Gbevlo Lartey Strikes At Kotoka International Airport.

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Col. Gbevlo-Lartey
Col. Gbevlo-Lartey

THE ACTING National Security Coordinator, Lt. Col. Gbevlo Lartey (Rtd) has finally succeeded in carrying out his intentions of terminating the contract of some private security companies providing security services at the Kotaka International Airport (KIA).

This follows a decision by the Ghana Airport Company Limited (GACL) to terminate the contracts of two private security companies that had been operating at the airport for the past 3 years, without reason.

Somewhere in February 2009, Gbevlo Lartey issued a directive asking the various state institutions operating at the airport not to renew contracts they had with the various security companies operating there.

Though these companies had managed to maintain sanity at Ghana’s main entry point which was once bedeviled with serious thefts, the National Security Coordinator exerted pressure on GACL to terminate the contracts of the companies without reason.

He is thus believed to have influenced the decision to terminate the contract of the two companies since he was said to have forced the new Board of the GACL, which is chaired by Deputy Majority Chief Whip and Member of Parliament (MP) for Mfantsiman East, George Kuntu Blankson, to take the decision.

Subsequently, the Board also caused the dismissal of the Managing Director of the GACL, Elizabeth Annor Sackey and her deputy Yaw Kwakwa.

Both were relieved of their appointments without any specific reason since none was stated in their dismissal letters.

This, according to sources, was because they were appointed by the previous New Patriotic Party (NPP) government.

The duo has since been replaced with Mrs. Doreen Owusu Fianko and J. Q Amedior, who are said to have strong links in the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC), as the new Managing Director and Deputy respectively.

Sources close to the GACL said part of the reasons Mr. Kwakwa in particular was booted out was because he insisted on the strict adherence to tender processes as stated in the country’s Procurement Law and for the contract to be awarded to any security company that met the standards set for the job in spite of its political affiliation.

He was said to have made this suggestion at a time when the authorities including Mr. Gbevlo Lartey and the GACL Board were said to be making frantic efforts to circumvent laid-down rules in favour of their preferred choice of company, Sohin Security, a company which has virtually no experience in handling security issues at the airport.

But Mrs Fianko says there was nothing wrong with the termination of the contract of the two companies, though it was subject to renewal.

She made the statement when DAILY GUIDE contacted her for her contribution to the story.

‘It’s not termination, the contract has ended. There was a tender whoever isif they are not there then it means they didn’t win the tender,’ she said.

Attempts to speak to Mr Gbevlo Lartey proved unsuccessful since his phone was said to be switched off or out of coverage area.

DAILY GUIDE sources at the Ministry of Interior have indeed confirmed that Sohin, which is owned by a strong member of the ruling party, Solomon Adelaquaye, managed to secure an operating license as a recognized private security company only three months ago.

Meanwhile, one of the basic requirements, as stated on the tender document, was for a company to have 6years experience before it would be awarded the contract.

Barely a month ago, a similar move was undertaken by the management of GACL which led to the termination of a contract with advertising company Alliance Media, which was operating advertising concessions at the KIA, because it was said to have been awarded the contract during the NPP regime.

The company has since sued the GACL together with Speedmasters Limited, a new company which has taken over the advertising concessions from the plaintiff.

According to Alliance Media, the GACL had acted in contravention of the Public Procurement Act to the extent that it paved the way for the second defendant, Speedmasters, to be in gross violation of the same Act and the terms of the request for proposal.

The company is therefore praying the court to give an order of mandamus to compel the GACL to award its advertising concession on contract to the plaintiff, for being the best offer and responsible tender.

Now that the contracts of the companies have been terminated, several employees of the affected security companies are expected to be laid off.

This is likely to have a telling effect on an economy that is struggling to be on its feet. The situation has compelled some individuals and group of persons operating at the airport to raise questions about the prudence of the decision.

By Charles Takyi-Boadu

Mandela’s life and times

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Source: BBC – BBC News

Nelson Mandela is one of the world's most revered statesmen, who led the struggle to replace the apartheid regime of South Africa with a multi-racial democracy.
Nelson Mandela is one of the world's most revered statesmen, who led the struggle to replace the apartheid regime of South Africa with a multi-racial democracy.

