NPRA gets new Chief Executive Officer


The President, Nana Addo-Dankwa Akufo-Addo has appointed Mr. John Kwaning Mbroh, as the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the National Pensions Regulatory Authority, (NPRA).

Mr. Mbroh, whose appointment takes effect from February 1, 2024, replaces Mr. Hayford Atta Krufi who proceeds on retirement after holding the position since 2017.

Mr. Mbroh, a management member of the NPRA and currently the Director of Standards and Compliance at the Authority for the past six years, has overseen the core mandate under Section 7 of Act 766 of 2008 and has significantly enhanced the Authority’s regulation of the 3-tier pension schemes, schemes trustees, and service providers.

An official statement signed by Nana Sifa Twum, the Head of Corporate Affairs of NPRA stated.

The statement said, ‘Mr Mbroh is well versed in pension systems and administration and has been the Coordinator of the Authority’s Risk-Based Supervision System (RBSS) deployment, which seeks to strategically move the Authority from a compliance-based to
a risk-based approach, with the development of the underlying business processes manual, the RBSS framework manual and the completion of a transitional RBS model’.

The new CEO has attended several local and international conferences on pensions and has represented the Authority at the technical committee levels of the International Organisation of Pension Supervisors (IOPS), the OECD Working Party on Private Pensions, the International Social Security Association (ISSA) and Ghana’s Financial Stability Council (FSC).

Mr. Mbroh takes over as the CEO of the NPRA with extensive experience, having benefited from several specialised training sessions in the areas of Risk-Based Supervision of pension funds, design of pension systems, managing pensions in developing economies, alternative investments, responsible investing, Financial Technology and pension inclusion, social protection systems, retirement planning, leadership, corporate governance, among others.

Until 2018 when he joined the NPRA, he worked as a Le
cturer and rose through the ranks to become a Senior Lecturer, Head of the Department of Accountancy Studies and Director of the

Business Advisory Directorate of the Cape Coast Technical University between January 2006 and December 2017.

Mr. Mbroh also taught post-graduate first-year Accounting and Finance and final-year Corporate Finance at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Institute of Distance Learning and between the 2013 and 2015 academic years, he supervised 15 postgraduate dissertations.

From July 2002 to December 2005, he worked as the Accounts and Administrative Manager of a property management company, Riverside Belvedere Management Company Limited, Westminster, London.

Mr. Mbroh has widely consulted several micro, small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in the areas of business set-up, funding sources, financial management and general business management.

He has co-authored a book on financial management, published several articles and is credited with hundreds of citations i
n accounting, funding and financial management practices of SMEs in Ghana.

A former business student at St Augustine’s College in Cape Coast, Mr. Mbroh holds a BSc in Accounting and Finance and an MSc in Finance and Accounting from the London South Bank University, London, England.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Ghana to host Africa’s Peace, Investment and Tourism Summit in April


Africa’s Peace, Investment and Tourism Summit, an annual event organised to unite diverse stakeholders with a focus on promoting Peace, Investment and Tourism in Africa, comes off in April.

The three-day event which will take place from April 15 to 17 in Accra, is to primarily cultivate a positive and inclusive environment whilst inspiring and empowering individuals and communities to contribute to a peaceful future.

It is being organised in partnership with the Office of the Ga Mantse Star Galaxi Media UK, Enlightening and Empowering People with Disabilities in Africa (EEPD Africa, Luxurious Living USA, SunRays Group – Nigeria, DiffuserNigeria – Nigeria, Maurya Infotech Services – India, K-Pentag LLC – Finland and other international organisations.

The summit will serve as a vital platform to identify investment opportunities that can drive economic growth, job creation, and overall community development.

Beyond the economic considerations, there would be leadership and breakout sessions where seasoned
speakers would inspire participants to become catalysts for positive change in their communities.

A press release from the organisers said community and political leaders would be given the opportunity to showcase their unique potentials and engage investors to explore possibilities for industrialisation and economic growth to create employment opportunities.

Key personalities like the Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia would grace the occasion as the Special Guest of Honour and also in attendance would be the Ga Mantse, King Tackie Teiko Tsuru II.

The Chief of Staff, US Ambassador to Ghana, British High Commissioner to Ghana, Officials from the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre, Ministers of Defense, Trade and Industry, Aviation, Business Development and other sector Ministers would also be in attendance.

The release said on the first day, there would be discussions and initiatives on the importance of peace in national development where participants would include community and political leaders, securit
y agencies, members of the Diplomatic Corps, the clergy, and Civil Society Organizations (CSOs).

The second day would have an investment round table discussion and the focus would be to bring together investors, entrepreneurs and, industry experts for insightful discussions and collaborations.

