Black Maidens Draw Canada, Brazil, Norway At U-17 World Cup

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Ghana’s Black Maidens will face Canada, Brazil and Norway in Group C of the 2026 FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup in Morocco.

The pairing sends Ghana’s teenage side against three heavyweights of youth football just months after the team ended a wait of six years to reach the tournament again.

Ghana booked its spot on Saturday, July 11, beating Senegal 7-6 on penalties after a qualifier spanning two legs finished level. The first leg in Dakar ended 1-1, and Saturday’s return at the Accra Sports Stadium finished the same way, leaving the aggregate score tied at 2-2 before the shootout decided it.

Senegal took the lead in the 10th minute from a free kick. Ghana’s captain, Seidatu Wahab, restored parity in the 44th minute to force the shootout that Ghana eventually won.

The victory ended a run in which Ghana missed the previous two editions of the tournament, breaking a streak of quarterfinal appearances in 2014, 2016, 2018 and 2022.

Head coach Joe Nana Adarkwa’s squad reached the final qualifying round after routing Togo and Liberia by an aggregate score of 8-0 in each tie.

FIFA staged the group draw in Zurich in May, placing 20 of the 24 confirmed teams into their groups before African qualifying concluded. African qualifying filled the four remaining slots, including Ghana’s, when the continent’s series wrapped up in July.

The tournament kicks off in Morocco on October 17 and runs through November 7.

Miss Ghana: 69 Years of Contributing to Ghana’s Social-Economic Development and Women Empowerment

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By Inna Mariam Patty, Esq.

Whenever the conversation turns to beauty pageants, there are those who are quick to dismiss them as outdated contests centred solely on physical appearance. While such criticism may have applied to some pageants around the world, it certainly does not reflect the evolution of Miss Ghana. After 69 years, Miss Ghana has become one of the country’s most enduring institutions for developing female leadership, promoting national identity, and driving social impact.

As we approach the historic milestone of 70 years, I believe the time has come to appreciate Miss Ghana not simply as a pageant but as a national institution that has consistently contributed to Ghana’s socio-economic development while empowering generations of young women to become confident leaders and agents of change.

The greatest strength of Miss Ghana has never been the crown. Its true value lies in the opportunities it creates for young women to discover themselves, build confidence, and realise that leadership begins with service.

Long before the global conversation shifted towards women empowerment and gender equality, Miss Ghana was already providing young Ghanaian women with a platform to develop their voices, pursue their ambitions, and contribute meaningfully to society. Over the decades, hundreds of young women have walked onto the Miss Ghana stage with uncertainty but left with purpose, confidence, and a renewed sense of responsibility to their communities.

Leadership cannot be taught in a classroom alone. It is developed through experience, exposure, mentorship, discipline, and service. These have remained the defining pillars of the Miss Ghana journey.

Contestants are challenged intellectually, emotionally, and professionally. They learn effective communication, public speaking, emotional intelligence, financial literacy, leadership, project management, teamwork, diplomacy, and personal branding. They engage policymakers, corporate leaders, traditional authorities, development partners, and local communities, experiences that prepare them for life far beyond the competition itself.

These transformational opportunities have been strengthened through partnerships with institutions including the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE), Fidelity Bank, Manet Properties, Pippa’s Health Centre, Amazing U, the Jungle Warfare School at Akim Achiase, Sashabayack, Buka Restaurant, La Chaumier, Oak Plaza Hotel and several other organisations committed to youth development.

Perhaps the strongest evidence of Miss Ghana’s impact is not found in photographs or pageant archives but in the remarkable achievements of its former contestants.

Today, former Miss Ghana contestants occupy leadership positions across government, business, diplomacy, education, healthcare, media, law, entrepreneurship, and the creative arts. They continue to shape public policy, influence national conversations, create employment opportunities, and mentor younger generations.

From Hon. Sena Benita Okity-Duah’s distinguished career in politics and public service to Sheila Azuntaba’s leadership within Ghana’s banking industry; from Her Excellency Kalsoume Sinare Baffoe’s diplomatic service to Brigitte Dzogbenuku’s political leadership; from Yvonne Nelson’s influence within Ghana’s creative industry to Kafui Danku’s contribution to national film administration and Precious Kyei Bonsu’s achievements in education, these women demonstrate that the Miss Ghana experience extends far beyond a single night on stage.

They are living proof that investing in young women produces lasting national dividends.

Yet the influence of Miss Ghana reaches far beyond individual success.