Jailed for 27 years, he emerged to become the country’s first black president and to play a leading role in the drive for peace in other spheres of conflict. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.

His charisma, self-depreciating sense of humour and lack of bitterness over his harsh treatment, as well as his amazing life story, partly explain his extraordinary global appeal.

Since stepping down as president in 1999, Mr Mandela has become South Africa’s highest-profile ambassador, campaigning against HIV/Aids and securing his country’s right to host the 2010 football World Cup.

 

 “ In prison, you come face to face with time. There is nothing more terrifying ” 
Nelson Mandela

Mr Mandela – diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2001 – was also involved in peace negotiations in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi and other African countries. 

He has also encouraged peace efforts in other areas of the world.

In 2004, at the age of 85, Mr Mandela retired from public life to spend more time with his family and friends and engage in “quiet reflection”.

“Don’t call me, I’ll call you,” he warned anyone thinking of inviting him to future engagements.

Raised by royalty
He was born in 1918 into the Madiba clan of the Xhosa-speaking Thembu people in a small village in the eastern Cape of South Africa. In South Africa, he is often called by his clan name – “Madiba”.

 

Click for Full Size
Mr Mandela set up South Africa’s first black law firm with Oliver Tambo

Born Rolihlahla Dalibhunga, he was given his English name, Nelson, by a teacher at his school. 

His father, a counsellor to the Thembu royal family, died when Nelson Mandela was nine, and he was placed in the care of the acting regent of the Thembu people, chief Jongintaba Dalindyebo.

He joined the African National Congress in 1943, first as an activist, then as the founder and president of the ANC Youth League.

Eventually, after years in prison, he also served as its president.

He married his first wife, Evelyn Mase, in 1944. They were divorced in 1957 after having three children.

Mr Mandela qualified as a lawyer and in 1952 opened a law practice in Johannesburg with his partner, Oliver Tambo.

 

LANDMARKS
  • 1918 – Born in the Eastern Cape
  • 1956 – Charged with high treason, but charges dropped
  • 1964 – Charged again, sentenced to life
  • 1990 – Freed from prison
  • 1993 – Wins Nobel Peace Prize
  • 1994 – Elected first black president
  • 1999 – Steps down as leader
  • 2001 – Diagnosed with prostate cancer
  • 2004 – Retires from public life
  • 2005 – Announces his son has died of an HIV/Aids-related illness
  • 2007 – Forms The Elders group
  • 2008 – Turns 90

Together, Mr Mandela and Mr Tambo campaigned against apartheid, the system devised by the all-white National Party which oppressed the black majority. 

In 1956, Mr Mandela was charged with high treason, along with 155 other activists, but the charges against him were dropped after a four-year trial.

Resistance to apartheid grew, mainly against the new Pass laws, which dictated where black people were allowed to live and work.

In 1958, Mr Mandela married Winnie Madikizela, who was later to take a very active role in the campaign to free her husband from prison.

The ANC was outlawed in 1960 and Mr Mandela went underground.

Tension with the apartheid regime grew, and soared to new heights in 1960 when 69 black people were shot dead by police in the Sharpeville massacre.

Life sentence
This marked the end of peaceful resistance and Mr Mandela, already national vice-president of the ANC, launched a campaign of sabotage against the country’s economy.

 

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Mr Mandela spent 27 years behind bars

He was eventually arrested and charged with sabotage and attempting to violently overthrow the government. 

Conducting his own defence in the Rivonia court room, Mr Mandela used the stand to convey his beliefs about democracy, freedom and equality.

“I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities,” he said.

“It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.”

In the winter of 1964 he was sentenced to life in prison.

In the space of 12 months between 1968 and 1969, Mr Mandela’s mother died and his eldest son was killed in a car crash but he was not allowed to attend the funerals.

He remained in prison on Robben Island for 18 years before being transferred to Pollsmoor Prison on the mainland in 1982.

