Abura Dunkwa gets Odikro


Mr Yaw Korankye, a 64-year-old retired engineer based in the United States, has been installed the Odikro of Abura Dunkwa in the Abura-Asebu-Kwamankese District of the Central Region at a colourful ceremony on Saturday.

The Odikro, with the stool name Nana Owusu Koku II, was carried in a palanquin amid drumming and dancing through the principal streets of the town.

The coronation was graced by traditional authorities, clergymen, politicians and people from all social classes.

Speaking to the gathering later, Nana Koku expressed gratitude to God and to his family for the honour done him and promised to deliver on his mandate.

He called for peace and cooperation from all and sundry to lead the good people of Abura Dunkwa and strategise to help solve the numerous challenges confronting the community.

The Odikro assured the people of his continuous support towards an educational fund to assist brilliant but needy students and charged parents to ensure their children went to school for a better future.

Sour
ce: Ghana News Agency

Ghana Water Limited to embark on arrears collection in Tema


The Ghana Water Company Limited (GWL) will, from Monday, April 15, embark on an exercise to collect all arrears owed by its customers in the Tema Region.

The Tema Area Management of the Company stated this in a statement copied to the Ghana News Agency on Saturday.

The task force would be dispatched for the exercise to retrieve all arrears.

It, therefore, advised customers to promptly settle all outstanding bills by visiting the nearest pay points.

Customers, the statement said, could also use the Momo short code, *170# for MTN users, and *110#* for Telecel and AT users, as well as download the company’s customer app for convenient payment.

‘Please pay your water bill now to avoid any disconnection and embarrassment,’ the communication added.

Source: Ghana News Agency

SOS Children’s Villages presents start-up equipment to 18 youth in Tamale


Eighteen youth, who have undergone training in plumbing, tailoring/seamstress, tiling, motor electrician, smock weaving amongst others, have been supported with start-up equipment to assist them as they embark on their journey to self-reliance.

The start-up equipment, provided by the SOS Children’s Villages in Ghana, included industrial sewing machines, drilling machines, equipment for weaving, plumbing amongst others, and the beneficiaries were from Cheshe, a suburb of Tamale.

Mr Alexander Mar Kekula, National Director, SOS Children’s Villages in Ghana, who handed over the equipment to the beneficiaries at Cheshe, said it formed part of the SOS Children’s Villages in Ghana’s Family Strengthening project to empower them to be economically stable.

The ceremony was also to inaugurate an Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Learning Centre for the Cheshe R/C Basic School in Tamale to help ensure quality education and prepare the schoolchildren for the challenges of the digital age.

Mr Mar Kekula sa
id, ‘In relation to self-reliance, we have in addition provided grants to 70 caregivers to start their own businesses, earn income and care for their children. Our interventions in this regard are in line with the Sustainable Development Goals; No Poverty and Decent Work and Economic Growth, respectively.’

He said for the past one year, ‘SOS Children’s Villages has invested over GHc600,000.00 to empower families through grants, youth start-up tool kits, school support and community empowerment in our participating communities including Adubiliyili, Fooshegu, Chanshegu, Gbulahibila and Cheshe in the Tamale Metropolis.’

He announced that as the SOS Children’s Villages in Ghana marked its 50th anniversary this year, a project dubbed: ‘PUNBO’, which was mainly an agricultural intervention to invest over GHc4 million in the lives of caregivers in those communities, would be implemented for the next three years.

He expressed hope that, ‘The caregivers, traditional leaders and other stakeholders of these communit
ies will cooperate with my staff in Tamale to make this project a success.’

Mr Haruna Iddrisu, Member of Parliament for Tamale South Constituency commended SOS Children’s Villages in Ghana for its interventions to improve on the living conditions of the people in the area.

Napari Mahama, one of the beneficiaries, who is a seamstress, lauded the support extended to them, saying without such support, it would have been difficult for some of them to acquire such equipment to establish their businesses.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Anglicans urged to explore their God-given roles


The Right Reverend Dennis Dabukari Tong, the Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Tamale, has called on Christians, especially the Anglican community, to explore their God-given roles through consistent meditation and Bible reading to understand His assignments.

Preaching on the Theme: ‘The Lord will gladen the hearts of His people,’ Rt Rev Tong said the hope of Christians came from the resurrection of Christ, who atoned for their sins.

During the sermon at the Saint Cyprian’s Parish in Bolgatanga, he indicated that Christ rose to give humanity new life.

‘If we will work for Him, believe in Him, and serve Him, we shall resurrect when we die’.