There would also be an evening gala dinner, which would be an exclusive celebration in the esteemed company of King Tackie Teiko Tsuru II.

On the third day, there would be a diplomatic tour where Africa’s potential for investment would be highlighted, and cultural richness and investment prospects highlighted together with the diverse heritage.

Key areas of discussion would be peace and security, real estate, wealth and asset management, wellbeing, wellness and healthcare, aviation, oil and gas, tourism, mining and solar energy.

Some participating countries are United States of America, United Kingdom, Switzerland, Germany, Netherlands, Trinidad and Tobago, Zimbabwe, Sierra Leon Liberia and Togo.

The rest are Nige
ria, Cote D’Voire, Cameroon, Kenya, Uganda, Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.

Participants are to visit www.ddlfglobal.com to register.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Unavailability of plumpy-nut affecting treatment of kwashiorkor- Nutritionist


Ms Joyce Asare Kissi, the Head of the Nutrition Unit at Tema General Hospital, has said the unavailability of the Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF), popularly known as plumpy nuts, is affecting the treatment of Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM).

Ms Kissi said the fortified peanut butter-like paste contained essential macronutrients from the four-star diet groups to aid in the treatment of SAM, known in Ghanaian parlance as ‘kwashiorkor’.

Speaking with the Ghana News Agency in an interview, she said the treatment food, which used to be provided for by the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF), had become a scarce commodity for some years now.

She stated that with the unavailability of the RUTF from UNICEF, the Tema General Hospital which is one of the few hospitals that treated SAM inpatients, now relied on a local producing company in Kumasi for an alternative treatment food known as ‘project peanut butter’.

She, however, said that the local alternative was also no longer available as the company had ha
lted production, impeding nutritionists’ quest to reduce the vulnerability and high mortality risk among children under five years suffering from kwashiorkor.

Ms Kissi revealed that, having knowledge of the formulae for the preparation of the treatment food, nutritionists at the Tema General Hospital currently prepared their own ready-to-use therapeutic food to manage severe acute malnourished children in their care, stating, however, that it is quite an expensive venture.

She said that kwashiokor children under the care of her outfit are fed and treated under the supervision of the health officials when on admission, explaining that those who have other medical conditions were treated under Inpatient care (IPC), as both conditions are managed concurrently.

She said when discharged, the feed was provided for them for the treatment to continue, indicating that it was well packaged and sealed and therefore did not need refrigeration.

She said the food and treatment milk were packaged in such a way that care
givers would have to take a pack at a time instead of having to fetch it from a container and contaminate it.

The Tema General Hospital had been able to use its own therapeutic food to treat SAM in children and recorded remarkable survival.

Ms Kissi, however, indicated that because the treatment was not included in the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) and most of the parents of children with kwashiorkor did not have the means to pay a token for the feed, they stopped the treatment after discharge, leading to relapse and in some cases, resulting in the death of the children.

She appealed to the government and the National Health Insurance Authority to include SAM treatment in the scheme to help save the lives of the children, as it still existed in Ghana and posed growth and developmental challenge to patients.

She said that Tema General Hospital, which was the only hospital with inpatient care for kwashiokor treatment within Tema and its environs, recorded on average two severe acute malnutrition c
ases per week.

Ms Kissi appealed to organisations and individuals to add the nutrition unit of the Tema General Hospital to their support list, indicating that the unit needed baby diapers, grains, and children’s clothing to assist poor mothers on admission.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Lawyer for Jammeh enforcer argues Swiss prosecutors failed to connect Sonko to alleged crimes against humanity


Philippe Currat, a Swiss attorney defending Ousman Sonko, Gambia’s former interior minister in his Swiss trial for crimes against humanity, told the court on Wednesday that prosecutors had failed to prove their case.

Currat said that after 13 days of hearings, including the testimonies of 11 witnesses, prosecutors had not provided sufficient evidence linking Sonko to the violations for which he is accused.

Sonko was arrested in January 2017 on charges brought by the Swiss Attorney General’s office, along with 10 plaintiffs from Gambia, who accused Sonko of torture, murder, false imprisonment, rape, and deprivation of liberty, allegedly perpetrated against Gambians during the 22-year rule of ex-president Yahya Jammeh.

In 2006, following a failed coup, dozens of civilians and military personnel were arrested and detained, during which they were allegedly tortured. Several plaintiffs testified to such events, but Sonko maintained he was not a member of the panel that would have overseen their alleged torture
. ‘He was there on the first day… This was before the people were tortured. Once again, these people were tortured, and they were under the custody of the NIA and the Junglers,’ and not Sonko, Currat argued.