 

 “ Only free men can negotiate. Prisoners cannot enter into contracts ” 
Nelson Mandela

As Mr Mandela and other ANC leaders languished in prison or lived in exile, the youths of South Africa’s black townships did their best to fight white minority rule. 

Hundreds were killed and thousands were injured before the schoolchildren’s uprising was crushed.

In 1980, Mr Tambo, who was in exile, launched an international campaign to release Mr Mandela.

The world community tightened the sanctions first imposed on South Africa in 1967 against the apartheid regime.

The pressure produced results, and in 1990, President FW de Klerk lifted the ban on the ANC, and Mr Mandela was released from prison and talks on forming a new multi-racial democracy for South Africa began.

Nobel Peace Prize
In 1992, Mr Mandela divorced his wife, Winnie, after she was convicted on charges of kidnapping and accessory to assault.

 

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Mr Mandela was greeted by huge crowds when he was released

In December 1993, Mr Mandela and Mr de Klerk were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. 

Five months later, for the first time in South Africa’s history, all races voted in democratic elections and Mr Mandela was elected president.

Mr Mandela’s greatest problem as president was the housing shortage for the poor, and slum townships continued to blight major cities.

He entrusted his deputy, Thabo Mbeki, with the day-to-day business of the government, while he concentrated on the ceremonial duties of a leader, building a new international image of South Africa.

In that context, he succeeded in persuading the country’s multinational corporations to remain and invest in South Africa.

Steps down
But he lost out in his battle to have anti-apartheid activist Cyril Ramaphosa take over as his successor. Mr Mbeki became ANC leader in 1997 and went on to win a landslide victory in June 1999.

 

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Mr Mandela married Graca Michel on his 80th birthday

On his 80th birthday, Nelson Mandela married Graca Machel, the widow of the former president of Mozambique and continued travelling the world, meeting leaders, attending conferences and collecting awards after stepping down as president. 

After his official retirement, his public appearances have been mostly connected with the work of the Mandela Foundation, a charitable fund that he founded.

On his 89th birthday, he formed The Elders, a group of leading world figures to offer their expertise and guidance “to tackle some of the world’s toughest problems”.

Possibly his most noteworthy intervention of recent years came early in 2005, following the death of his only son, Makgatho.

In a country where taboos still surround talking about the Aids epidemic, Mr Mandela announced that his son had died of Aids, and urged South Africans talk about Aids “so to make it appear like a normal illness”.

Woman Dies Over Ghana Defeat

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Emelia Adwoa Asiedua
Emelia Adwoa Asiedua

“Oh Asamoah”, were the last words of Emelia Adwoa Aseidua who met her untimely death after Black Stars’ striker Asamoah Gyan missed a crucial penalty kick during Ghana’s quarter-final match with Uruguay in Soccer City, Johannesburg, South Africa last Friday.

Emelia, 32, whose body is at the Police Hospital morgue, was said to have collapsed on her husband at their Tabora residence in Accra, immediately Asamoah Gyan’s kick hit the crossbar in the dying seconds of extra time at the World Cup tournament.

“Immediately she shouted ‘Oh Asamoah’ she fell and died of shock,” a source at her residence said.

The crucial penalty, which was wasted by Asamoah Gyan, contributed greatly to the defeat of the Black Stars at the tournament.

Narrating the incident to DAILY GUIDE, the husband of the deceased, Kwesi Fosu,  said that he returned from work around 7:30 pm and met his wife sitting outside whilst the football match was going on.

“When I enquired from her why she was not watching the match, she explained to me that she could not withstand the pressure associated with it.”

Mr. Fosu said his wife then came inside the house to serve him his meal and returned to sit outside their chamber and hall apartment.

He noted that when the last penalty was awarded to Ghana in the last minute, Emelia, upon hearing the shouts of goal from fans, then rushed to the room to watch the penalty as Asamoah Gyan was taking it. “Immediately the ball hit the bar, my wife shouted ‘Oh Asamoah’ and fell on the bed.”

Kwesi Fosu said they quickly poured water on her, with the intention of reviving her but she succumbed to the icy hands of death.

“We rushed her to the Lapaz Community Hospital where we were told on arrival that she had already died,” Mr. Fosu stated.

