continued increase in the country’s reserves to sustain the performance of the local currency.

“We cannot continue to rely on cocoa as our main cash crop. We must deliberately diversify the Non-Traditional Exports base by targeting other cash crops such as oil palm, shea nut, rubber, and cashew. We must grow these into cash-cow commodities that will bring in the much-needed earnings in foreign exchange”, he added.

On inflation, he stressed that if the cedi can sustain its recent stability and supply-side factors can be improved to ease the rise in food prices, “we should see a gradual decline in inflation towards the 11.9% year-end target noted in the Budget Statement”.

A Business Desk Report

Mahama removes Anne Sansa Daly from NHIA Board over licensing concerns

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President John Dramani Mahama has revoked the appointment of Anne Sansa Daly from the Board of the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA), following concerns about her lack of a valid license to practise medicine in Ghana.

In a letter from the Office of the President, the government announced that Prof. Dr. (Med) Ernest Yorke has been nominated to replace Daly with immediate effect. The Presidency has instructed relevant authorities to facilitate Prof. Yorke’s swearing-in.

While the letter did not specify reasons for Daly’s removal, sources indicate the decision was prompted by public and professional backlash over her representation as a medical doctor despite not being licensed to practise in Ghana.

Health sector stakeholders had raised questions about Daly’s qualifications and fitness to serve on the board of a major public health institution.

Prof. Ernest Yorke, a seasoned medical practitioner and former Greater Accra Regional Chair of the Ghana Medical Association, has been praised by industry experts as a suitable and credible replacement.

The NHIA Board plays a key role in overseeing the management and policy direction of Ghana’s national health insurance scheme, which serves millions of citizens across the country.

Dzifa Gomashie loses father

Abla Dzifa Gomashie with her father, Patrick Dotse Gomashie Abla Dzifa Gomashie with her father, Patrick Dotse Gomashie

Minister of Tourism, Culture, and Creative Arts, Abla Dzifa Gomashie, has lost her father, Patrick Dotse Gomashie.

Close sources have confirmed the news, which has been circulating on social media in recent days.

While Dzifa Gomashie is yet to officially announce the development, she has taken to social media to share subtle hints about it.

On May 26, 2025, she posted a photo of her late father on Facebook, accompanied by comforting lyrics from the solemn hymn “Begone, Unbelief” by John Newton, the renowned writer of Amazing Grace.

It will be recalled that on March 17, 2022, Dzifa Gomashie took to social media to celebrate her father and wished him a happy birthday.

The late Patrick Dotse Gomashie was a retired soldier who resided in Aflao, in the Volta Region. He was known for his strength and dedicated service to his community.

Meanwhile, funeral arrangements are yet to be announced.

ID/EB

See the post below:

You can also watch an exclusive interview with Ayisi on the latest edition of Talkertainment below:

NPP’s Nana B reacts to journalist heckling at EOCO headquarters

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Henry Nana Boakye, the National Organiser of the NPP Henry Nana Boakye, the National Organiser of the NPP

The National Organiser of the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP), Henry Nana Boakye, popularly known as Nana B, has responded to the heckling of a journalist at the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) headquarters.

The incident occurred while the journalist was covering a protest by party supporters over the arrest of NPP Regional Chairman, Bernard Antwi Boasiako on May 27, 2025 at the EOCO headquarters.

In a video snippet shared by UTV on X on May 28, 2025, Nana B addressed the treatment of JoyNews journalist, Latif Iddrisu, who was reportedly heckled during a live coverage of the protest.

Speaking on the matter, Nana B stated that he had not seen the footage of supporters confronting the journalist but condemned such actions, emphasising the need for professionalism.

“I haven’t seen the footage showing that he was heckled by some supporters. Let your producers send it to me. We will advise our supporters to be decorous, but you must also advise your journalists,” he said.

When asked whether a journalist’s alleged wrongdoing justified such a response, Nana B acknowledged that “two wrongs do not make a right” but claimed that some journalists engage in propaganda.

He urged media houses to guide their reporters accordingly.

Meanwhile, the journalist at the center of the heckling, Latif Iddrisu, has reportedly filed a police complaint over the development.

On a separate note, he provided an update on the condition of embattled NPP Regional Chairman, Bernard Antwi Boasiako, also known as Wontumi, assuring that he was recovering after hospitalisation and was expected to be granted bail after reporting to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) on Wednesday, May 28, 2025.

Watch the video below

VPO/MA

Meanwhile, catch up on the concluding part of the story of Fort William, where children were sold in exchange for kitchenware, others, below:

Self-build housing to create jobs and expand the economy – Research

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Professor George Owusu, Senior Lecturer at ISSER Professor George Owusu, Senior Lecturer at ISSER

A study conducted by members of the Ghana Center for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana), the London School of Economics, and the University of Ghana has shown that self-build housing contributes to job creation and helps expand the local economy.

A Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER) at the University of Ghana, Professor George Owusu, stated that the research examined factors driving urbanisation in Ghana and Tanzania and how urbanisation contributes to employment and economic growth.

Speaking to the media on the sidelines of the Research Dissemination Workshop in Accra on Monday, May 26, 2025, Professor Owusu explained that individuals who build their own houses create employment opportunities for artisans, as they require skilled labor during construction.

“If you take a typical Ghanaian building a self-contained house, just look at the number of people involved, carpenters, masons, laborers, painters, tilers, and more,” he stated.

“Apart from that, they also buy building materials and demand services from architects, surveyors, and others. This generates a lot of economic activities and employment,” he added.

Challenges in self-build housing

Despite these benefits, the researchers also identified challenges, including urban sprawl and uncontrollable expansion.

According to the 2021 census, Ghana’s housing deficit remains a major issue. The country has over 5 million houses, but many remain unfinished or unaffordable for low-income earners.

The compound house, which has been a popular housing option for low-income earners, is also declining.

Call for policy interventions

The Senior Lecturer at ISSER emphasised the need for government and policymakers to improve urban planning and land-use systems to promote sustainable building practices that do not adversely impact the environment.

The research dissemination workshop brought together participants from government ministries, academia, local assemblies, and civil society organisations (CSOs).

SA/MA

South Africans pay tribute to acting ‘icon’ Chweneyagae who died age 40

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Presley Chweneyagae rose to international prominence after starring in hit 2005 film Tsotsi Presley Chweneyagae rose to international prominence after starring in hit 2005 film Tsotsi

South Africans are paying tribute to actor Presley Chweneyagae, who has died at the age of 40.

Speaking on Wednesday, his family said he had died from natural causes after experiencing breathing problems.

Family spokesperson Mzwakhe Sigudla said that paramedics had attended to him, but he “couldn’t make it”.

Chweneyagae, who was born in 1984 in South Africa’s North-West Province, got his big international break after starring in the 2005 film Tsotsi, which earned the country its first Oscar for best foreign language film.

Tsotsi, a powerful crime film in which Chweneyagae plays the lead role, explores gang life in a South Africa.

Speaking to the BBC, South African film critic Stephen Aspeling said Tsotsi was a “landmark film” which came at a “critical juncture for South Africa’s film industry but also for South Africa on the international platform”.

“It’s taking a look at post-apartheid South Africa, the social inequalities, conveying poverty [and] crime in townships,” Mr Aspeling said, outlining that before Tsotsi, South Africa hadn’t featured much at the Oscars.

The year after the film’s release, its director, Gavin Hood, told an American student newspaper that Chweneyagae had “never done a film”, before he scouted him for the movie, highlighting that Chweneyagae himself came from a “tough neighborhood”.

Mr Aspeling also highlighted Chweneyagae’s role in iNumber Number, a film where he played a police officer, demonstrating his “versatility”.

In a statement announcing his death, his agency described him as a “South African icon” and one of the country’s “most gifted and beloved actors”.

The South African government published a post on X describing him as “a gifted storyteller whose talent lit up our screens and hearts”.

Chweneyagae also starred in the Nelson Mandela biopic Long Walk to Freedom in 2013, as well as acting in various theatre productions.

The South African Film and Television Awards described him as a “true legend of South African cinema” and a “powerhouse performer”.

The Ministry of Sports, Art and Culture released a statement highlighting his role in the popular South African series River and Cobrizzi.

“The Department of Sports, Art and Culture, mourns the loss of a true trailblazer – a storyteller who held the soul of a nation in his craft,” Culture Minister Gayton McKenzie said in the statement.

‘The law is the law; and it’s being applied to her’ – Spio-Garbrah justifies actions against Torkornoo

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Dr. Ekwow Spio-Garbrah

Former Minister for Trade and Industry, Dr. Ekwow Spio-Garbrah, has weighed in on the ongoing controversy surrounding the suspension of Chief Justice Gertrude Torkornoo, asserting that the law must be applied equally, even to the highest-ranking judicial officer.

His comments come amid growing public debate surrounding the legitimacy of the closed-door inquiry into three petitions seeking the Chief Justice’s removal. Justice Torkornoo has challenged the constitutionality of the process and filed an injunction at the Supreme Court.

Speaking in an exclusive interview with JoyNews’ Blessed Sogah in Abidjan, Dr. Spio-Garbrah remarked that the ongoing legal process must be respected, even by those at the very top of the judicial system.