Currat argued the prosecution failed to establish Sonko’s role in the alleged torture of the plaintiffs. ‘What is missing is the link between torture at the NIA [National Intelligence Agency] and Ousman Sonko,’ argued Currat.

The hearings of witnesses ended Wednesday with the testimony of Madi Ceesay, the former general manager of The Independent, arrested in March 2006 with the paper’s editor-in-chief Musa Saidykhan. Both were allegedly tortured and detained for 22 days at the premises of the National Intelligence Agency for publishing false information about the alleged involvement of the former deputy director of NIA, Samba Bah, in a foiled coup that year.

The bi-weekly newspaper was ‘forcibly shut down,’ by members of the police intervention unit, according to local and international press freedom
organizations. But Sonko claimed that officials obtained a court order to shut down the paper. According to the Gambia Press Union, however, all 15 incidents of media closure in Banjul, under Jammeh, were arbitrary.

Sonko denied any knowledge or involvement in the alleged torture of Musa and Madi. At least two civilians-one of whom was allegedly raped-and one soldier also testified they were tortured in 2006. They blamed Sonko for participating in the investigation panel that ordered or endorsed their ill-treatment.

Sonko is the second person to face trial in Switzerland under the principle of universal jurisdiction, which holds that crimes against humanity are committed against all humans regardless of where they were committed. The first person to face trial in Switzerland under universal jurisdiction, Alieu Kosiah of Liberia, was convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2022.

Swiss prosecutors have tried to prove Sonko’s responsibility for torture through his alleged participation in various inv
estigation panels as inspector general or for ordering or abetting abuse as interior minister.

During his testimony, Sonko, who denied any participation or knowledge in the arrest and torture of protestors at NIA in 2016, said he learned ‘much later’ what had occurred, and said the police acted ‘in accordance with the Gambian law,’ with ‘proportionate use of force’ when arresting them.

Sonko served under Jammeh as police chief for one year and as interior minister for 10 years. He was in charge of Gambia’s prisons and internal security matters for half of Jammeh’s presidency. The Gambia’s Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission found Jammeh had used police and prisons as tools to oppress and neutralise political opponents.

During Gambia’s Truth Commission hearings, several witnesses testified that the Security Wing at the country’s central prison Mile 2-the area of the prison where high-profile prisoners are kept-was used as a torture and arbitrary detention ground for members of Jammeh’s hit-squa
d, the Junglers. Sonko maintained that the Security Wing had been under the control of the State Guards, elite forces guarding the presidency.

In the second week of the trial, two prison officers, Lamin Sanneh and Abdou Jammeh, testified to torture, and poor food and hygiene conditions at Mile 2 prison.

‘Prisons in The Gambia are notoriously substandard, but this is not the result of Gambian state policy, but rather a historical legacy with which we have to come to terms,’ said Sonko, while adding that he tripled the budget for food for prisoners during his time as interior minister.

According to the human rights committee of Gambia’s parliament, however, the food ration for a prisoner in the Gambia is currently D5 per person, which is the cost of half a loaf of bread in the country.

Sonko also stands accused of participating in the torture and death in state custody of Ebrima Solo Sandeng, the leader of a protest in April 2016. At least five alleged torture victims who participated in protests have since
died, and one of them-Nogoi Njie-was expected to testify against Sonko in Switzerland.

Three alleged torture victims-Fatoumatta Jawara, Fatou Camara and Modou Ngum-testified against Sonko. Unlike Ngum, Jawara and Camara did not testify to seeing Sonko at the paramilitary or NIA headquarters, where they were allegedly tortured. The country’s former police chief-Yankuba Sonko, who was Sonko’s direct subordinate-told Swiss investigators that he had reservations regarding how protests on April 14 and 16 were handled but was not explicit about whether he communicated this to Ousman.

Sonko faces one allegation of rape by Binta Jamba, the widow of Almamo Manneh, a former state guards soldier who served under Sonko in 2000. Jamba said she was abused over a period of five years, from 2000 to 2005.

The prosecutors are trying to prove that Sonko also participated in at least one investigation panel that oversaw the torture and rape of a political detainee in 2006. They argued that rape was used as an instrument of to
rture by Jammeh’s regime.

Currat, Sonko’s lawyer, told journalists that he did not cross-examine Jamba, because her ‘contradictory statements’ had already discredited her testimony. Several witnesses, including Demba Dem, alleged that Sonko is a ‘womaniser’ who does not respect women.