He said his wife was in a perfect condition before he left for work, and they were even making preparations to travel the following Saturday to their hometown for a funeral.

“She had never complained of any heart disease before and was well before I left the house,” he maintained.

The landlady of the house, Madam Mercy Aba Cudjoe, said earlier that morning, Emelia woke up very early to scrub the house and even did some domestic chores before the rain stopped.

“There was no sign of sickness as she was very healthy,” she stressed.

Mercy left for the salon to get her hair done since she was travelling with the husband to Akuapim the following morning for a funeral, she added.

After the penalty shoot-out, the landlady heard shouts of the deceased’s name and came out only to find that she had been put in a taxi which had sped off to the Lapaz Community Hospital where she was pronounced dead.

By Linda Tenyah/Daily Guide

Dzen Nako Cultural Group to Perform at Jazz An Der Donau Concert in Germany

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Ghana’s high-spirited cultural group, Dzen Nako, is heading to Germany for the annual Jazz An Der Donau Concert in Straubing, Germany.

According to the event organizers, the event is scheduled to take place from 16 – 18 July 2010 in Germany.
The enchanting cultural group has performed at this event for the last four consecutive years and are not missing this years’ as well.

The tour promises to be a spectacular experience as Dzen Nako Cultural Group is once again ready to showcase their traditional drumming and dancing performances brewed in the pot of the Ga Traditional area of the Greater Accra Region of Ghana.

The group is taking over fourteen performers to Germany to showcase the cultural uniqueness of Ghana at the concert venue.

One of the most popular performances to look forward to is that of the Fontomfrom recitation known as “Drum Circle”, a high-energy routine featuring the skilled drummers and dancers of Dzen Nako. With this special performance, the drummers play a variety of traditional instruments, including the ngoma –a large, single-headed drum; and the kenkeni – a small, hourglass-shaped drum.

The performers scheduled for the trip include Hyde Edmond, Allotey Mingle, Konadu Eric, Ketorwoo Christian, Appiah Elsben, Koomson Richard, Kobina Kuubetersuri Charity, Antwi Rosemond, Nipah Ekow, Owusuwaah Priscilla, Twumasi Isaac, Asante Ntori Kwabena, Martey Daniel Marmah, Medjie Mathias Quartey, Mensah Sandy Junior and Yamoah Bright.

According to Hyde Edmond, “nothing is as exciting as performing live in front of prospective audience. We’re going to have fun and promote Ghanaian culture”.

Hyde Edmond added that the band has effectively rehearsed and that the audience should expect nothing but showmanship with a delectable traditionally-unique dance forms and performances such as Susuma, Kpanlogo, Tutswa, Nyira, Akonsombo, Santofie, Sisala and Brekete.

Yvonne Nelson Fights Journalist Attractive Mustapha

Ghanaian actress Yvonne Nelson is currently in a fierce fight with an Art and Entertainment writer, Mustapha Nii Okai Inusah, Popularly knwon as Attractive Mustapha who writes for “Flex Newspaper” and ghanaianmovies.com.

The tall actress is ‘mad’ with the writer and has warned him not to write anything about her or use her pictures in any of the mediums he writes for.

An observation made by peacefmonline.com yesterday

Thursday July 1, 2010 during the press preview of a new movie “The Game” at the Silverbird Cinema in Accra, confirms that the “Princess Tyra” actress is bent on keeping her distance from the writer, and she has no intentions of making peace with him.

After the movie was screened to the media, a few questions were allowed from pressmen present in the cinema. The journalists were then asked to move out so they can have one-on-one interviews with the cast and crew, and it was there that Yvonne exposed her uncontrolled temperament.

When Attractive Mustapha pointed his camera to take a shot of Yvonne, just like any other journalist was doing, Yvonne shouted in the full glare of everybody present: “Why are you taking pictures of me, why? what are you going to use it for? Please, please, please don’t take any short of me. I don’t want you to take any picture of me,” she screamed with so much aggression and anger.

On the other hand, Mustapha also said at the spur of the moment “Who said I was taking your picture? It is not your picture I am taking. Why would I take your picture if you don’t want me to?” he asked in shock.