“As Chief Justice, we are implementing the law. She says the law is the law—and so the law is the law—and the law is being applied to her,” he said.

“The incidents that are being cited, unless she proves that they are incorrect, must stand.”

While the Chief Justice has pointed to personal hardship and procedural irregularities in challenging the process, the former minister declined to speculate on her emotional state, choosing instead to reflect on the broader human condition.

“It depends on how each individual responds to adversity. We all go through it—we lose loved ones, suffer accidents—and how we deal with it varies. So I won’t comment on what kind of adversity she claims to be facing,” he said.

Responding to concerns raised about a change in the location of the disciplinary hearing, Dr. Spio-Garbrah maintained that the government has the final say in procedural arrangements.

“All I’ve heard is that the location where she expected the hearing to take place wasn’t the one the government chose. But ultimately, it is the government that decides where the hearing should be held,” the former minister said.

On the matter of resignation, Spio-Garbrah emphasized that stepping down is a personal choice, often shaped by a complex mix of professional and personal considerations.

“A resignation is an individual decision. One must weigh all the information available at any given time. But the good news, from what I know, is that the Chief Justice—and others in similar high public office—retire on their full salary.”

Dr. Spio-Garbrah questioned the rationale for continuing in office when, by law, senior public officials such as the Chief Justice retire on their full salary.

While Dr. Spio-Garbrah refrained from making direct accusations, he implied that the decision to stay may extend beyond purely professional or legal concerns.

“So if you’re going to retire on your salary, why worry about staying on? Unless, of course, you want to continue enjoying some privileges—like the ability for your husband and children to travel—which you might not have access to once you leave office. But the other standard benefits remain. It’s a personal judgment, and I’m not in a position to make that decision for her,” he noted.

SourceEmmanuel Tetteh

GAUA-UDS Declares Indefinite Strike Over Allowances

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GAUA-UDS members addressing journalists in Tamale

 

The Executives of the University for Development Studies (UDS) branch of the Ghana Association of University Administrators (GAUA-UDS), have declared an indefinite strike action with immediate effect.

According to them, the strike decision follows the unilateral directive by Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC) on April 28, 2025 to stop the payment of office-holding allowances of GAUA-UDS members serving in management and leadership positions in the UDS.

The GAUA-UDS members noted that the directive, issued without consultation or engagement with GAUA-UDS, undermines long-established conditions of service and violates the principles of fairness, dialogue, and mutual respect.

The President of the Ghana Association of University Administrators (GAUA-UDS), Dr. Stephanie Adongo, addressing journalists indicated that it is ironic that GTEC, which approved the offices with headships in a letter dated September 18, 2023, would turn around to issue a new contrary directive overturning its own earlier decision without recourse to engagement and dialogue with the affected parties.

“This is in spite of a letter dated April 25, 2025 from GAUA National Executive Committee to the Hon. Minister of Education calling for the Hon. Minister’s intervention on the issue of office-holding allowances.

“The withdrawal of the office-holding allowances has severely affected one hundred and eight (108) members of GAUA-UDS. Indeed, with this heartless withdrawal of allowances, some members of the GAUA-UDS would not be able to subsist to the next salary pay day,” she added.

She disclosed that GAUA-UDS held an emergency meeting on Monday, May 26, 2025 with its members, and the resolution was that, in the face of the bad-faith action by GTEC, effective Tuesday, May 27, 2025, GAUA-UDS has withdrawn all services and responsibilities until the directive to withhold the allowances is withdrawn, and the withheld allowances are paid.

Dr. Adongo called for a Ministerial Committee to be set up to develop a framework for the payment of office-holding position allowances and other matters concerning the welfare of members.

“We wish to state for emphasis and unequivocally that this strike will remain in force until the said directive is withdrawn, the withheld allowances are restored and paid, and constructive dialogue is initiated to resolve the matter in good faith,” she added.

Mr. Abubakari Abdul Nasir, a graduate who travelled from Wa in the Upper West Region to the University for Development Studies to collect his certificate, expressed his disappointment regarding the ongoing strike.

He urged the government to urgently address the situation with the Ghana Association of University Administrators (GAUA-UDS).

“I just arrived from Wa to collect my certificate and I was told they are on strike, after spending hours traveling to Tamale. Now I’m confused and don’t know what to do next, so I will appeal to government to try and resolve the issue,” he stated.

FROM Eric Kombat, Dungu

Abdul Mumin nominated for La Liga Goal of the Season award

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Ghana international Abdul Mumin is in the race for the 2024/25 La Liga Goal of the Season award following the completion of the campaign.

Mumin’s stunning goal against Osasuna at Vallecas is among nine goals chosen to compete for the award.

The 26-year-old’s strike in September was one of two goals he scored in the league this season before a knee injury prematurely ended his involvement in the campaign.

The left-footed belter came as an equaliser against Osasuna in a game Rayo Vallecano would eventually go on to win at home.

His other goal scored last season was against Real Madrid in a thrilling 3-3 draw at home.

Mumim made 24 league appearances in the just-ended season, scoring two and providing one assist as his side secured European football for next season.

Click on the link to vote for the Ghanaian to win the Goal of the Season award.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

Translate Cedi gains into relief for citizens

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The Minority in Parliament is urging the government to take swift and deliberate action to ensure that the recent appreciation of the Ghanaian cedi results in meaningful relief for the public.

The local currency has seen a notable strengthening against major trading currencies in recent weeks, sparking public calls for a reduction in the prices of goods and services.

Speaking at a Leaders’ Media Briefing, Deputy Minority Leader Patricia Appiagyei welcomed the improvement in exchange rate stability but stressed that its impact must be felt by the average Ghanaian.

“Everybody is happy that the cedi has become very strong, the exchange rate is coming down, but what is its effect on the cost of living despite the gains that we are experiencing?

“It is important that certain actions are taken to ensure that the downward trend of the cedi to the dollar will have a reflection on the cost of living in our country,” she said.

Appiagyei’s remarks echo growing public sentiment that the strengthening cedi should bring about a corresponding drop in consumer prices, particularly on imported goods.

Read also…

Supreme Court strikes out Torkornoo’s supplementary affidavit

Dr Zanetor urges genuine human connection in a digital age

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Member of Parliament for Korley Klottey, Dr Zanetor Agyeman-Rawlings Member of Parliament for Korley Klottey, Dr Zanetor Agyeman-Rawlings

Member of Parliament for Korle Klottey, Dr Zanetor Agyemang-Rawlings, has called on Ghanaians to show greater empathy in their daily interactions.

In a recent post shared on her X (formerly Twitter) page, she wrote, “Today, when you ask, ‘How are you?’ Pause. Look them in the eye. Wait for them to respond. Listen to them. Are they really okay?”

Dr Agyemang-Rawlings emphasized the importance of genuine human connection, particularly in an era where social media has increasingly replaced face-to-face interactions.

“Let’s care for each other in a world that has an inverse relationship between social media and human-human connection. #MentalHealthMatters #PurpleMonth”, she added.

Her remarks come in the context of Purple Month, a mental health awareness initiative led by the Mental Health Authority and the Ghana Health Service, aimed at promoting emotional well-being and reducing stigma around mental illness.

According to the Chief Executive Officer of the Mental Health Authority, Professor Pinamang Apau, the goal of the campaign is to raise awareness about mental health, combat stigma, and celebrate the possibility of recovery.

“In keeping with the Authority’s mission to raise awareness among the general public, elevate the voices of mental health service users and caregivers, and fight for the rights and needs of individuals impacted, this month-long campaign also exhorts people to include movement in their daily lives as a means of promoting mental wellness,” she added.

See her post below:

JKB/MA

Speaker condemns Parliamentary misconduct, cautions against repetition

‘I’m single and searching, I don’t have a type anymore’ – Gyakie

Ghanaian songstress, Gyakie Ghanaian songstress, Gyakie

Ghanaian songstress, Gyakie, has opened up on her current relationship status and new preferences when it comes to love.

In an interview on GTV on May 28, 2025, Gyakie revealed that she is currently single and searching.

She stated that, unlike in the past when she was fixated on specific qualities in a partner, her perspective has changed.

“Gyakie is single. Yes, I am single and searching. I don’t have a type right now, but I used to. Before, I would focus on looks and certain things I’d now call childish. But now, I look at character and everything from within, not just the outside,” she explained.

Explaining the story behind her new single “Sankofa”, the ‘song bird’ noted that she was going back for her ex-lover, however, things didn’t work out as planned.

“I was going for an ex-lover but I didn’t go for it again. This is a love song. I know that people find themselves in broken-up relationships and would want to go back to the person. Sometimes you don’t have to always go back if you know it is something that would not help you or put you in a good place,” she added.

JHM/EB

Meanwhile, Ghanaian fashion designer Jude Dontoh shares inspiration behind Lauryn Hill’s Met Gala outfit:

Trump’s unfounded attack on Cyril Ramaphosa was an insult to all Africans

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The meeting at the White House between Donald Trump and the South African president, Cyril Ramaphosa, was, at its heart, about the preservation of essential historical truths. The US president’s claims of white genocide conflict with the actual racial persecution and massacres that took place during the two centuries of colonisation and nearly 50 years of apartheid in South Africa.