He said Jesus’ quizzing of the disciples after his resurrection was to let them know Him better for the assignment ahead and to affirm that the restoration of Israel and God’s people had been fulfilled.

‘We those who have become followers of Christ, it is clear that all of us need to know and understand scripture to play our roles as Christians’.

The Bishop, who reite
rated the significance of the story of Christ’s death and resurrection, said: ‘Every Christian has a part in the ministry of Jesus. Jesus says Christians are witnesses to His ministry and are to witness the word to the world to appreciate the purpose of life and death’.

He schooled members of the congregation on the nitty gritty of Christian life and the relations factor of Christians and Christ, saying: ‘It is hard to work for God, but the reward is the resurrection’.

‘Are we always looking to God for what He has for us, or it is what we want from Him. How have we fulfilled our calling as Christians? It is only when we are able to assess our roles as Christians that we can make meaningful assessment of our being’.

Rt Rev. Tong, therefore, admonished the congregation to be steadfast and understand their roles as directed by Christ through His disciples.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Youth urged not to shy away from culture


Ogyeahoho Yaw Gyebi ll, the Paramount Chief of Sefwi-Anhwiaso Traditional Area, has advised the youth not to shy away from their rich cultural heritage that distinguishes them as unique people in society.

‘The youth of today have thrown away their traditions for western culture. It is important for them to rather embrace their true cultural identity,’ he said.

Ogyeahoho Gyebi gave the advice during this year’s Allie Festival in the Sefwi-Anhwiaso Traditional Area of the Bibiani-Anhwiaso-Bekwai Municipality of the Western North Region, which was offer sacrifices to the gods and ancestors of the land.

He said: ‘Culture and tradition are what identify people and their ancestors and, therefore, neglecting them means rejecting one’s own identity.’

The Paramount Chief, who is also the President of National House of Chiefs, urged the people to embrace their culture rather than abandoning it to assimilate foreign ones.

Nana Ebiri Kwaku lll, Chief of Hwenapori, gave a brief history of the Festival and said Allie
was a harvest festival celebrated annually by the people and chiefs to express gratitude to the Almighty God and ancestors for blessing them with bountiful harvest as well as in other spheres of endeavour.

He said it was a period to feed their ancestors with their preferred meals and to ask for protection, blessings and a better harvest in the ensuing year.

Nana Kwabena Obeng Ankoana ll, the Head of the Sefwi Anhwiaso Aduana Royal Family, in an interview with the media, called on the chiefs and people of Sefwi Anhwiaso Traditional Area to continue to peacefully coexist to ensure more development.

He advised the community members against indulging in homosexual activities, saying; ‘It is a taboo in the Ghanaian society and against the culture to indulge in such an unclean behaviour and attitude, which comes with numerous health issues.’

He appealed to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo not to allow the foreign support the country may lose to dissuade him from assenting to the anti-LGBTQI+ bill into law
to criminalise such acts.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Cameroon: Catholic Bishops call for massive voter registration ahead of 2025 elections


By Charity Nginyu

During the 49th Plenary Assembly of the Bishops of Cameroon held from 07 to 13 April 2024, Bishops of the Catholic Church under the National Episcopal Conference of Cameroon (NECC) called on citizens to register massively against the upcoming presidential elections in Cameroon.

His Grace, Archbishop Andrew Fuanya Nkea, presided over the proceedings as the Archbishop of Bamenda and President of the National Episcopal Conference of Cameroon (NECC).

The opening ceremony, which took place on Tuesday, 09 April 2024, saw the esteemed presence of His Eminence Robert Cardinal Sarah, Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments. Notable speeches were delivered by His Grace Jean Mbarga, Archbishop of Yaoundé, and Archbishop Andrew Fuanya Nkea, President of NECC.

‘Archbishop Andrew NKEA invited the citizens of Cameroon to register massively in good time, on the electoral register, to fulfill their civic duty during the forthcoming elections,’ read a c
ommunique by the NECC.

During the assembly, the Bishops voiced concerns about other issues affecting the country’s political, social, and economic landscape.

These concerns included the slow implementation of the Law on Decentralization, insecurity, high costs of living, the rise of secularism, desecration of sacred places, homosexuality, and the exploitation of natural and mining resources.

These challenges were highlighted as significant obstacles to the development of citizens.

Additionally, the assembly witnessed the appointment of new individuals to various positions, signaling a potential shift in leadership within certain sectors.

As Cameroon prepares for the 2025 elections, the call by the Catholic Bishops for massive voter registration demonstrates the importance of civic engagement and participation in shaping the future of the nation.

Source: Cameroon News Agency