University of Ghana to host UN Toolkit on Sport, Development and Peace

The University of Ghana will host this year’s United Nations (UN) Toolkit on Sport, Development and Peace workshop beginning 13th to 14th June,2023

Capacity development and technical cooperation are mandated work areas within the Division for Inclusive Social Development of UN DESA.

The UN General Assembly in 2018, adopted a resolution dubbed ‘Sport as enabler of sustainable development’ that outlined the expectations of Member States regarding the mainstreaming of sport as a platform and an enabler of sustainable development.

The two-day event also seeks to enhance capacity among its member states and civil society organisations to formulate effective policies that focus on the intersection of sport and sustainable development.

The workshop would provide a platform for participants to discuss, share knowledge, concepts, experiences, good policy practices and recommendations to help create effective SDP policies and programs.

Some key areas to be discussed would be development and peace policies and programmes, Skills training, volunteerism, employability, mentorship, Physical education, physical activity and sport, Safeguarding, integrity, among others.

The workshop would be graced by the Minister for Youth and Sports, Hon. Mustapha Ussif, Mr. Charles Paul Iheanacho Abani, who is the resident coordinator of the UN in Ghana, Mr. Paul Semeh, Founder and CEO of Street Children Empowerment Foundation and representative of the Civil Society Organisations, and Professor Bella Bello Bitugu, Director of Sports at the University of Ghana Sports Directorate.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Yaw Myler releases new banger titled ‘Why Me’

Young Ghanaian afro-pop artiste Charles Afriye Baiden, known in the music world as Yaw Myler has dropped a new song titled ‘Why Me’.

The song was released on Friday, June 9, 2023, and was produced and mixed by Sowix.

The song explains how he chose to open-up to his friend about his dark life experiences with hope that it stayed between them but rather got disappointed.

In an interview with GNA Entertainment in Accra, Myler said he was motivated by his own perspective about life and said that: ‘you must go stronger to survive in life’.

He said he has music at his heart and has the passion and talent to educate the public through music.

‘I have been singing throughout my entire life but never dreamt about making it professionally,’ he said.

Myler started his music career in senior high school, where he used to perform at inter-school musical competition.

He said the music industry has not been easy, but he thanked the talented artistes who have already made it the music industry.

The young rapper assured his fans about more singles dropping soon this year.

He advised the youth and upcoming musicians to keep going, and said, ‘you can be late, but you will be the latest’.

His previous song dubbed ‘Mood’ has reach millions of streams on all musical platforms.

Myler is an artiste with passion and different dynamics of music, he is ambitious to put the Ghanaian music industry to the world.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Let’s invest Covid levy in HIV/Malaria/TB ‘fight’ – Cecilia Senoo

Madam Cecilia Senoo, the Executive Director, Hope for Future Generations (HFFG), a health focus non governmental organisation, has urged the Government to invest covid levy in HIV and TB campaign.

She said having declared officially that COVID-19 pandemic had ended in the country, it was only prudent that the levy was converted as domestic resources to end HIV, malaria and TB.

Madam Senoo said this at a day’s sensitisation for media practitioners on reporting on TB.

She said HIV, malaria and TB killed more than five million people a year globally and said ‘once Covid-19 is no more, let’s use these monies to save lives’.

Madam Senoo said for instance In 2021, incidence of tuberculosis for Ghana was 136 cases per 100,000 people and that it was time the country supported co-financing of the Global Fund and GAVI grants to ensure sustainability and ownership of their programmes.

Edward W. Scott, Jr., founder and Chairman of Friends of the Global Fight, which provides support, with the assistance of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, for The Global Fund to Fight for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, in an article, said progress in fighting those diseases had been facilitated by the dramatic increase in resources provided by international donors, including the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

Madam Senoo said domestic funding of the campaign against the three diseases could strengthen the health system and build community systems to help find cases for treatment.

Dr Yaw Adusi-Poku, Programme Manager, National TB Control Programme, said two people died every hour from TB globally and advocated the use of town health committees to stop TB in Ghana.

Chief Austin Arinze Oblefuna, Vice Chair, Stop TB Partnership Board, said: ‘The pandemic we have now is TB. Covid is gone. Instead of preparing for any future pandemic, let’s deal with what we have now.’

The participants were taken through reporting on TB.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Organized Labour must protect interest of both workers and investors – Tema Workers

Scores of workers in Tema have called on the Ghana Trade Union Congress (TUC) to work in the interest of both workers and investors, saying that ‘without investors, there will not be any workforce for labour unions to protect their interests.’

Some of the workers in Tema expressed concern about the recent impasse between the Ghana Mineworkers’ Union and TUC and the management of Sunon Asogli Power Plant.

The Workers told the Ghana News Agency that the protracted differences between the TUC and management of Sunon Asogli Power Ghana Limited was unhealthy for both workers and investors and that ‘the formation of a union should not create a landmine at Sunon Asogli.’

‘Workers need a conducive environment to work, while investors also demand the same, as well as protection and security of their investment,’ Dr. William Mensah Ansah, an industrialist, told the GNA in an interview.

Dr. Ansah called on the TUC to adopt mediation instead of the antagonistic fighting strategy.

He described the attack on the management of Sunon Asogli Power Ghana Limited by Dr. Yaw Baah, TUC General Secretary, on the May Day commemoration and at the ongoing 11th International Labour Organization Annual Conference in Geneva as very unfortunate.

He said ironically that the ILO conference sought to address a wide range of issues, including a just transition towards sustainable and inclusive economies, quality apprenticeships, and labour protection; unfortunately, ‘our TUC used the occasion to attack a local company.’

Dr. Ansah noted that such pronouncements on international platforms would send wrong signals to the investor community about the antagonistic posture of Organized Labour against investors.

