Union Groups of Companies present 5,000 exercise books to deprived schools


The Union Groups of Companies, operators of the Sunyani-based Union FM, a local radio station, has presented 5,000 exercise books, to be distributed among deprived schools in the Bono Region.

Mrs Ruth Taeko, the General Manager, said the presentation forms part of the Union’s corporate social responsibility to improve education in the municipality.

‘Dr Augustine Opoku Agyemang, our Chief Executive Officer is highly interested in human development, changing lives and transforming the world and he is determined to remove barriers that impede education growth’, she stated.

Mrs Taeko expressed the hope that the exercise books would benefit the poor and vulnerable children in the deprived communities so as to inspire them to learn.

Receiving the books, Madam Justina Owusu-Banahene, the Bono Regional Minister expressed appreciation to the Union and promised to ensure that the education directorate sent and distributed the books accordingly.

She said the government required support from the private sector in p
roviding quality basic education and called on other companies, organisations and corporate bodies to also emulate, and support basic schools in the region with learning and teaching materials.

Mad Owusu-Banahene praised Dr Agyemang for his exceptional contributions towards enhancing quality education in the region, and expressed the optimism he would do more and help tackle pertinent challenges confronting the growth and development of education in the region.

Source: Ghana News Agency

We support ‘positive’ review of Free SHS – Group


The Champions of Free Education, Africa (COFEA), says it supports a review that will add to the fortunes of Government’s Free Senior High School (Free SHS) programme and not one that will cancel or reduce its purpose.

The Group said a review of the programme should be positive in outlook and add to the gains made in the programme in terms of enrollment and curriculum development.

‘Any possible review from Government or any political party should be premised on improving the policy on its

intended benefits and not one that will deprive others, especially the vulnerable,’ Reverend Afreh Acheampong, Executive Secretary of the Group, said at a press briefing in Accra.

Rev. Acheampong urged SHS heads to comply with the GES harmonised prospectus initiative for schools.

He said the nationalised prospectus initiative, when fully adhered to, would bring relief to parents and students.

‘If school heads adhere to the national prospectus without imposing any extra items apart from what has been officially prescrib
ed, parents will no longer have to wait for schools to be out before shopping for their children,’ he said.

Rev. Acheampong commended GES for introducing the initiative, saying it would curb unapproved prospectus and enrich the Free SHS programme by ensuring that students did not drop out of school because they could not afford certain fees.

Source: Ghana News Agency

CAMFED Ghana supports Over 6,400 students across 38 districts


CAMFED Ghana has supported over 643,964 students to go to school.

The beneficiaries include 153,649 girls supported through secondary school under CAMFED scholarship.

Mr Samuel Asare Danquah, Head of Monitoring, Evaluation, Research and Learning at CAMFED Ghana, mentioned that about 3,430 young women had also been supported through tertiary or higher education with CAMFED scholarship.

He said this during CAMFED Ghana National Annual General Meeting, held in Tamale on the theme: ‘CAMFED’s 2024-2029 Strategy: Your Role in Successful Implementation.’

The meeting was to provide a platform for CAMFED Ghana, its partners and champions to discuss critical issues around the chosen theme and to report on the major programme of activities that had been undertaken in the year.

It was also to receive input from champions that would inform strategies and approaches for the ensuing year.

Mr Danquah stated that CAMFED Ghana had trained 2,400 Teacher Mentors and Community Mentors to support girls in 1,189 CAMFED partn
er schools with 1,107 Leaner Guides trained to also support students in secondary and primary schools to improve girls’ performance in schools.

He said CAMFED Ghana had invested in training programmes for school administrations to strengthen school governance and accountability systems.

Madam Fairuza Safian, National Director of CAMFED Ghana, said over the next six years, CAMFED would implement comprehensive support system, targeted at the most marginalized girls to enable young women transition to secure livelihoods and join a peer network of leaders, to drive the adoption of best practices in national education systems.

Source: Ghana News Agency

ADDRO donates foodstuffs, detergents to Lumen Mundi School of Special Children


The Anglican Diocesan Development and Relief Organisation (ADDRO), has donated food items and other detergents to the Lumen Mundi School of Special Children in the Builsa North Municipality of the Upper East Region.

The items, including bags of rice, gallons of cooking oil, liquid soap, diapers, and toiletries, are to help facilitate the operations of the school and the development of the children with special needs.

The donation by the organisation was in recognition of this year`s World Children`s Day, which was held on the theme ‘For every child, every right,’ aimed at honouring children, protecting and ensuring their welfare, as well as giving them access to rightful education.

It also formed part of ADDRO’s Early Childhood Development Programme, dubbed ‘Moments That Matter (MTM)’, being implemented in six regions of the country, namely; Upper East, Upper West, Western North, Eastern, Northern, and Ashanti.

The programme, with funding support from Episcopal Relief and Development in the United States
of America (USA), aimed at contributing to a healthy mother, growth and survival of children from conception to three years.

Mr Prince Imoro Awimba, the Programmes Coordinator, ADDRO, noted that, as an organisation working in the area where the school was located and particularly focused on the development of children, it was important to complement the efforts of the Lumen Mundi Foundation, that established the school.