It is not enough to be affronted by these claims, or to casually dismiss them as untruths. These statements are a clear example of how language can be leveraged to extend the effects of previous injustices. This mode of violence has long been used against Indigenous Africans. And it cannot simply be met with silence – not any more.

The Kenyan writer Mzee Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o wrote: “Language conquest, unlike the military form, wherein the victor must subdue the whole population directly, is cheaper and more effective.”

African nations learned long ago that their fates are inextricably linked. When it comes to interactions with the world beyond our continent, we are each other’s bellwether. In 1957, the year before my birth, Ghana became the first Black African country to free itself from colonialism. After the union jack had been lowered, our first prime minister, Dr Kwame Nkrumah, gave a speech in which he emphasised that, “our independence is meaningless unless it is linked up with the total liberation of Africa”.

Shortly after, in 1960, was the Sharpeville massacre in South Africa, which resulted in 69 deaths and more than 100 wounded. In Ghana, thousands of miles away, we marched, we protested, we gave cover and shelter. A similar solidarity existed in sovereign nations across the continent. Why? Because people who looked like us were being subjugated, treated as second-class citizens, on their own ancestral land. We had fought our own versions of that same battle.

I was 17 in June 1976, when the South African Soweto uprising took place. The now-iconic photo of a young man, Mbuyisa Makhubo, carrying the limp, 12-year-old body of Hector Pieterson, who had just been shot by the police, haunted me for years. It so deeply hurt me to think that I was free to dream of a future as this child was making the ultimate sacrifice for the freedom and future of his people. Hundreds of children were killed in that protest alone. It is their blood, and the blood of their forebears that nourishes the soil of South Africa.

The racial persecution of Black South Africans was rooted in a system that was enshrined in law. It took worldwide participation through demonstrations, boycotts, divestments and sanctions to end apartheid so that all South Africans, regardless of skin colour, would be considered equal. Nevertheless, the effects of centuries-long oppression do not just disappear with the stroke of a pen, particularly when there has been no cogent plan of reparative justice.

Despite making up less than 10% of the population, white South Africans control more than 70% of the nation’s wealth. Even now, there are a few places in South Africa where only Afrikaners are permitted to own property, live, and work. At the entrance to once such settlement, Kleinfontein, is an enormous bust of Hendrik Verwoerd, the former prime minister who is considered the architect of apartheid.

Another separatist town, Orania, teaches only Afrikaans in its schools, has its own chamber of commerce, as well as its own currency, the ora, that is used strictly within its borders. It has been reported that inside the Orania Cultural History Museum there is a bust of every apartheid-era president except FW de Klerk, who initiated reforms that led to the repeal of apartheid laws.

Both Kleinfontein and Orania are currently in existence, and they boast a peaceful lifestyle. Why had the America-bound Afrikaners not sought refuge in either of those places?

Had the Black South Africans wanted to exact revenge on Afrikaners, surely, they would have done so decades ago when the pain of their previous circumstances was still fresh in their minds. What, at this point, is there to be gained by viciously killing and persecuting people you’d long ago forgiven?

According to the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, half of the population of South Africa is under 29, born after the apartheid era and, presumably, committed to building and uplifting the “rainbow nation”. For what reason would they suddenly begin a genocide against white people?

Ramaphosa was blindsided by Trump with those unfounded accusations and the accompanying display of images that were misrepresented – in one image, pictures of burials were actually from Congo. Trump refused to listen as Ramaphosa insisted that his government did not have any official policies of discrimination.

“If you want to destroy a people,” Archbishop Desmond Tutu once said, “you destroy their memory, you destroy their history.” Memory, however, is long. It courses through the veins of our children and their children. The terror of what we have experienced is stored at a cellular level. As long as those stories are told, at home, in church, at the beauty and barber shop, in schools, in literature, music and on the screen, then we, the sons and daughters of Africa, will continue to know what we’ve survived and who we are.

Mzee Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o wrote: “The process of knowing is simple. No matter where you want to journey, you start from where you are.” We journey forward with a history that cannot be erased, and will not be erased. Not while there are children dying in the mines of the Congo, and rape is being used as a weapon of war in Sudan.

Our world is in real crisis; real refugees are being turned away from the borders of the wealthiest nations, real babies will die because international aid has been abruptly stopped, and real genocides are happening in real time all across the globe.



At the White House, Donald Trump shows Cyril Ramaphosa what he claims are images of burial sites in South Africa, 21 May 2025

Rethink trade strategy – Dr Antwi Danso urges as global tariff turmoil rages on

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Video | Dr Antwi-Danso pushes for full disclosure in Ghana’s natural resource deals

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Likely Black Stars starting XI against Nigeria

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Jordan Ayew will captain the Black Stars against Nigeria Jordan Ayew will captain the Black Stars against Nigeria

Head coach Otto Addo is expected to field a strong starting lineup for the crucial match against Nigeria in the 2025 Unity Cup game to be played on May 28, 2025.

With over eight first-team players omitted from the squad due to various reasons, young players and debutants are expected to gain starting roles.

Accra Hearts of Oak’s Benjamin Asare is expected to start as the goalkeeper after recording two clean sheets against Chad and Madagascar in the 2026 World Cup qualifiers.

In defense, AS Monaco’s Mohammed Salisu and Nations FC’s Razak Simpson will play in the center-back positions, while Gideon Mensah and Ebenezer Annan will occupy the full-back positions.

In-form Atalanta midfielder Ibrahim Sulemana and Sunderland’s Salis Samed will play in a double pivot role in the central and defensive areas, while Anderlecht’s Majeed Ashimeru will take the attacking midfield role to support the attack.

Black Stars captain Jordan Ayew is expected to be part of the forwards, alongside Christopher Baah Bonsu, while Coventry City’s Thomas-Asante will lead as the center-forward.

Felix Afena Gyan, Lawrence Ati-Zigi, Abdul Aziz Issah, and others are likely to start from the bench.

Below is the starting XI:

Benjamin Asare, Gideon Mensah, Mohammed Salisu, Razak Simpson, Ebenezer Annan, Majeed Ashimeru, Salis Samed, Ibrahim Sulemana, Jordan Ayew, Thomas Asante, Christopher Baah Bonsu.

The Black Stars’ game against the Super Eagles will take place at Brentford’s Gtech Community Stadium, with a kick-off time of 19:00 GMT.

The winner will face Jamaica, who defeated Trinidad and Tobago 3-2 in the other semi-final clash.

SB/MA

Meanwhile, watch as ADISEC win the 4×200 Boys finals at the 23rd Annual Inter schools and colleges

Kenyan president apologises to Tanzania over deportation row

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William Ruto says Kenya is keen to build relationships with its neighbours William Ruto says Kenya is keen to build relationships with its neighbours

Kenya’s President William Ruto has publicly apologised to Tanzania following days of tension between the neighbouring countries.

Some Kenyans on social media have been targeting Tanzania’s President Samia Suluhu Hassan following the recent detention and deportation of prominent East African activists.

Angry Tanzanian MPs on Monday accused Kenyans of cyberbullying and disrespecting Tanzanian sovereignty and “meddling in domestic affairs”.

Speaking at a national prayer breakfast on Wednesday, Ruto appeared to extend an olive branch to Tanzania.

“To our neighbours from Tanzania, if we have wronged you in any way, forgive us,” he said.

“If there is anything that Kenyans have done that is not right, we want to apologise,” the president added.

Ruto also apologised to young Kenyans, popularly known as Gen-Zs, who have been critical of his administration since the deadly anti-tax protesters last June.

The president made the remarks in response to a call by visiting American preacher Rickey Allen Bolden, who urged leaders to pursue reconciliation.

The diplomatic row was triggered by the deportation of activists who had travelled to Tanzania to attend the trial of opposition leader Tundu Lissu.

Among them were Kenyan Boniface Mwangi and Agather Atuhaire from Uganda.

The two said they were held incommunicado for several days and tortured, before they were left at the border by Tanzanian security forces, sparking widespread condemnation across the region and from international rights groups.

Tanzania is yet to comment on the torture claims but President Samia had earlier warned that she would not allow activists from neighbouring countries to “meddle” in her country’s affairs and cause “chaos”.

Both Kenya and Ugandan had formally protested against the detention of the activists, accusing the Tanzanian authorities of denying consular access despite repeated requests.

The alleged mistreatment of the activists triggered an online war, with social media users from Kenya and Tanzania clashing over the claims.

In a heated debate on Monday, Tanzanian parliamentarians expressed outrage over the young Kenyans trolling President Samia.

The MPs said Samia had every right to defend Tanzania’s national interests.

The legislators’ comments angered some Kenyans who hit back by sharing lawmakers’ contacts and flooding their phones with messages to express their disapproval.

Tanzania’s Iringa Town MP Jesca Msambatavangu said that most of the messages came via WhatsApp, forcing her to temporarily switch off her phone.

Msambatavangu, however, welcomed the engagement, encouraging Kenyans on social media to “counter ideas with ideas”.