‘We are not protecting and endorsing bad labour practices by management, but we must be fair and sincere in the protection of workers without killing the chicken that produces the golden eggs,’ he said.

Ms. Juliet Okai, a banking consultant, also told the GNA that labour and management must coexist through peaceful means, stressing that modern labour engagement must ensure the relationship between workers, employing entities, trade unions, and the government.

Ms. Okai stressed the need for a strong relationship between labour unions, the government, and investors for a harmonious business environment, adding this is the ‘way to attract investors who we need to grow the economy for the future; labour cannot scare investors away through constant agitation against private companies.’

Ms. Ramatu Ayisha, a communication consultant, expressed concern about the posture of the Ghana Mineworkers’ Union (TUC), which had resulted in protracted hostilities with the management of Sunon Asogli Power (Ghana) Limited.

She said the wilful interferences, threats, and intimidating tactics adopted by the Ghana Mineworkers Union to force management at Sunon Asogli Power to accept the formation of the union were unfortunate.

‘The union cannot adopt intimidation as a means to force management to follow a process. We must engage through cordial means, not one party holding a gun to the head of the other,’ Ms. Ayisha stated.

The Tema Based Communication Consult reminded management and unions that whatever action ‘we embarked on collectively or individually, we must look at the general impact on the investor community, the Ghanaian workers’ interest, and the general work atmosphere in the country.’

Other workers also appealed to the Ghana Mineworkers Union, the Ghana Trade Union Congress, and the workers and management of Sunon Asogli to back out of their entrenched positions in the best interest of the country and the workers of Sunon Asogli.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Coastal communities risk tidal invasion due to sand winning – EPA warns

The Environment Protection Agency (EPA) has cautioned that many coastal communities in the Central Region risked being washed away by sea waves due to increasing sand winning activities usually carried out at night with impunity.

It indicated that although the menace had persisted for many years, the trend in recent times was scary and posed a threat to coastal inhabitants and monumental structures.

‘The beautiful beachfront with undulating sandbars and sandy beaches on which many communities sit are fast vanishing as a result of sand winning among others,’ Mr. Shine Fiagome, the Central Regional Director of the Agency, said in an interview with the GNA.

Researchers have warned that coastal communities risk tidal invasions as the global coastline loses an average of 1.5 metres annually, he told the Ghana News Agency.

This was on the sidelines of a clean-up exercises held in Elmina in the Komenda-Edina-Eguafo-Abrem Municipality to mark the World Environment Day celebration.

The Day, celebrated annually, was observed on the theme: ‘Solution to plastic solution’, with the campaign slogan: #BeatPlasticPollution, ‘Ecosystem Restoration’.

Supported by the Municipal Assembly, Hotels Association and Zoomlion Ghana, the team cleared the beaches and roadsides of weeds and desilted choked gutters, among others.

The celebration served as a reminder that people’s action on plastic matters, as the material was slowly seeping into the oceans, soil, and forest and causing irreparable damage.

Mr. Fiagome said despite the importance of the sea to tourism development, fishing and marine resources were being desecrated with open defecation, sand winning and plastic waste.

According to him, more than 400 million tons of plastics were produced every year for use in a wide variety of applications, with at least 14 million tons of plastic ending up in the ocean.

He also decried the practice where people took things for granted and treated water bodies anyhow as marine species ingested or were entangled by plastic debris, which caused severe injuries and death.

That, Fiagome said, threatened food safety and quality of human health, coastal tourism, and contributed to climate change.

Therefore, he rallied the unalloyed support of coastal communities to rid the beaches of all environmental breaches to serve their meaningful purposes.

The protection of the ocean, he said, must be seen as a collective responsibility by all but not limited to institutions as it remained an important resource for nation building.

Mr. Alvin Mensah Robertson, the Municipal Environmental Officer, called on Ghanaians to observe environmental cleanliness to enable them to stay healthy.

He noted that the attitude of some people throwing garbage into gutters and defecating in open places did not augur well for the environment and must be stopped.

Nana Kwamina Eku IV, the Chief of Mbofra Nkyinim, a suburb of Elmina, who participated in the exercise, pledged to collaborate with stakeholders to ride the coastal stretch of insanitary conditions.

He, however, appealed for refuse containers to be placed at vantage locations to stop people from indiscriminate waste disposable.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Atiwa West NCCE promotes civic responsibility in schools

The National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) office in the Atiwa West District has visited over 30 public schools to educate students and teachers on responsible citizenship.

The visit was part of activities of the NCCE to mark this year’s citizenship week celebration, which seeks to promote national development and cohesion.

Among the schools visited were A.M.E. Zion JHS, Presbyterian JHS, Methodist JHS, Roman Catholic JHS, Anglican JHS, Islamic JHS, Blue Star JHS, and Advent JHS.

During the visit, Mr. Joseph Owusu Koranteng, Atiwa West District Director of NCCE, spoke on the theme: ‘Thirty Years of Consolidating Constitutional Democracy and Building National Cohesion: The Role of the Youth.’

He narrated the history of the First to Fourth Republics and enumerated what led to the longevity and sustainability of the Fourth Republic.

He encouraged the pupils to be bold and report crimes to authorities at home and at school whenever they come across suspicious people or people who were engaging in unlawful activities.

He mentioned some things that the youth could do to protect Ghana’s democracy and ensure its sustainability, as well as advised schoolchildren to study hard to fulfil their dreams in life.

Police Superintendent Harold Yamoah of the Kwabeng District Police Office, who served as a resource person, also encouraged students to be responsible young citizens.

He advised them to desist from illegal mining (Galamsey) while urging them to uphold national values such as patriotism, honesty, discipline, hard work, respect, and tolerance for peaceful cohesion.

Source: Ghana News Agency