One of the most significant transformations within the organisation has been the establishment of the Miss Ghana Foundation, which shifted the pageant’s emphasis from celebration to service.

Today, contestants are xpected not merely to identify societal problems but to develop practical solutions. They undertake community projects, raise funds, mobilise stakeholders, and implement interventions that directly improve lives. This process teaches accountability, compassion, innovation, and sustainable leadership.

The Foundation’s contribution to healthcare alone deserves national recognition.

For several years, it has supported life-changing scoliosis surgeries for children at the FOCOS Orthopaedic Hospital while contributing to campaigns addressing maternal and infant mortality, goitre prevention, HIV/AIDS awareness, and other pressing public health concerns.

Equally significant has been its work in child protection. Through collaboration with the Don Bosco Child Protection and Youth Centre, support was provided towards developing rehabilitation facilities that continue to offer hope to vulnerable children and young people.

Its environmental interventions have equally demonstrated that responsible leadership includes protecting the environment. Tree planting campaigns, sanitation initiatives, waste management support, and mechanised borehole projects have improved both environmental sustainability and public health within several communities.

These are not symbolic gestures. They are measurable contributions to national development.

Another area where Miss Ghana’s contribution deserves greater recognition is tourism and international diplomacy.

Many people may not realise that the pageant has played an important role in projecting Ghana’s image internationally.

The Tourism Ambassador initiative introduced in 2004, in partnership with the late Hon. Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey and the Ministry of Tourism, demonstrated how beauty queens could become ambassadors for investment, tourism promotion, and cultural diplomacy.

From promoting Ghana during the World Travel Market in London to supporting the launch of Ghana’s first international paragliding festival at Kwahu and featuring prominently in global tourism campaigns broadcast on CNN, Miss Ghana demonstrated that pageantry could serve national economic interests while promoting Ghana’s cultural heritage.

These initiatives helped reposition Ghana as a destination not only for tourism but also for international investment and cultural exchange.

Equally important is Miss Ghana’s influence on Ghana’s pageantry industry itself.

The success of the Miss Ghana model inspired the emergence of numerous pageants across the country. It is particularly encouraging that many of today’s pageant organisers are themselves former contestants who continue to uphold the values of leadership, professionalism, and service that they first encountered through Miss Ghana.

This lasting institutional influence illustrates how one organisation can shape an entire industry while continuously producing future leaders.

As we prepare to celebrate 70 years of Miss Ghana, we should also remember its historical significance.

The pageant was initiated during the administration of Ghana’s first President, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, who recognised the importance of culture, identity, and youth development in nation-building. Historical records show that Parliament once allocated resources towards its organisation, reflecting its national importance.

That vision remains relevant today.

In an era defined by digital transformation, artificial intelligence, entrepreneurship, climate change, and global competition, Ghana needs young women who are confident enough to innovate, compassionate enough to serve, and resilient enough to lead.

This is precisely the type of leadership Miss Ghana continues to cultivate.

The journey is no longer about appearance. It is about purpose.

It is about preparing women who can sit confidently in corporate boardrooms, represent Ghana diplomatically, establish successful businesses, influence public policy, advocate for vulnerable communities, and inspire the next generation.

As auditions continue for the current edition, I encourage every young Ghanaian woman with ambition, integrity, and a passion for service not to underestimate her potential. Confidence is rarely something one possesses from the beginning. More often, it is something developed through opportunity, mentorship, experience, and perseverance.

Miss Ghana provides that opportunity.

After 69 years, the organisation’s greatest achievement is not the number of crowns it has awarded or international competitions it has attended.

Its greatest achievement is the thousands of lives it has touched, the communities it has transformed, the leaders it has produced, and the hope it continues to offer young women across Ghana.

That is the true legacy of Miss Ghana.

As we look towards the 70th anniversary, my conviction remains unwavering: Miss Ghana is not merely preserving a tradition; it is strengthening a national institution that continues to contribute meaningfully to Ghana’s social and economic development while empowering women to lead with confidence, integrity, compassion, and purpose.

That is a legacy worthy of celebration, protection, and continued investment.

AfCFTA Customs Reforms Set To Make Trading Across Africa Faster

Behind every truck that crosses an African border without unnecessary delays lies effective customs administration systems. This is what continues to engage the minds of experts of customs administration across the continent of Africa as the 11th Meeting of the AfCFTA Subcommittee on Trade Facilitation, Customs Cooperation and Transit, hosted by the AfCFTA Secretariat’s Directorate of Customs Administration takes place in Abuga, Nigeria.