She asked young Kenyans to create a WhatsApp group for further engagement and promised to engage them in a live session on Saturday.

“Kenyans are our neighbours, our brothers, and we cannot ignore each other,” she added.

Yvonne Okoro Denies ‘Being Dumped’ Allegation

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Yvonne Okoro

 

Award-winning actress, Yvonne Okoro, has initiated legal action against Facebook-based media outlet Naija Boss Vlog following a publication of a viral post that falsely attributed personal statements to her.

, which was shared on May 15, 2025, claimed that the actress confessed to being “dumped many times,” prompting widespread discussion on social media.

In a letter dated May 16, 2025, Yvonne Okoro’s legal representative, M&O Law Consult, firmly denied that she ever made the remarks. The letter, signed by Managing Partner, Emmanuel Mate-Kole, stated that the claims were entirely false, defamatory, and a misrepresentation of the actress’s personal life.

“Our client categorically states that she has never made such comments, whether publicly or privately,” the letter said. “The attribution of these statements to her is entirely false and defamatory.”

, written in the style of a heartfelt confession, detailed alleged past heartbreaks and was framed as a message of encouragement to other women. Despite its emotional tone, Yvonne Okoro insists she never authored or endorsed any such statement.

Her legal team is demanding the immediate and permanent removal of the post from all Naija Boss Vlog platforms, a full public apology acknowledging that the statements are false and defamatory, and the publication of this apology across every platform where the original content may have circulated.

Yvonne Okoro, known for guarding her private life and maintaining a professional public image, is reportedly committed to addressing the issue head-on and ensuring accountability for the spread of misinformation online.

By Francis Addo

Supreme Court strikes out Torkornoo’s supplementary affidavit

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The Supreme Court has struck out a supplementary affidavit filed by suspended Chief Justice Gertrude Torkonoo in support of her injunction application.

The affidavit alleged inhumane treatment, violation of her dignity, and described the ongoing proceedings as a “mockery of justice” and a “ruse” aimed at unjustifiably removing her from office.

However, the apex court ruled that the contents of the affidavit referred to events that occurred before the committee investigating the petitions for her removal — proceedings which, by law, are expected to be held in camera.

A five-member panel of the court upheld an objection raised by the deputy Attorney General, Justice Srem Sai who argued that the supplementary affidavit violated Article 146(8) of the Constitution. That provision mandates that proceedings concerning the removal of justices be conducted in private.

According to the deputy Attorney General, by deposing to an affidavit that disclosed aspects of the committee’s deliberations, the suspended Chief Justice breached this constitutional requirement.

Former Attorney General and legal counsel for Justice Torkonoo, Godfred Yeboah Dame, countered that the affidavit was submitted within a judicial forum and not disclosed to the general public. He argued that this did not constitute a breach of Article 146(8).

Nonetheless, the Supreme Court held that the contents of the affidavit indeed violated the confidentiality provisions under the Constitution and accordingly struck it out.

Supreme Court rejects AG’s bid to remove Justice Pwamang, others from Torkonoo case as defendants

I am very disappointed – Bagbin slams MPs for failing to snitch

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Speaker of Parliament Alban Bagbin has expressed disappointment that members of parliament have neither owned up nor accepted responsibility and that fellow MPs have also failed to identify the MP who called Korle Klottey MP, Dr Zanetor Agyeman-Rawlings “Daughter of a murderer”.

The Minority Leader, Alexander Afenyo Markin was on the floor addressing Parliament on Tuesday, February 4, 2025, when a loud voice from the back bench from the Minority in Parliament called a Majority MP “Daughter of a murderer, sit down!

Minister Calls For Investment In Tourist Sites

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Abla Dzifa Gomashie

 

The Minister of Tourism, Culture and Creative Arts, Abla Dzifa Gomashie, has called on investors and well-meaning Ghanaians to partner with the ministry in developing tourist sites across the country.

She said that would also help boost tourism, enhance local economies, and increase national revenue.

Speaking at Wli in the Hohoe Municipality during her first fact-finding tour of tourist destinations in the Volta Region, Madam Gomashie, who is also the Member of Parliament for Ketu South, emphasised the importance of harnessing Ghana’s diverse natural and cultural assets for sustainable tourism.

She highlighted the need for collaboration between families, local assemblies, and the ministry, explaining that while most tourist attractions were owned by communities or private individuals, their development required joint efforts.

Madam Gomashie identified several infrastructural gaps, such as the lack of restrooms along tourist trails, and called for urgent attention to improve visitor experience.

She, however, expressed optimism that with better branding, packaging, and investment, Ghana’s tourism sector could see significant growth, especially during peak seasons when visitor numbers rise.

The minister urged the private sector to invest in eco-friendly accommodations and services that could cater for the needs of all categories of visitors.

As part of the tour, the minister paid a courtesy call on the Volta Regional Minister, Mr. James Gunu, held engagements with Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives (MMDCEs), and visited several sites including the Centre for National Culture, Regional Museum, Tafi Atome Monkey Sanctuary, Culture Village, and the Wli Agumatsa Waterfalls.

Her visit reinforced the ministry’s commitment to revitalising the tourism sector and ensuring that Ghana’s cultural and natural heritage become a pillar of economic development.

GNA

NPP has been vindicated, NDC scammed Ghanaians – Ntim Fordjour

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Rev. John Ntim Fordjour , Deputy Minister of Education

Member of Parliament for Assin South, Rev. John Ntim Fordjour, has criticised the government over its handling of the Free Senior High School (Free SHS) feeding system.

He says the New Patriotic Party (NPP) has been vindicated, and that Ghanaians were misled by promises made by President John Mahama and the National Democratic Congress (NDC).

Speaking in an interview on JoyPrime on Wednesday, May 28, Rev. Fordjour recounted the earlier structure of food supply under the NPP government.
“We were supplying about 70% of the food, and then 30% was directly paid to the schools to buy perishables,” he explained.

According to him, the NDC promised to change this completely.
“President Mahama on many occasions stood on platforms and said, ‘We are going to send all the money directly to the headmasters so they can go to the markets and buy goat meat and the rest,’ and the students were happy,” he said.

While he acknowledged the idea sounded good, Rev. Fordjour questioned its feasibility.
“I personally thought it was a brilliant idea if they were able to implement it. But again, I came back to predict that they will not be able to do it. And I said to Ghanaians boldly and clearly that I am not predicting doom, but President Mahama cannot fulfil that. And whoever becomes the Minister for Education will not be able to fulfil that promise.”

He added,
“Clearly, I have been vindicated. We’ve been scammed.”

Rev. Fordjour accused the government of failing to deliver on its word.
“They came in, and the only thing they did in that regard was to send remittances to the schools directly for just two weeks. For all these months of being in power for over five months, the only direct remittance they’ve sent to the schools is to take care of them for only two weeks.”

He also revealed that the government later abandoned its own approach.
“They wrote a letter signed by the Director-General of the GES and said they were going back on their words. Now the Ministry of Education is going to centralise it. They will be supplying the food to them, and now they are only going to allow them to buy only five items.”

Rev. Fordjour argued that this new system is even worse than what the NPP had in place.
“They said they were going to do better, but they are even doing worse than the weakness we had.”

He then warned against the rush to criticise when in opposition.
“Sometimes when you are in opposition, you are so quick in criticising certain implementations, but when you get there and the reality hits you, you begin to fumble. So we have been vindicated. We even ran Free SHS better than the NDC is doing it now.”

Source: Clara Seshie

ALSO READ:

Govt Committed To Long-Term Growth

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President John Mahama (M) with organizers and some CEO’s displaying their awards

 

President John Mahama has reiterated the government’s commitment to reset the economy to drive long term growth in order to achieve sustainable development.

President Mahama, who made this known at the 9th Ghana CEO Summit in Accra, said such sustainable development could be achieved through a number of pillars including the completion of the IMF programme with discipline, reopening domestic and international capital markets.

He said the government will continue to be disciplined in its expenditure and borrowing and work to achieve all targets under the extended credit fund with the IMF programme.

He said, “We expect to conclude the fourth review of the IMF programme in June 2025 with a target to exit at the end of the programme in 2026. And, thereafter, we’ll participate in Article 4 consultations and adopt the policy support instrument framework signaling Ghana’s return to responsible non-borrowing engagement with a fund”.

President Mahama stated that the government will also reopen domestic and international capital markets, reopen Ghana’s bond market in collaboration with the IMF and its development partners,  while ensuring that  future borrowing  is linked to self-financing  financially viable  projects  particularly by State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) to ensure value for money  and sustainable  repayment.

He also added that the government will strengthen sovereign funds and local government financing, amend the Public Finance Management Act and Constitution to make contributions to the sinking and stabilization funds mandatory.

He said while a certain percentage of funds would be committed to the sinking and stabilization funds, it also intends to empower MMDAs to issue infrastructure and municipal bonds secured against a portion of their district assembly’s common fund to fund infrastructure projects such as roads, schools, water systems and local industry in the districts.

“Government will be clearing verified arrears and rationalising public investments, accelerating public financial management reforms, revitalizing exports through Ghana Exim Bank, building Ghana into a regional hub for trade and investment and resume infrastructure development to stimulate growth,” he added.