Lumen Mundi Foundation is a Latin term which means light of the world.

This, he indicated, would help in the realisation of the full potential of the children who were physically challenged, less privileged, and needed unusual care.

‘We were happy to know two years ago, through one of our stakeholder meetings of which the Executive Director of the school was part, that there was a centre here that takes care

of children that are physically challenged and less privileged and who, in some instances, are abandoned.

‘So, we were inspired by that, and as part of World Children’s Day this year
, we deemed it necessary to support the center so that the Foundation would continue to support and take care of the children’, he added.

Madam Margreet Carpay, Executive Director of the Lumen Mundi Foundation while expressing her gratitude to ADDRO for the donation, said she was moved by the kind gesture and was open to collaborating with them for the development of children with disabilities.

‘This donation of food and other items means so much to us because it can sustain us for months, which means that we do not have to spend that much money on food and the items donated, and we can now use the money for other things, towards the development of the children.

‘We are really grateful, and we thank ADDRO so much for this donation because these children are not as stupid as may be perceived, and together we can support them to grow and realise their potential’, she added.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Konchuri PTA begs for befitting classroom block


The Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) of the Konchuri Basic School in the Jirapa Municipality has appealed to benevolent individuals and organisations to consider building a befitting classroom block for the Junior High Students.

The appeal was necessitated by the lack of befitting classrooms for Junior High School (JHS) one to three students compelling them to sit in dilapidated structures for teaching and learning.

The PTA led the community to build two mud structures to temporarily host the children while they waited for government intervention.

Speaking in an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in the community, Mr Charles Anatakang, the PTA Chairman, described the structures accommodating the JHS children as ‘death traps’ since they could collapse at any time.

‘We do not have any option if not the children are not supposed to be sitting in these structures, they are not safe inside here.

Anytime it threatens to rain the children run into other classrooms because they fear it will collapse on
them,’ he explained.

He said the government constructed the kindergarten (KG) block for the community while a philanthropist built six classrooms for primary one to six.

The PTA Chairperson observed that the timely intervention by providing the JHS block for the community would save the children from imminent disaster as the current structure they sat in risk of collapsing.

Mr Anatakang also mentioned that the school lacked teacher’s accommodation, which discouraged many teachers from staying in the community to teach.

He added that the lack of a source of potable water for the school children at the school was also affecting effective teaching and learning.

‘Because there is no borehole in the school, some children will pretend that they are going to the house to drink water but will never return.

If the boreholes were to be here the child would go there, drink the water, and return to the classroom’, he explained.

Meanwhile, Mr Huudu Kunaateh, the Jirapa District Director of Education, said the direc
torate was aware of the challenge at the school and had informed the Municipal Assembly to provide a befitting classroom block for the children.

He, however, joined the PTA in making a passionate appeal to the benevolent society to intervene as the District Assembly was not swift in responding to their plea of providing a classroom block.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Some $115 million paid as insurance in the upstream sector


Ms. Gertrude Adwoa Ohene-Asienim, Executive Director of the Whitestone Shipbrokers Ghana says some $115 million had been paid as claims in the upstream sector to date.

She added that this huge financial burden in the event of accidents, lost or damages made it prudent for businesses in the industry to carefully insure adding, ‘…and the deep blue sea, right? So, once you are going there, you are in a risky environment and anything can happen, and so for any business venture, you need to take adequate insurance to cover your risk again, because the financial models are huge. Whatever gets lost, missing, or damaged is huge.?

Mrs. Ohene-Asienim told the Ghana News Agency after a plenary session on promoting sound insurance practices and risk mitigation strategies in the oil and gas industry at the 2023 Local Content Concern and Exhibition underway in Takoradi in the Western Region.

The Conference is under the theme: ’10 years of Local Content in Ghana’s Upstream Petroleum Industry: Achievements, Challenges an
d Prospects’.

The Whitehouse Ship Broker said the high risks coupled with high financial burden called for strong financial capacity to compensate,’ yourself or the other parties, or the people who are working for you.’

She noted that if banks were taking insurance to cover their risk, then the ordinary businessman must take adequate insurance for the business and employees and even the contract, ‘We say the principle of indemnity, so you are brought back where you were before the loss so that your business does not suffer setbacks’.

In Ghana,?she indicated that the oil companies together with the insurance companies have come together and formed Ghana oil and gas insurance pool which ensured that resources were pulled together…’ if something is high and one insurance company cannot take it. They share the risk among themselves. And when they even take the risk. They also re-insure with a foreign insurer or a local reinsurance market.’

Ms. Ohene-Asienim, wandered why Ghanaian businesses always played on t
he God-Factor of protection without systemic preparation adding, ‘but insurance is for the future. Even for your life….

She continued that ‘You need to ensure your life. Ensuring your life does not mean you are dying. People die and children can no longer go to school. People’s houses get burnt, and you must rent them. Insurance is for you.’

The National Insurance Commission, she lauded, for the many sensitizations with freight forwarders, importers and exporters, postal services, and others in the chain for increased understanding and participation.

Source: Ghana News Agency