Discussions centered on the AfCFTA e-Certificate of Origin, continental digital customs initiatives, transit procedures, the Single Bond Guarantee Scheme, Authorized Economic Operators (AEO), and customs capacity building.

Director of Customs Administration at the AfCFTA Secretariat, Demitta Gyang reminded participants of the AfCFTA Subcommittee meeting that “the AfCFTA has moved from negotiations to implementation, our focus is now on building a digitally connected customs environment that makes intra-African trade faster, simpler and more predictable” She emphasized.

While the meeting may not generate headlines like high-level political summits, its outcomes have a profound impact on how businesses trade across Africa.

“Africa’s trade future lies at the border between innovation and cooperation, and this meeting has brought both closer to reality” the Head of Customs Administration at the AfCFTA opined.

Among the key initiatives under discussion is the AfCFTA e-Certificate of Origin, a digital document that enables customs authorities to verify that goods qualify for preferential treatment under the Agreement. By replacing paper-based documentation with secure digital verification, the system is expected to reduce fraud, speed up customs clearance and make it easier for African businesses to benefit from preferential tariffs.

“From electronic certificates of origin to continental customs information sharing, Africa is laying the digital foundations for a truly integrated market” Director Gyang asserted.

The Subcommittee is also advancing continental digital customs systems, which seek to replace cumbersome manual processes with modern electronic platforms, allowing customs authorities to exchange information more efficiently and process goods faster.

Another major priority is the Single Bond Guarantee Scheme, which will allow cargo moving through multiple African countries to travel under a single financial guarantee instead of requiring separate guarantees at every border. The measure is expected to significantly lower transport costs and reduce delays for regional transit trade.

Delegates are equally reviewing the expansion of the Authorised Economic Operator (AEO) Programme, which grants trusted traders faster customs clearance based on compliance with established standards. The initiative is designed to reward compliant businesses while allowing customs authorities to focus resources on higher-risk consignments.

Complementing these reforms are discussions on customs capacity building and coordinated border management, recognising that modern infrastructure alone cannot deliver seamless trade without well-trained customs officers and stronger cooperation among border agencies.

According to the AfCFTA Secretariat, these customs instruments are more than technical reforms. They are practical solutions aimed at removing some of the biggest obstacles to intra-African trade.

“The time for frameworks is giving way to the time for results. State Parties are now translating AfCFTA commitments into practical tools that traders can use” Demitta Gyang highlightted

The work in Abuja also highlights the collaborative nature of AfCFTA implementation. Customs modernisation intersects with legal affairs, digital trade, private sector engagement and trade facilitation, making coordination among multiple directorates essential for building a truly integrated African market.

“The decisions taken in Abuja mark another step toward transforming AfCFTA from an agreement on paper into a trading reality for businesses across Africa.” Demitta Gyang, Director of Customs Administration at the AfCFTA Secretariat concluded.

The meeting endorsed the trade facilitation work program across the discussed areas, advocated for mutual recognition of Authorized Economic Operators, endorsed the legal framework for the e-certificate of origin, as well as the ministerial regulation for notification of HS transpositions every 5 years.

Yellow Card Nominated for the Morgans GRC Financial Crime Awards 

Yellow Card, the largest licensed stablecoin-based infrastructure provider operating across over 60 countries, has been nominated for several awards at the Morgans Governance, Risk Management, and Compliance (GRC) Financial Crime Awards 2026 (Africa Edition), including the “Organizational Excellence in Governance, Risk, and Compliance Award.

The Morgans GRC & Financial Crime Prevention Awards recognize individuals and organizations that are setting the benchmark for excellence in governance, risk management, compliance, cybersecurity, fraud prevention, and the fight against financial crime across Africa. The awards, which celebrate leaders who are strengthening trust, resilience, and accountability within the financial services ecosystem, were founded in 2020 and have expanded beyond Africa to Europe and other parts of the world.

“Financial crime doesn’t take a day off, and neither have I. At Yellow Card, compliance sits at the heart of our operations, not on the sidelines. These nominations are proof that Africa’s compliance frontier is being defended with expertise the world can trust. Vote for the standard, not just the story,” said Bright Anyanwu.

Yellow Card received a total of seven nominations across five categories. One institutional nomination in the Organizational Excellence in Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) category and 6 other individual nominations for two members of the team in four categories.