According to the President, the eight key strategic plans if achieved will help increase GDP growth in every sector to lift Ghana out of its huge debt, increase GDP, boost investor confidence, and deepen fiscal discipline among others.

Apart from Chief Executives from both the public and private sector, the summit held under the theme, “Leading Ghana’s Economic Reset: Transforming Business and Governance for a Sustainable Futuristic Economy,” also brought together key industry players and officials from various state institutions.

As part of the event, Chief Executives of various companies were presented with awards for their contribution to the development of the country over the years.

By Ebenezer K. Amponsah

 

 

Mahama gov’t reverts to old BECE school selection system

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The John Mahama government has reverted to old school selection system for 2025 Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) candidates.

BECE candidates are now expected to choose preferred schools before they sit for exams like they used to be in the past.

The BECE school selection and placement process for candidates of 2025 officially began yesterday Tuesday, May 27, and will end on Friday, June 6.

Feyenoord, Strasbourg eyeing move for Ghana midfielder Lawrence Agyekum

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Dutch top-flight side Feyenoord are reportedly eyeing a summer move for Ghana international Lawrence Agyekum.

The Eredivisie side is not the only team keen on securing the services of the 21-year-old, with Strasbourg and Premier League clubs also in the race.

Agyekum recently joined Cercle Brugge on a permanent deal after following a successful loan stint during the 2024/25 season.

The midfielder joined the Belgian outfit on loan from RB Salzburg, with the former activating their buy option for the Ghanaian.

Agyekum made 40 appearances for Cercle Brugge last season, scoring three goals and providing two assists across all competitions.

His performances during the season saw him earn a maiden call-up to the senior national team, the Black Stars, during the 2026 FIFA World Cup Qualifiers against Chad and Madagascar, featuring in the game against the former at the Accra Sports Stadium.

Agyekum is in the Black Stars squad for the 2025 Unity Cup in London where he will be watched by Feyenoord, Strasbourg and the interested Premier League clubs.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

‘NDC now delivering 24-Hour intimidation of political opponents’

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Richard Ahiagbah, Communications Director of NPP Richard Ahiagbah, Communications Director of NPP

The Communications Director of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Richard Ahiagbah, has accused the John Dramani Mahama-led administration of using political tactics to divert attention from the government’s inefficiency.

In a post shared on the social media platform X on Wednesday, May 28, 2025, Ahiagbah expressed concern over what he described as a calculated effort by the NDC to shift the national conversation away from the pressing issues facing ordinary Ghanaians to the intimidation of political opponents.

“President Mahama and the NDC are employing diversionary tactics to deflect attention from the bread-and-butter issues of the day. They promised a 24-hour economy but are instead delivering 24-hour intimidation of political opponents,” he wrote.

Ahiagbah suggested that instead of prioritising solutions to everyday challenges such as unemployment, high living costs, and income insecurity, the Mahama-led government is adopting strategies that intimidate political opponents and create an atmosphere of fear.

“Holding people accountable should not be used as a cover-up for this government’s inefficiency. Mr. President, where are the jobs? Ghanaians are asking,” he added.

His remarks follow the arrest and detention of the NPP’s Ashanti Regional Chairman, Bernard Antwi Boasiako, popularly known as Chairman Wontumi, by the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) on May 27, 2025.

Chairman Wontumi’s legal team, led by NPP Member of Parliament Andy Appiah-Kubi, confirmed that he fell ill during interrogation and has since been hospitalised.

According to Appiah-Kubi, Bernard Antwi Boasiako required urgent medical attention and was transferred from EOCO custody to a medical facility for treatment.

He has been accused of engaging in illegal mining activities.

Read his post below:

JKB/MA

Speaker condemns Parliamentary misconduct, cautions against repetition

‘We don’t have support; it’s a big issue’– James Gardiner on Ghana’s struggling film industry

James Gardiner is the Deputy Executive Secretary of the National Film Authority play videoJames Gardiner is the Deputy Executive Secretary of the National Film Authority

Deputy Executive Secretary of the National Film Authority, James Gardiner, has stated that the Ghanaian film industry is struggling due to a lack of support.

Speaking in an interview on the Girls Aloud Podcast, James Gardiner did not hold back when addressing the state of the industry.

According to him, the lack of adequate support has hugely hindered progress of the industry.

“Support is a huge issue. We don’t have that,” James Gardiner stated.

He went on to explain that the National Film Authority is committed to reversing this trend by promoting high-quality Ghanaian productions that can captivate audiences and revive interest in Ghanaian cinema.

“We are in the realm of affairs to promote the kind of quality stuff that we know people will like to consume so that it brings back that whole excitement about going to the cinema and watching Ghanaian-produced films,” he shared.

James Gardiner acknowledged the uphill nature of this task but expressed optimism that a turnaround would have a lasting impact on the industry.

“We know it is going to be a very hard battle, but it’s going to go a long way in restoring the way the industry used to be,” he added.

Also watch as Robert Klah addresses Felicia Osei’s ticket incident at TGMAs

AK/EB

Supreme Court hears CJ Torkornoo’s injunction application

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Suspended CJ Torkornoo and her husband in Court on May 28, 2025 [Image Credit: The Law Platform] Suspended CJ Torkornoo and her husband in Court on May 28, 2025 [Image Credit: The Law Platform]

The Supreme Court is currently hearing an injunction application filed by suspended Chief Justice, Justice Gertrude Torkornoo, seeking to halt the work of the Pwamang Committee, which is considering three petitions for her removal.

During proceedings on Wednesday, May 28, 2025, the five-member panel presiding over the application unanimously dismissed a supplementary affidavit filed by Justice Torkornoo.

Following the dismissal of the injunction application, the Court proceeded to hear arguments on the substantive case.

The panel is chaired by the Acting Chief Justice, Justice Paul Baffoe-Bonnie. The other members are Justice Omoro Amadu Tanko, Justice Yonny Kulendi, Justice Henry Kwofie, and Justice Richard Adjei Frimpong.

Background

Justice Torkornoo, in her injunction application, is seeking to halt proceedings by a five-member committee investigating petitions for her removal from office.

The interlocutory injunction, filed on May 21, 2025, also aims to restrain the committee, constituted by President John Dramani Mahama, from continuing its work until the case is fully resolved.

Chief Justice Torkornoo is also requesting the apex court to bar two of its own justices, Gabriel Scott Pwamang and Samuel Kwame Adibu-Asiedu, from participating in the hearings, citing concerns over impartiality.

In her affidavit, she argued that Justice Pwamang had previously adjudicated cases involving Daniel Ofori, one of the petitioners, and should not be part of a panel reviewing a petition to which he is a party.

She further contended that Justice Adibu-Asiedu had served on a Supreme Court panel that reviewed a related injunction application, potentially compromising his neutrality.

In addition, Justice Torkornoo questioned the constitutionality of the committee’s composition. She challenged the eligibility of its three remaining members, Daniel Yao Domelovo, Major Flora Bazwaanura Dalugo, and Professor James Sefah Dzisah, citing potential breaches of Articles 146(1), (2), (4), 23, and 296 of the Constitution, as well as the Oaths Act of 1972.

BAI/MA

Watch the latest news in Twi on GhanaWeb TV:

BoG’s quarter-ounce gold coin selling at GH¢9,365.08 on May 28

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BoG's quarter-ounce gold coin selling at GH¢9,365.08 on May 28 BoG’s quarter-ounce gold coin selling at GH¢9,365.08 on May 28

The Bank of Ghana’s (BoG) gold coins continue to see a drop in its prices for its investment, following the appreciation of the Ghana cedi against the US dollar.

The central bank introduced the coin as a strategic measure to discourage the hoarding of the US dollar.

As of Friday, May 28, 2025, the bank reported the following updated prices:

The 0.25 oz coin is now selling at GH¢9,365.08 down from GH¢9,614.01 on May 28, 2025.

The 0.50 oz coin is priced at GH¢18,018.53 down from GH¢18,511.24 .

The 1.00 oz coin is selling for GH¢35,367.53 down from GH¢36,348.27 .

According to the Central Bank, the initiative is designed to absorb excess liquidity in the market to help strengthen the Ghana cedi against major foreign currencies.

The Ghana gold coin is available in three denominations: one ounce, half-ounce, and quarter-ounce, and it is being sold through commercial banks.

SP/MA

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Watch highlights of Jamaica’s thrilling 3-2 win over Trinidad and Tobago

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Jamaican players celebrating after scoring the third goal to win against Trinidad and Tobago play videoJamaican players celebrating after scoring the third goal to win against Trinidad and Tobago

Jamaica have booked their ticket to the finals after beating Trinidad and Tobago 3-2 in the Unity Cup in London on May 27, 2025.

The game started off carefully as both teams tried hard to win, but Jamaica took the lead in the 25th minute when Kasey Palmer scored a penalty.

Upon returning from the break, Rumarn Burrell doubled the lead in the 53rd minute as they continued to dominate the game.

Trinidad and Tobago upped their game to cancel out the lead in the 55th and 69th minutes, thanks to goals from Isaiah Leacock and Kevin Molino.