A former wife of Sonko- with whom he had a son- came to testify to his character. Though Njemeh Bah did not take the stand, she submitted a one-page statement which was admitted by the court. ‘I haven’t witnessed or heard a glimpse of any of the undertakings that he’s being accused of,’ she said in her statement. ‘I stand here as a living testament that for the duration that I knew him, he was a harmless, caring and considerate figure who would go to great lengths to make someone safe and happy.’

The Swiss court must now decide if Sonko’s alleged crimes were part of a broader context of state-sponsored terror visited upon Gambians during Jammeh’s 22-year rule. The hearings are closed until March 4, when the court will hear th
e lawyers’s pleading statements. A verdict is expected later in the year. Sonko faces 20 years in prison if convicted including the six years he has already served. He would be deported at the end of his sentence.

Source: Ghana News Agency

The Central Bank revoked the license of GN Bank legally- Court


The Human Rights Division, Accra High Court, has?dismissed an application filed by Dr Papa Kwesi Nduom, GN Saving and Loans Company and others for the violation of fundamental human rights in its entirety.

Dr Ndoum filed an application against the Bank of Ghana (BoG), the Attorney General and the Receiver of the savings and Loans companies, praying the Court to revert the decision by BoG to revoke the license of GN Savings and Loans, saying the action was a violation of his fundamental human rights.

Meanwhile, applicants have served notice of an appeal, saying ‘We will appeal and prevail.’

The Court presided over by Justice Gifty Addo Adjei, delivering judgement on the case, said the Central Bank was therefore right when it revoked the licence of the third respondent because it had become apparent that it was unable to meet its debt obligations due to poor governance structures.

Initially, Lawyers for the BoG raised a legal objection to the application on the basis that the jurisdiction of the High Court
had been wrongly invoked.?

Dr Justice Srem Sai, Counsel for Dr Nduom, said the action taken by the BoG and its agent, which included the receiver of the savings and loans companies, was a clear violation of his human rights.

The lawyers for the Central Bank?and the Attorney General said the jurisdiction of the court had been wrongly invoked because matters of banking revocation were expected to go for arbitration at the Arbitration Centre.

But Justice Srem Sai?vehemently opposed this argument.

The Court said the applicant had not been able to satisfy the court that at the time of the revocation of its licence, it was solvent and able to meet its debt obligations.

Justice Addo Adjei said the claim by the applicants of unreasonableness coupled with malice and violation of existing laws in the process of the revocation was unfounded.

On the violation of the rights of the Administrative justice, the court was of the view that the Central Bank intervened in the applicants’ operations by way of revocation of
license according to the provisions of Article 130 of the 1992 Constitution.

‘No illegality was occasioned by the conduct of the Central Bank in revoking the license in the face of insolvency,’ she added.

She said BoG had not breached the fundamental principles imbibed in its status.

The court said the Central Bank took the most reasonable and fair decision in the face of the liquidity challenge in accordance with its mandate.

On the issue of discrimination, the court concluded that the applicants were not discriminated against since other entities suffered a similar fate as that of the applicants.

The court said the applicant was not discriminated against and their complaints are unfounded and without merit.

It said the applicants could take the matter of debt owed them by the government through the Finance Ministry, even though they maintained that several actions to demand their money from the government had failed and so it was unreasonable for the BoG to have revoked their license, considering thei
r circumstances.

The court awarded a cost of GH?50,000 in favour of all the respondents.

Source: Ghana News Agency

West : murdered cattle rearer’s organs still not found, culprits on the run


The internal organs of Musa Fatoul, a cattle rarer killed on December 31, 2023 in Foumban in the Noun division have still not been found and the unidentified and suspected body part traffickers are still on the run.

‘We are continuing with investigations to identify and arrest the body part traffickers. This is a big crime that shouldn’t go unpunished,’ Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Zourmba , Major Commander of the West gendarmerie region said.

The cattle rearer was allegedly killed by two men, Bouba, 21 years old and Damdi, 29 in the course of a fight with the help of a machete. His body was found at a place called Fosset.

‘That fateful day I received a call that my younger brother’s corpse had been found at Fosset. He was butchered like an animal,’ Amadou Saley said.

Lt. Col. Jonathan Zourmba , major commander of the West gendarmerie region explained that ‘the victim had consumed sachet whiskey given to him by Bouba. Later on, Musa and Damdi engaged in a quarrel that led to a fight. Damdi brutally sent a
machete through Musa’s stomach, pulling out his internal organs.’

The suspect Damdi who escaped was arrested recently following investigations opened.

‘We arrested Damdi in Tiko, South West region. Bouba was also apprehended after. We are not relenting efforts to arrest individuals who made away with Musa’s internal organs,’ the commander added.

The gendarmerie officials urged the population to stay vigilant and denounce criminals.

Source: Cameroon News Agency