Individual Recognition for Compliance Leadership

Alongside the organizational nomination, Bright Anyanwu, Senior Compliance Manager and Money Laundering Reporting Officer (MLRO) for West, Central, and East Africa, has been nominated across four categories:

Emerging Talent / Rising Star in GRC & Financial Crime Prevention
GRC & Financial Crime Prevention Influencer (Africa)
Financial Crime and Fraud Prevention Leader
Governance, Risk, and Compliance Leader

In addition, Japhet Gana, Group Head, Transaction Risk and Financial Crime, has been nominated in two categories:

Financial Crime and Fraud Prevention Leader
Governance, Risk, and Compliance Leader

These nominations highlight the depth of expertise within Yellow Card’s compliance function and its leadership in navigating complex, multi-jurisdictional regulatory environments.

Building a Compliance-First Infrastructure Across Emerging Markets

Founded in 2016, Yellow Card has become one of the leaders in the industry with a growing global presence. Most recently, they were recognized on the Fortune Crypto Innovators list and also announced receiving a regulatory AML affiliation in Switzerland, unlocking the Africa-European flows.

The company maintains a rigorous and professional approach to compliance, including customer onboarding (KYC), AML/CFT controls, sanctions screening, fraud prevention, transaction monitoring (KYT), and anti-bribery and corruption measures.

Yellow Card is licensed as a Crypto Asset Service Provider (CASP) and Third-Party Payment Provider (TPPP) in South Africa; holds a CASP license in Botswana; and maintains regulatory registrations across multiple jurisdictions, including the European Union and the United States.

As a U.S.-incorporated parent company, Yellow Card is also registered as a Money Services Business (MSB) with FinCEN and works closely with financial intelligence units across Africa and beyond, further reinforcing its commitment to transparency, accountability, and regulatory alignment.

Voting and Awards Ceremony

Voting for the awards is now open and will close on 30 August 2026. Three nominees will be shortlisted in each category based on votes, and the shortlist will be evaluated by a panel of judges against defined criteria.

Winners will be announced at the official awards ceremony in November in Nairobi, Kenya.

Supporters, partners, and members of the public are encouraged to cast their votes and support Yellow Card and its nominees via the official voting portal: https://grcfincrimeawards.com/vote

Full Nominees List For The Ghana Comedy Awards 2026

Creative Republic Limited, organizers of the Ghana Comedy Awards (GCA), has officially unveiled the shortlist of nominees for the sixth edition of the prestigious awards scheme.

The nominees were announced on Friday, 10th July 2026, through the organization’s official social media platforms, recognizing outstanding comedians and key contributors who have made significant impacts across various categories in Ghana’s comedy industry.

The much-anticipated awards ceremony is set to take place on 1st August 2026 at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Ridge, Accra, where winners will be celebrated for their remarkable achievements and contributions to the growth of comedy in Ghana.

The short listed nominees is open to review and petitions on omissions, corrections or errors as the Board and Management will give room to all Comedians who have sentiment and genuine concerns on the Release for redress and consideration on 11th July to 13th July.

GHANA COMEDY AWARDS 2026 NOMINEES LIST

1. COMEDY SKIT ACT OF THE YEAR
* Comeddy Bwoy
* Ben South
* Jeffrey Nortey
* Al Maleek
* Aka Ebenezer
* Opoku Bilson
* Donske
* Asafo Powers (Killa Ntua)
* Real NKB
* Freedom Official
* Last Hero
* Seniorman Layla
* Big Daama
* Piloolo GH

1. MOST POPULAR COMEDIAN OF THE YEAR
* Dan Kweku Yeboah
* Lekzy Decomic
* Jeffrey Nortey
* Aka Ebenezer
* Clemento Suarez
* Asafo Powers (Killa Ntua)
* Ben South
* DKB

1. STANDUP COMEDIAN OF THE YEAR
* Okokobioko
* Lekzy Decomic
* OB Amponsah
* DKB
* Parrot Mouth
* Foster Romanus
* Jacinta Ocansey
* Oh Joo

1. COMEDY THEATRE ACT OF THE YEAR
* Clemento Suarez
* Jeneral Ntatia
* Monica Awimbono Aitariga
* Efua Dell
* William Odartei Lamptey
* Sylvia Naa Adjeley
* NGO
* Lawyer Amekuji