Jamaica bounced back into the game strongly with a remarkable attacking play that earned them a penalty, which Richard King converted to secure a dramatic 3-2 win.

The Reggae Boys will face the winner between Ghana and Nigeria in the finals.

The losing teams in the semi-finals will also play for third and fourth place.

SB/EB

Watch the match highlights below:

Namibia marks colonial genocide for first time with memorial day

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The genocide in what is now Namibia lasted from 1904 to 1908 The genocide in what is now Namibia lasted from 1904 to 1908

Dubbed “Germany’s forgotten genocide”, and described by historians as the first genocide of the 20th Century, the systematic murder of more than 70,000 Africans is being marked with a national day of remembrance for the first time in Namibia.

Almost 40 years before their use in the Holocaust, concentration camps and pseudoscientific experiments were used by German officials to torture and kill people in what was then called South West Africa.

The victims, primarily from the Ovaherero and Nama communities, were targeted because they refused to let the colonisers take their land and cattle.

Genocide Remembrance Day in Namibia on Wednesday follows years of pressure on Germany to pay reparations.

The new, national holiday will be marked each year as part of Namibia’s “journey of healing” including a minute’s silence and candlelight vigil outside parliament in Windhoek, according to the government.

It said it chose the date of 28 May, because it was on that day in 1907 that German officials announced the closure of the concentration camps following international criticism.

Control over South West Africa – along with what is now Cameroon, Togo and other colonial territories – was stripped from Germany by competing powers after World War One.

For many years Germany did not publicly acknowledge the mass slaughter that took place between 1904 and 1908.

But four years ago it formally recognised that German colonisers had committed the genocide, and offered €1.1bn (£940m; $1.34bn) in development aid to be paid out over 30 years – with no mention of “reparations” or “compensation” in the legal wording.

Namibia declined that offer, calling it “a first step in the right direction” that nonetheless had failed to include the formal apology and “reparations” it was seeking.

Many Namibians were not impressed by what they saw.

“That was the joke of the century,” Uahimisa Kaapehi told the BBC at the time. “We want our land. Money is nothing.”

He is an ethnic Ovaherero descendent and town councillor in Swakopmund, where many of the atrocities took place, and said “our wealth was taken, the farms, the cattle”.

A group representing genocide victims’ families was also scathing about the deal offered in 2021, calling it evidence of a “racist mindset on the part of Germany and neo-colonial subservience on the part of Namibia” in a joint statement.

Since then a draft deal has been reached between the two nations that would include a formal apology given by Germany, and which would reportedly increase the overall sum by an extra €50m.

But many Ovaherero and Nama campaigners say the deal is an insult to their ancestors’ memory and that they were unfairly excluded from the negotiating table. News of a national day of remembrance been met with cynicism from some, with community activists saying restorative justice is still a long way off.

Many campaigners would like to see the German government buy back ancestral lands now in the hands of the German-speaking community, and return them to the Ovaherero and Nama descendants.

Historians point out the irony of Germany hitherto refusing to pay reparations, because prior to the genocide, Germany itself extracted its own so-called reparations from Ovaherero and Nama people who had fought back against the colonisers.

This was paid in the form of livestock and amounted to 12,000 cows – which is estimated by German-American historian Thomas Craemer to be somewhere between $1.2m and $8.8m in today’s money, and which he argues should be added to the reparations bill.

Those colonial lootings and battles were followed by the genocide, which began in 1904 with an extermination order from a German official named Lothar von Trotha.

“This extermination order indicated that they were no longer going to take on any prisoners – women, men, anyone with or without cattle – they were going to be executed,” Namibian historian Martha Akawa-Shikufa told the national broadcaster NBC.

This was followed by the introduction of concentration camps, she added.

“People got worked to death, a lot of people died in the concentration camps because of exhaustion. In fact, there were pre-printed death certificates [saying] ‘death by exhaustion’, waiting for those people to die, because they knew they would die.”

The remains of some of those who were killed were then shipped to Germany for now-discredited research to prove the racial superiority of white Europeans. Many of the bones have now been repatriated.

Last year, Namibia criticised Germany after it offered to come to Israel’s defence to stop it from answering a case for crimes of genocide in Gaza at the UN’s top court.

“The German government is yet to atone for the genocide it committed on Namibian soil fully,” said then-President Hage Geingob.

Majority Praises Economic Gains –

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Mahama Ayariga

 

The Majority Leader, Mahama Ayariga yesterday outlined an ambitious legislative agenda and celebrated what he described as tangible economic recovery under the leadership of President John Dramani Mahama.

Speaking at the opening of the Second Meeting, Mr. Ayariga hailed the government’s performance as a “national awakening” and credited President Mahama’s administration with restoring faith in democratic institutions and driving a strong economic rebound.

“This meeting is taking place during a pivotal moment in our nation’s history,” he said and added, “Under President Mahama’s dynamic leadership, Ghana is again Africa’s shining beacon of progress.”

Mr. Ayariga pointed to significant economic improvements, including a dramatic appreciation of the cedi since January, pointing out that the local currency has gained 24.1% against the U.S. dollar, 16.2% against the British pound, and 14.1% against the euro. “The exchange rate now stands at GH₵10.94 to the dollar, down from GH₵14.90 at the start of the year,” he intimated.

He linked this rebound to legislative action taken during the first meeting of Parliament, including the repeal of what he termed “obnoxious” taxes such as the electronic levy, carbon emissions levy, and taxes on lottery winnings and gold from small-scale miners.

Mr. Ayariga said this economic improvement is already translating into relief for Ghanaians, including lower fuel prices and transport fares. He noted fare reductions on several routes, including Ho-Accra (down to GH₵60 from GH₵70) and Bolgatanga-Accra (down to GH₵240 from GH₵250).

“This is not just statistics. It’s a real relief for Ghanaian families,” Ayariga asserted.

Milestones and Upcoming Bills

The Majority Leader praised the House for passing 11 key bills in the last sitting, including the establishment of the Ghana Gold Board and the Appropriations Bill. He also highlighted the swift vetting and approval of 56 ministerial and deputy ministerial nominees and the handling of 117 motions.

Mr. Ayariga outlined a packed legislative agenda, disclosing that major upcoming bills include Mid-Year Budget Review and related financial reforms, Scholarships Authority Bill, University Bills, and Amendments to Education Act, as well as the Social Protection and Domestic Violence Bills, Petroleum Sector Investment Legislation, Amendments to the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre Act, and Legal sector reforms, including the Conduct of Public Officers Bill and Legal Education Reform Bill.

He revealed that several regulatory reforms are in the pipeline to bolster accountability and investor confidence, including amendments to tax, customs, and exemptions regimes.

Mr. Ayariga emphasised the Majority’s commitment to accountability. He announced that the House would investigate the “ballooning cost of the Bank of Ghana’s new headquarters, which jumped from $81.8 million to $250 million,” the “controversial Agyapa Royalties deal and the $190 million PDS power scandal,” and alleged procurement abuses at the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG).

He said the Attorney General and the Special Prosecutor would be held accountable for delivering results on prosecutions and asset recovery.

The Majority also applauded the performance of House committees during the recess, citing inspections of schools, hospitals, sanitation infrastructure, and vulnerable care centres. He emphasised the importance of Parliament’s role between elections.

“If we falter, democracy will fail our citizens,” he warned, “and the appeal of military adventurism may grow.”

The Majority Leader concluded by urging bipartisan cooperation in tackling youth unemployment, improving infrastructure, reducing living costs, and delivering governance reforms.

“Let us rise above partisan divides,” he said and added, “Together, we can deliver meaningful progress for our beloved nation.”

By Ernest Kofi Adu, Parliament House

Juaboso District Assembly holds workshop for newly recruited revenue collectors

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By Isaac Kwaku Gyedu

Juaboso (WN/R), May 28, GNA – The Juaboso District Assembly has organised a workshop for newly recruited revenue collectors to equip them with the necessary skills and knowledge on effective revenue mobilisation.

The training was aimed at educating the collectors on the distribution of bills and updating records to improve upon the Assembly’s Internally Generated Fund (IGF).

Mr Ambrose Gago, the Juaboso District Budget Officer, during the event said the workshop was to equip them with strategic ideas and skills to mobilise revenue for development.

He added that what the collectors needed to know was to ensure that proper education and sensitisation were given to the people for them to understand why they should pay their taxes.

Mr Alexander Adu Quist, the District Chief Executive (DCE), said domestic revenue mobilisation was crucial for economic and social development of the district.

He advised the collectors to exhibit good communication and customer relations with the people to help persuade them to fulfil their tax obligations.

“I am as well urging you to furnish the Assembly with names of defaulters for the right measures to be taken against them to deter others with wrong intentions about tax payments,” he noted.

He appealed to the people of Juaboso to pay their taxes timely and appropriately to help generate enough funds for development.

Mr Douglas Ntiamoah Mensah, the Juaboso District Accountant, also underscored the need for the training, and said it was meant to educate the collectors on addressing revenue shortfalls, tracing and tracking revenue source, and keeping revenue records among others.