1. COMEDIAN OF THE YEAR
* DKB
* Clemento Suarez
* Ben South
* OB Amponsah
* Foster Romanus
* Lekzy Decomic
* Jeffrey Nortey
* Dan Kweku Yeboah
* Aka Ebenezer
* Asafo Powers (Killa Ntua)

1. COMEDY ACTOR OF THE YEAR (MOVIE/SKIT)
* Donske
* Aka Ebenezer
* Jeffrey Nortey
* William Odartei Lamptey
* Kyekyeku
* Asafo Powers (Killa Ntua)
* Real NKB
* Oteele
* Papa Kumasi
* Kenya

1. COMEDY ACTRESS OF THE YEAR (MOVIE/SKIT)
* Efua Dell
* Jacinta Ocansey
* Monica Awimbono Aitariga
* Vivian Gil Lawrence
* Ama Pokuaa
* Ama Yeboah
* Asor Yaa

1. COMIC DISCOVERY OF THE YEAR
* Comeddy Bwoy
* Grumma
* Al Maleek
* Sam Qweeku
* Elder Trihoo
* Donske
* Pastor Kwame Ansah
* Boss Majoy
* Last Hero
* Kenya
* Odenkyem
* Visa Bwoy
Comedian Smile

1. COMIC MC/ORATOR OF THE YEAR
* Papayaw Ataamle
* Lekzy Decomic
* Dan Kweku Yeboah
* Okokobioko
* Kwame Oboadie
* Geovani Caleb
* Mr Katah
* Papa Shamo

1. WOMAN IN COMEDY AWARD
* Vivian Gil Lawrence
* Monica Awimbono Aitariga
* Jacinta Ocansey
* Afia Barcelona
* Ekua Official
* Felicia Osei
* Efua Dell
* Ama Yeboah
* Ama Pokuaa
* Asor Yaa

1. COMIC MEDIA PERSONALITY OF THE YEAR
* Dan Kweku Yeboah –PEACE FM
* Odi Ahenkan Kwame Yeboah – PEACE FM
* Kwabena Marfo – PEACE FM
* Atongo – Dadi FM
* Kwame Oboade3 – ADOM FM
* Geovani Caleb – TV3/3FM
* Mr. Katah – Pure FM
* Oliver Kahn the Ship Dealer – PURE FM
* Papa Shamo – ONUA FM

1. AFRICAN COMEDIAN OF THE YEAR
* Layi Wasabi
* Destalker
* Sabinus
* Dezny
* Bovi
* Alpheenomenal
* Brain Jotter

1. ALTERNATIVE COMIC ACT OF THE YEAR
* Shatta Wale
* Kofi Kinaata
* Broda Sammy
* Prophet Kumchacha
* Oheneni Adazoa
* Ebo Noah
* Bukom Banku

1. COMIC INFLUENCER OF THE YEAR
* Quecy Official
* Papayaw Ataamle
* Jeffrey Nortey
* Aka Ebenezer
* Lekzy Decomic
* Donske
* Clemento Suarez
* MJ the Comedian
* Asafo Powers (Killa Ntua)
* Freedom Official
* SDK
Oh Joo

1. COMIC ANIMATOR OF THE YEAR
* Derreq Animations
* Jerry Hay/Hay Toons
* Pencil and Vim

1. COMIC GROUP OF THE YEAR
* Last Hero & Crew
* Aka Ebenezer & Crew
* Asafo Powers & Crew
* Al Maleek & Crew
* Freedom Official & Crew
* Half Serious Crew
Senior Man Layla & Crew

1. COMIC MUSIC ACT OF THE YEAR
* Hyndu & Kweku Bany
* Ablekuma Nana Lace
* Naana Bluw
* OT & Agies
* Godson Cokeman
* Kyei Nwom
* Asafo Powers (Killa Ntua)
* SDK

1. COMIC WRITER OF THE YEAR
* Papayaw Ataamle
* Jeffrey Nortey
* Kojo PJay
* Oh Joo
* Kofas
* Francis Nutakor
* Ken Fiati
* Mawuli Jasparo
* Kofi Nelson

1. COMIC DIRECTOR OF THE YEAR (PLAY/MOVIE/SKIT/EVENT)
* Kofi Asamoah – Kofas Media
* Francis Nutakor – Spafam Network
* Big Ghun
* David Chapman Quayson
* Ken Fiati
* Kofi Nelson
* Mawuli Jasparo