GNA

Edited by Justina Paaga /Kenneth Odeng Adade

#GraphicEcobankForum: Ghana’s tax system encourages evasion – ISSER Director

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The Director of the Institute for Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER), Professor Peter Quartey, has warned that Ghana’s current tax regime promotes evasion and enriches a select few at the expense of national development.

Delivering remarks at the maiden edition of the Daily Graphic/Ecobank Ghana Economic Forum in Accra, Prof Quartey argued that the imposition of high taxes on individuals and businesses, in a bid to meet fiscal targets, is backfiring and undermining public confidence in the tax system.

“Our tax levels are too high, in my view. Our VAT is 21 per centplus. Some are even straight levies that you cannot claim input tax on. But look at our competitors. On average, some are paying 15 per cent, 18 per cent, and we are charging over 21 per cent. So what you are doing is that you are encouraging people to evade,” he said.

He emphasised that taxation should not merely be a tool for revenue generation, but also a means of influencing behaviour and promoting compliance. However, he noted that Ghana’s approach has created an environment that fosters collusion and corruption between tax collectors and taxpayers.

“When your tax is too high, it calls for tax evasion. So you are enriching customs officials, you are enriching businessmen, and the government is struggling for money,” he stressed.

Prof Quartey lamented the state’s continued failure to effectively integrate the informal sector into the tax net, stating that more than 80% of Ghana’s economy remains untaxed, putting undue pressure on the formal sector.

“All we do is tax the 20 per cent in the formal economy. Why should we focus so much on the 20 per cent and overtax them, and leave the 80 per cent?” he queried.

He called for an urgent review of the VAT system and advocated broader stakeholder engagement to bring informal businesses under a more equitable tax regime. Without such reforms, he warned, Ghana’s revenue mobilisation efforts would continue to fall short, increasing the country’s reliance on borrowing.

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“We need to look at this critically. Otherwise, we would not be making a lot of inroads in terms of tax revenue mobilisation, and that is why we keep borrowing. Because we are not raising enough revenue,” he said.

Prof Quartey also dismissed the notion that increasing taxes would automatically raise the country’s tax-to-GDP ratio, pointing out that Ghana continues to lag behind its peers on the continent. “Tax to GDP at best is 14 per cent, when some are doing 18, 20, 23 per cent within Africa. So it tells you there is a lot of risk inherent in this approach.”

He concluded that tax compliance could be improved through greater transparency and accountability in the use of public funds. “It’s not just about raising the revenue, but how well you use the revenue to advance your cause,” he said.

The forum, held at the Ecobank Head Office under the theme “A broad review of the economy of Ghana: Then, now, and the way forward”, featured contributions from Presidential Advisor on the Economy, Seth Terkper, and PwC Ghana’s Tax Partner, Abeku Gyan-Quansah. Discussions focused on repositioning Ghana’s economy for long-term growth through prudent fiscal management, innovative taxation strategies and sustainable monetary policy.

Gyakie Returns With ‘Sankofa’ –

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Gyakie 

 

Ghanaian singer and songwriter, Gyakie, has released a new single, ‘Sankofa’, a soulful anthem that explores the power of reflection and emotional truth.

Co-written with longtime collaborator Eyram Gbewonyo (Afrolektra), the song marks the beginning of a new chapter in Gyakie’s artistic journey—one that is raw, inward-looking, and brimming with vulnerability.

Rooted in the meaning of the Ghanaian Adinkra symbol Sankofa – to go back and retrieve what has been lost – the song delicately captures the beauty in reconnection, closure, and emotional
honesty.

With stripped-down production and emotive delivery, Gyakie offers listeners a glimpse into the heart of her upcoming debut album.

The soulful songstress and Afrobeats sensation is also set to unveil her highly-anticipated debut album, ‘After Midnight’. The project is a deeply personal body of work, inspired by the quiet, reflective, and creatively charged hours that follow midnight—when emotions run deep, inspiration flows, and the world feels at its stillest.

Speaking on the album’s essence, Gyakie shares: “Almost all the songs on the album were recorded after midnight. It’s within those hours that I find my best inspiration to write. The peace and quiet, the sounds from the birds, the serenity— everything about that time fuels my creativity.”

Beyond its musical scope, ‘After Midnight’ is also a reflection of Gyakie’s personal experiences and emotional journey. She opens up about moments of solitude, grief, and healing: “I’ve done a lot of crying after midnight too. When I’m in my down moments, I schedule my tears for when I get home from work, then I let it all out.”

 

Balancing cultural fit and leadership competence

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In the high-stakes world of executive recruitment, one wrong hire can cost a company millions—not just in compensation, but in lost opportunities, damaged morale, and strategic missteps.

Yet, the ideal candidate isn’t always the one with the most impressive CV or the longest list of accomplishments. It’s the one who strikes the right balance between cultural fit and leadership competence.

As businesses across Africa and the world continue to evolve, this balancing act becomes both an art and a science. The leaders who thrive are those who can navigate a company’s unique ecosystem while propelling it into new frontiers. But how do we identify and attract such rare talent?

Why Cultural Fit Matters—But Isn’t Everything

Cultural fit refers to how well a person aligns with an organisation’s values, mission, and working style. At the executive level, it’s more than showing up in company colours or attending town halls—it’s about living the ethos of the organisation through decisions, leadership, and change management.

Executives who lack cultural alignment can create dissonance at the top, leading to friction and turnover. Imagine a risk-averse leader placed in an innovation-driven startup, or a hierarchical manager entering a flat, collaborative organisation. No matter how competent, they will likely struggle to gain followership and drive results.

However, over-emphasising cultural fit can be risky. When companies hire primarily for “fit,” they may inadvertently create echo chambers and limit diversity of thought—especially dangerous at the leadership level, where varied perspectives are crucial.

Leadership Competence: The Strategic Backbone

Cultural alignment may help an executive settle in, but it’s competence that ensures they succeed. Today’s executive roles demand multidimensional skill sets: strategic vision, execution strength, emotional intelligence, stakeholder management, and the ability to lead in crises.

Leadership competence must also be contextual. A company in turnaround needs a change agent; one in rapid growth needs a systems builder. It’s not enough to review past achievements—what matters is how relevant those achievements are to a company’s current and future needs.

Too often, companies are dazzled by big titles and brand affiliations without probing for substance. That’s where evidence-based assessment becomes critical.

The Case for Evidence-Based Executive Assessment

To strike the right balance, companies must move beyond gut feelings and adopt structured evaluation processes. Two tools in particular offer a sharper lens:

  1. Behavioural Interviews
    These interviews explore not just what executives have done, but how they’ve done it. Questions such as “Tell me about a time you led through uncertainty” or “Describe when you had to challenge your board” offer deep insights into leadership style, values, and adaptability.

  2. Psychometric and Personality Assessments
    When used responsibly, tools like Hogan Assessments or EQ-i reveal cognitive abilities, personality traits, and stress responses. While not a magic bullet, these tools—combined with interviews and references—provide a fuller picture of a candidate’s potential.

Across Africa, where more companies are embracing data-driven HR, these tools offer a competitive edge in executive search.

Don’t Forget Cultural Due Diligence

Just as we assess candidates for cultural fit, organisations must assess the culture they’re inviting someone into. Is it inclusive, resilient, and future-ready? Does it support the kind of leadership it needs?

Cultural due diligence requires honesty about company norms, politics, and unspoken rules. Often, executive hires fail not because of poor performance, but due to misaligned expectations.

What Leading Companies Do Differently

Top-performing organisations treat executive recruitment as a strategic investment. They:

  • Clearly define role requirements and success metrics.

  • Engage internal stakeholders early and consistently.

  • Use external advisors to challenge bias and enhance objectivity.

  • Prioritise onboarding and long-term integration—not just placement.

These companies understand that the right leader can transform a business, while the wrong one can derail it.

Conclusion: The Road Ahead for Executive Hiring in Ghana

With expanding industries and new opportunities, Africa—and Ghana in particular—is poised for a leadership revolution. But to sustain growth, we must abandon outdated hiring models.

Balancing cultural fit with leadership competence is more than a slogan—it’s a strategy for long-term success. It requires holistic evaluation, intentional hiring processes, and a deep understanding that executive recruitment is not just about filling roles—it’s about fueling transformation.

The right leaders are out there. The question is: Are we asking the right questions, using the right tools, and creating the right environments for them to thrive?

As Ghana’s talent landscape matures, executive recruitment must become a deliberate, high-impact function. Those who get it right will build resilient organisations ready for the future.

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Source: Jobberman

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Transforming Economy Requires Private Sector Support – BoG Governor

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Dr. Johnson Asiama

 

The Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Dr. Johnson Asiama, has indicated that transforming the economy into a more resilient, forward looking enterprise ecosystem requires the support of the private sector.

Speaking at the 9th CEO Awards and Expo on the theme, “Monetary Policy, Financial Stability & Innovation: Anchoring Ghana’s Economic Reset for Sustainable Growth,” in Accra, he said it was imperative for the private sector to expand its productive footprint through innovation.

“Your leadership is now central to building a more resilient Ghana. Indeed, the private sector is not a bystander – You are the builders of jobs, the drivers of innovation, the stewards of risk, and the enablers of long-term productivity,” he said.