1. COMIC KID OF THE YEAR
* Combos Kids
* Beyou Comedy
* Twiaah Comedy
* Awesoa Comedy

1. COMEDY SERIES OF THE YEAR (TV/ONLINE/RADIO)
* Yayah & Tyson – AMA GHANA PRODUCTIONS
* Wonim Red – Yaa Asantewaa TV
* Mr. KOD – KOFAS MEDIA
* My IN Law – Darling GH
* Steeze On Steeze – Sikafie TV
* Lomo Lomo – Ohiani Ba TV
* Eye Red – KOFAS MEDIA
* Village Girl – KOFAS MEDIA
* Accra Stay by Plan – AKWAABA MAGIC

1. COMIC TV PROGRAM OF THE YEAR
* Half Serious Show – GH ONE/UTV
* The Real News – UTV
* On a More Serious Note – JOY PRIME

1. COMIC RADIO PROGRAM OF THE YEAR
* Weekend City Show – Joy FM Accra
* Mani Agye oo Mani Agye – Dadi FM Accra
* Morning Swing – Ultimate FM Kumasi
* Time with the Ship Dealer – Pure FM Kumasi
* Toa Ebe yi so – Agoo 6.9FM Kwahu
* Around The World – Peace FM Accra

1. COMEDY SPECIAL OF THE YEAR
* DKY Night of Comedy & Music – Dan Kweku Yeboah
* Lasting Long – Okokobioko
* Turd Talks 2025 – Oh Joo
* Greetings From Abroad – OB Amponsah
* Laugh It Off 2025 – PARROT MOUTH
* Romanus Incomplete VII – Foster Romanus
* Funny Boy Innit (F.B.I) – Lekzy Decomic

1. COMEDY CLUB OF THE YEAR
* Laugh In the Golden City – KUMASI
* 2927 Comedy Club – TESANO
* SOHO Comedy Nights – AIRPORT
* Speak Easy – Yaya La Parisiene
* Comedy Bar – KUKUN OSU

1. COMEDY EVENT OF THE YEAR
* Kumasi Comedy Show – Xmas 2025
* New Year Comedy Night – DKB and Friends
* Charity Comedy Show – TARKWA ROTARY CLUB
* 3 Faces of Jeffrey Nortey – Jeffrey Nortey

1. COMIC MOVIE OF THE YEAR (TV/ONLINE)
* Tears Of A Father – WEEZY EMPIRE
* Yonko Do – KODA MEDIA
* Agyapade – KODA MEDIA
* Stubborn Son – KWAPS STUDIOS
* Noko Fio – KOFAS MEDIA
* Money Wahala – KOFAS MEDIA
* Where Is the Money – KOFAS MEDIA
* Last Stop – KWABENA GYANSAH FILM
* Vibes The Movie – PB STUDIOS AFRICA

1. COMIC PLAY/DRAMA OF THE YEAR – NEW
* Honey Moon Hotel – AFRICA ARTS NETWORK
* Prekese Theatre Festival – FEDCREATES STUDIOS
* Better Safe than Sorry – PEREZ EVENTS 360
* In Her Waist – ART NOBLES EXPRESSIONS
* Akwaaba Vs Obaake – Ashanti Global Film Heritage
* I Want to Sue God – KOBINA ANSAH
* Tarkwa We Dey – O-Sid Productions
* In the Chest of A Woman – AFRICA ARTS NETWORK

NEXT RATED COMIC ACT OF THE YEAR
COMEDY FOR SOCIAL GOOD AWARD

Dennis Miracles Aboagye promises fearless communication as he eyes NPP National Communications Director position

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Communications Director for the Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia campaign team, Dennis Miracles Aboagye, has officially announced his intention to contest for the position of National Communications Director of the New Patriotic Party (NPP).

Announcing his decision, Aboagye said he was offering himself to serve the party at a time when it needed a communications team that was bold, resilient, and capable of defending the NPP’s record.

“Our message is strong. Our record is defensible. What we need now is a communications team that does not flinch or surrender,” he stated.

He further stressed that the party would not allow its opponents or intimidation to shape its identity, declaring, “The opposition and intimidation will not define us. We will define ourselves.”

Calling for unity among party members, Mr. Aboagye urged supporters to “stand shoulder to shoulder” as the NPP works toward returning to power, describing his campaign with the slogan: “Built to Lead. Ready to Win,” alongside the hashtag *#CommandTheNarrative*.