“I understand the weight of your responsibilities, margins are tight, talent is mobile, and markets are demanding. But in this environment, leadership isn’t about avoiding risk. It’s about managing it with purpose. That’s where the public and private sectors must walk together,” he stated.

He, therefore, advised the chief executives to develop future-ready talent, invest in skills, leadership pipelines, and inclusive workplace cultures through value-added exports as well as regional trade, and industrial scaling.

“This is what a national reset requires. If we rebuild macro stability but maintain outdated business models, we will have missed the moment. In other words, the Bank of Ghana can stabilise the playing field, but it is you, the private sector, who will shape the game,” he added.

He said the Bank of Ghana, as a steward of financial stability, has taken decisive steps, beyond traditional supervision toward a more proactive, risk-sensitive, and system-aware model to what it describes as forward-looking supervision.

According to him, the approach is not just about compliance, but geared towards shaping a banking system that is agile, accountable, and equipped for a fast-changing world.

“At the Bank of Ghana, we are reforming how we regulate, how we communicate, and how we partner. But the true test will be what you do next, as stewards of capital, innovation, and employment, let us make this the moment where Ghana’s public and private leadership rise together, not just to recover, but to reinvent,” he added.

By Ebenezer K. Amponsah

 

You will hear from us- Nana B threatens President Mahama over EOCO arresting Chairman Wontumi

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The organizer of the NPP, Nana B has threatened to deal with the president of Ghana, president John Mahama.

Nana B, speaking in an interview has said that the NPP wouldn’t tolerate the president anymore.

Nana B does not understand why just immediately after the Ashanti Regional chairman had honored the invitation by the CID, EOCO would also arrest him.

Speaker announces reintroduction of anti-LGBTQ+ Bill in Parliament

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The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, has announced that the controversial Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, popularly known as the anti-LGBTQ+ Bill, will be laid before Parliament for its first reading during the second meeting of the Ninth Parliament.

The bill seeks to criminalise LGBTQ+ activities in Ghana, as well as any form of advocacy, promotion, or financial support for such acts.

Delivering his opening address to mark the beginning of the new parliamentary session, Speaker Bagbin stated: “Three private members’ bills—the Property Rights of Spouses Bill, 2025, the Constitution of the Republic of Ghana (Amendment) Bill, 2025, and the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, 2025—have completed the necessary processes in line with the Standing Orders and are expected to be presented for first reading during this meeting.”

The Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill was previously passed by the Eighth Parliament but failed to become law after it did not receive presidential assent during former President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s tenure.

Its reintroduction is expected to reignite intense national and international debate over human rights, constitutional freedoms, and Ghana’s cultural identity.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

Ko-Jo Cue on detailing traumatic experiences in upcoming works

Rapper Ko-Jo Cue has opened up about how traveling to various parts of the world helped him cope with depression brought on by persistent “traumatic experiences.”

Speaking to Graphic Showbiz, the Rich Dad, Poor Dad hitmaker refrained from providing too many details about his challenges, assuring fans that he would reveal more in his “upcoming projects.”

“In 2020 and 2021, I faced two back-to-back traumatic experiences that pushed me to my limits. I’m intentionally withholding some details as they relate closely to my upcoming projects—both in theme and execution,” Ko-Jo Cue shared.

He noted that the COVID-19 pandemic worsened his struggles and ultimately prompted him to seek medical help.

“Those events happening so closely together, alongside the pressures of COVID, became overwhelming. It was this situation that drove me to seek therapy and address the challenges I was facing,” he said.

He continued, “I traveled extensively. At one point, I visited Nigeria, then Kenya, spent some time in the U.S., and even lived in Italy for a while. My travels took me all over, including various places here. The idea was simple: a change of environment can often clear your head.”

“It’s similar to how tidying up your room can enhance your mental clarity. When you’re in a new space, your brain is flooded with fresh information to process, leaving little room for overthinking or moping. It helps you reset.”

Linford Kennedy Amankwaa, known professionally as Ko-Jo Cue, emphasized that therapy, friendship, and gardening were among the key factors that helped him manage his emotions and remain steady during the turmoil.

He explained that he chose to speak out about his struggles to encourage others to seek help and to remind them that they are not alone.

Suspended CJ Torkornoo’s supplementary affidavit dismissed by Supreme Court

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Gertrude Torkornoo has been suspended from office as the Chief Justice Gertrude Torkornoo has been suspended from office as the Chief Justice

The Supreme Court, presided over by the Acting Chief Justice, Justice Paul Baffoe-Bonnie, has struck out the supplementary affidavit filed by the suspended Chief Justice, Gertrude Araba Sackey Torkornoo.

In a unanimous decision, the Court ruled that the supplementary affidavit disclosed information that, under Article 146 of the Constitution, is required to be kept in camera.

Accordingly, the Court struck out the affidavit.

More soon…

US halts student visa appointments and plans expanded social media vetting

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Trump's administration has ordered US embassies to halt student visa appointments Trump’s administration has ordered US embassies to halt student visa appointments

US President Donald Trump’s administration has ordered US embassies around the world to stop scheduling appointments for student visas as it prepares to expand social media vetting of such applicants.

An official memo said social media vetting would be stepped up for student and foreign exchange visas, which would have “significant implications” for embassies and consulates.

It comes during a wide-ranging Trump crackdown on some of America’s most elite universities. He sees these institutions as too left-wing – accusing them of failing to combat antisemitism when pro-Palestinian protests have unfolded on campuses.

Responding to the move, China called on the US to protect international students.

“We urge the US side to earnestly safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of international students, including those from China,” an official was quoted as saying. Hundreds of thousands of Chinese students attend US universities.

The universities themselves are likely to be disquieted as well. Many of them rely on foreign students for a significant chunk of their funding – as those scholars often pay higher tuition fees.

Foreign students who want to study in the US are usually required to schedule interviews at a US embassy in their home country before approval.

State department spokesperson Tammy Bruce told reporters on Tuesday: “We take very seriously the process of vetting who it is that comes into the country, and we’re going to continue to do that.”

The memo, viewed by the BBC’s US partner CBS News, directed US embassies to remove any unfilled appointments from their calendars for students seeking visas, but said those with appointments already scheduled could go ahead.

The pause would last “until further guidance is issued”, Secretary of State Marco Rubio wrote.

The memo also said the state department was preparing for an “expansion of required social media screening and vetting” applicable to all student visa applications.

It did not specify what the vetting would entail.

The Trump administration had already enhanced its vetting of student social media, according to a report by the Guardian in March, which linked the move to a broader crackdown on pro-Palestinian demonstrations on campuses.

In April, the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) stated that it would consider “antisemitic activity on social media and the physical harassment of Jewish individuals as grounds for denying immigration benefit requests”.

As part of the broader crackdown, Trump’s team has frozen hundreds of millions of dollars in funding for universities and moved to deport students, while revoking thousands of visas for others. Many of these actions have been blocked by the courts.

The White House has accused some US universities of allowing pro-Palestinian activism on campus to be hijacked by antisemitism.

Universities have accused the Trump administration of trying to infringe on free speech. Critics say the new policy on social media vetting represents a further violation of the rights that are supposed to be enshrined by the First Amendment in the US Constitution.

Trump has throughout his presidency countered that he is working to defend free speech.

Harvard University has been the focal point of the president’s ire; he has frozen $2.65bn (£1.96bn) in federal grants to the institution and has sought to put other federal funding worth $100m under review.

The university’s president has said the cuts will “hurt” the country, not just Harvard, because academics were conducting research deemed “high-priority” by the government.

Last week, Trump also revoked Harvard’s ability to enrol international students or host foreign researchers. A federal judge blocked the policy.

If the measure is ultimately allowed, it could deliver a devastating blow to the university, where more than a quarter of students are from overseas. Students protested against the move at the university’s campus near Boston on Tuesday.

Unity Cup: Watch Black Stars' first training session ahead of Nigeria clash

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Video | BLACK STARS FIRST TRAINING IN LONDON AHEAD OF FIRST UNITY GAME AGAINST NIGERIA

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Broys Int. To Launch Twin Musiclave

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Bright Addison Kofi Kyereme

 

The Director and CEO of Broys International Limited, Mr. Bright Addison Kofi Kyereme, has announced plans of hosting twin-launch of Musiclave, an annual training programme for musicians and instrumentalists.

The first launch is scheduled to happen in Paris on Saturday, June 28, 2025. The second launch will take place in Accra on August 6, 2025.

Musiclave has the commendable objective of offering training in DAWs and software, discussing equipment and innovations, music production tools, music publishing, music marketing, industry trends, and production tips.

The launch in France is scheduled to take place at Le Pacha, 25 D306, 77240, Vert-Saint-Denis, Paris; and the launch in Ghana is set to take place at The Dreamer’s Hub in North Legon, Kofi Annan Avenue. Both events are expected to attract music and sound industry players.

Mr. Bright Addison has, in the last twenty years, mentored several hundreds of people, especially in Ghana and the United Kingdom.

Broys International Limited has in the last eight years been devoted to the marketing, sales, and servicing of music items.