NDLEA Says South African Used Son To Hide Heroin

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National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) operatives arrested a South African woman, Will Jessica Ann, 38, in Abuja July 6, saying they found 5.75 kilograms of heroin in her luggage.

NDLEA said operatives intercepted the suspect during the inward clearance of passengers from Qatar Airways flight QR1433, which arrived at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NAIA) from Doha. The agency’s Director of Media and Advocacy, Femi Babafemi, said officers found 14 blocks of heroin in her checked bags and that she had brought her three year old son along, which investigators believe she used to lower scrutiny at the checkpoint.

Babafemi said the suspect first denied checking in any luggage. Operatives matched baggage tags on the two bags to the claim tags on her passport, after which, he said, “she recounted and admitted ownership of the bags,” telling investigators she had forgotten she checked them in.

She told investigators she had traveled from Cambodia through Doha to Abuja, according to the agency.

NDLEA said preliminary intelligence links the suspect to a transnational drug trafficking network she allegedly runs with her husband or partner, identified as Jan Coenraad De Jager, who is based in Cambodia. The agency described the pair as operating along a route between Cambodia and South Africa, though it gave no information on whether De Jager has been arrested or faces any charge.

The arrest was one of several operations NDLEA disclosed in the same Sunday statement. Agency officers working with Customs and other security agencies seized 8,287 nylon bags of a cannabis strain known as Canadian Loud, weighing more than 4,143 kilograms and valued above 10.3 billion naira, from a container at Apapa port in Lagos on July 10. In a separate case, NDLEA placed a 48 year old commercial motorcycle rider under observation for three days after he excreted 13 additional wraps of methamphetamine, bringing the total recovered from him to 100 wraps weighing 1.715 kilograms.

NDLEA chairman Mohamed Buba Marwa commended officers involved in the week’s operations and urged commands nationwide to sustain both enforcement and public awareness efforts against drug trafficking.

There is no indication yet that Will Jessica Ann has been formally charged, and neither she nor a lawyer representing her has issued a public response to the allegations.

LCB Worldwide Fumigates Accra Markets After Floods

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LCB Worldwide Ghana and the Ghana Health Service fumigated markets and terminals in Accra’s Korle Klottey area Saturday, part of a flood recovery push to prevent cholera.

The event fell on the second day of the government’s National General Cleaning Exercise, called after floods on June 29 killed at least 12 people and affected about 38,800 residents in the capital region. Ghana Health Service officials have warned since late June that stagnant water and blocked drains raised the risk of cholera and typhoid, though the agency’s Director General, Dr Samuel Kaba Akoriyea, said Saturday the agency had not recorded any cholera cases so far. “Fortunately as I talk today, we haven’t recorded any cholera outbreak,” he said, adding that prevention is far cheaper than treating an outbreak once it starts.

Fiifi Buabeng-Baiden, LCB Worldwide’s Lead for Partnerships and Programmes, said the company treats community fumigation as separate from its core work disinfecting cargo and travelers at Ghana’s ports and airports, framing Saturday’s exercise as part of a long running corporate responsibility programme that has covered schools, markets and government offices, including Covid era disinfection of holding centres.

Korle Klottey Municipal Chief Executive Alfred Allotey-Gaisie welcomed the exercise but said sustaining its benefits will require continued fumigation, naming Tema Station Market, Odawna and Osu as other areas still needing attention.

The company’s role in Accra’s cleanup follows scrutiny of its main disinfection contract with the Ghana Health Service at national ports and airports. In a half year report released in January, the Office of the Special Prosecutor said a corruption risk assessment found LCB Worldwide had retained port disinfection fees in private accounts without adequate government oversight, an arrangement it estimated cost the state 345 million cedis, including 25 million cedis in uncollected value added tax. Special Prosecutor Kissi Agyebeng ordered a suspension of payments to the company pending a forensic audit and gave the health service until March 31 to submit a corrective plan.

Civil society groups renewed criticism of the arrangement in June, alleging the disinfection service fell short of standards despite the fees collected. A separate coalition defended the company days later, arguing the Special Prosecutor’s report identified governance risks rather than proven wrongdoing and that the criticism lacked supporting evidence. LCB Worldwide has not issued its own public response to the Special Prosecutor’s findings.

LCB Worldwide representatives described Saturday’s fumigation as unrelated to the ports contract, saying it falls under the company’s separate community outreach programme, which has also disinfected schools, market centres and Covid holding centres in past years.

Anyidoho Urges NDC To Block Any Third Term Bid

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Former National Democratic Congress (NDC) deputy general secretary Samuel Koku Anyidoho urged the party Sunday to bar any third term candidacy, amid a Supreme Court case on repeat terms.

His intervention lands amid signs of division inside the NDC itself. While senior officials have rejected any third term ambition for President John Dramani Mahama, other party voices have said openly they would back such a bid if judges rule in the president’s favor.

Ganiwu Alhassan, a teacher from Kpandai in the Northern Region, filed the case at the Supreme Court on July 9 against the Attorney General. Alhassan is asking the court to rule that Article 66(2) of the 1992 Constitution bars only two consecutive terms, not two terms overall, a reading that would allow a former president to seek office again after time away.

Anyidoho rejected that reading outright. He said the party should refuse to sell nomination forms to anyone who tries to use such a ruling to seek the presidency again. “The NDC shall not be a vehicle for carrying the obnoxious ambition,” he wrote on X. He added that a candidate determined to run despite the party’s refusal could start a new party or contest as an independent.

Party leaders have already stated their position. Mahama told reporters in Singapore in August last year that he would respect the two term limit and would not contest in 2028. NDC national chairman Johnson Asiedu Nketiah has said the party has no plans to present him for a third term, and general secretary Fiifi Fiavi Kwetey branded growing calls for one as flattery driven by career ambition during a December address.

Pressure for a third term bid persists inside the party. NDC communications team member Hamza Suhuyini said this month he would celebrate a third term bid if the Supreme Court allows it, adding he has no link to the pending suit. NDC member Kojo Adu Asare argued in November that Mahama’s first term should not count against the limit and urged the party to test the constitutional question in court. The dispute turned personal in January, when NDC activist Yakubu Tony Aidoo publicly confronted Kwetey over his sycophancy remark, accusing him of disrespecting grassroots members who back a third term.

The opposition New Patriotic Party has also weighed in. Spokesperson Akosua Manu urged the Supreme Court Saturday to dismiss the suit entirely, warning judges to weigh the long term consequences of any ruling that opens the door to repeat presidencies.

The Supreme Court has not scheduled a ruling. Mahama has not repeated or withdrawn his pledge to step aside in 2028.

Ritual Invocation Video Escalates Bantama NPP Feud

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A viral video of a man invoking traditional deities against anyone who defies a court injunction has escalated tension in Bantama, a day after violence disrupted the constituency’s NPP election.

In the video, posted online Saturday night, a man identifying himself as Kwame Poku breaks an egg and pours schnapps while invoking traditional deities, including Antoa and Akonedi, and calling for punishment on anyone who proceeds with the New Patriotic Party’s (NPP) Bantama constituency executive election in defiance of a reported court injunction.

The video follows Saturday’s disruption of the same election at the Kumasi Cultural Centre, where a group of men destroyed ballot boxes and papers and assaulted officials overseeing the vote. One officer suffered a foot injury and was treated at Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital. Police arrested three people, including the constituency organiser, and declared the venue a crime scene.

A Kumasi High Court injunction had already put the election on uncertain footing before the violence. Judge Aberinga Anafo George granted a 10 day order sought by three party members who said long serving delegates had been dropped from the constituency’s register and replaced with unapproved names. The order named constituency chairman Fiifi Mensah among the respondents, restraining officials from proceeding with the vote.

The dispute traces back to a clash weeks earlier at the constituency office, where Mensah accused Bantama Member of Parliament Francis Asenso-Boakye of assembling a team to alter the delegate album in favour of preferred candidates, a claim Asenso-Boakye has not publicly addressed. Mensah has said he locked up the office’s album records to stop further changes while the matter was resolved. “If the elections are free, fair, and peaceful, whoever wins deserves the victory,” he said.

A day after the violence, a group calling itself Concerned Bantama Youth petitioned the Ashanti Regional Police Command for tighter security ahead of any resumption of voting. The group said Mensah should be treated as a person of interest only if investigations link him to any future violence, stressing it was not assigning blame in advance.

The Bantama vote was part of a nationwide round of NPP constituency executive elections held over the weekend at 385 centres. NPP flagbearer Mahamudu Bawumia urged unity as the process unfolded, saying the elections should strengthen the party and position it for the tasks ahead.

No charges have been announced against those arrested, and police have not commented on the video. Bantama is one of several constituencies where NPP elections this cycle have been contested in court, adding the invocation of traditional deities to a dispute already before both the police and the courts.