The Director of “The Game”, Frank Raja, and officials of Double D production who were present at the spot, tried to cool tempers down for the programme to go on.

However, peacefmonline investigation reveals that, the actress’ shocking attitude towards Mustapha is based on some publication Mustapha made about her in the past, about her owing school fees, and her alleged relationship with some male celebrities among others, which she was not too happy about, because she claims it’s her private Life.

When peacefmonline.com spoke to Mustapha Nii okai Inusah (Attractive) who is a member of the Arts Writers Association of Ghana (AWAG), he said Yvonne is just displaying her intolerance and arrogant attitude. “She is doing this because of some stories I did about her in

“Flex” some months ago.

We published that she did not pay her school fees at the Central University, and she wrote unprintable words on her facebook wall about me and my newspaper”. He added that as if the facebook comment was not enough, she called him on phone and rained all sorts of insults on me and all Entertainment writers in Ghana.

Mustapha said, Yvonne Nelson has not been able to deny that she owed school fees, which means that the story is true. He said he had his information from a member of the school administration, and any other story he has done on Yvonne he was reliably informed before he wrote them.

He said, Yvonne gave him the same attitude when he met her a few days ago on set, shooting for Roger Quatey’s movie, on the Spintex road. Meanwhile Yvonne, who was not ready to talk about this, has refused to apologize to Mustapha and his Newspaper for threatening and insulting them. She told ‘The Spectator’ newspaper:

“I don’t owe anybody an apology, and I am even happy they are saying they will not publish anything about me again”. Several attempts by some influential people in the movie industry to settle this issue have proven futile.

 

How it was in the journalism of my day (2)

A friend who read my last article emailed me to say:?Your article on Tuesday shows how far you have come. I will be waiting for the concluding part. GBC is 75 and they should have invited you to be part of the activities.?

I laughed when I read the part about the GBC inviting me to be part of their activities.

My friend obviously has no grounding in the Bible. Otherwise he would have remembered what Jesus said, namely, that ?A prophet is not without honour, except in his own country.?

The Ghana News Agency, where I have never worked, was kind enough to invite me to be its guest speaker at its 50th anniversary celebrations.

Even when, because of a funeral I couldn’t avoid, I couldn’t be present physically, the Managing Director, Nana Appau Duah, insisted that we should find someone to read my speech for me. Ironically, the man we chose was someone I had worked with at the GBC, the incomparable John Hammond.

Indeed, I hope John Hammond, the man whose golden voice graced its airwaves daily for some two decades, is on its high profile list. John was very sick when I visited him in Accra last year. He appeared pretty lonely to me.

I do not normally engage in special pleading, but I shall abandon my practice and urge all Ghanaians who have been delighted by John Hammond’s golden tones to flood the GBC with letters and telephone calls until the GBC makes it its official duty, as an institution, to take care of him, both physically and psychologically during his indisposition.

As for me, let’s hope I’ll still be around when the GBC’s centenary celebrations take place.

For I am sure that by the time the institution reaches its 100th year, it will have come to appreciate that some of us, unsung though we are, contributed to make it what it is today.

At its best, GBC was an institution of which its mother organisation, the BBC ? which seconded the top personnel who set the GBC up ? would have been proud.

When I joined the GBC in early 1957, at a time that everything in our country was being turned upside down, every top official in the organisation was a white man. But this soon changed. And yet it continued to retain the affections of the public.

The Director-General of my time was the soft-spoken J. B Millar. As I said in my last article, my story Tough Guy In Town, had made quite an impact. And on the back of it, I wrote to the Head of Programmes, Henry Swanzy, to tell him I wanted to join the GBC.

I was interviewed by a panel headed by Mr Millar himself and which included a Ghanaian called Mr Gadzekpo.

First, they asked me to write an article about the most important thing that had happened recently.

I chose the Middle East, which then as now, was boiling. The article impressed them and they gave me a news bulletin to read! Now, I had never been inside a broadcasting studio before, but they put me in one, with a microphone standing on a table covered with green gauze, and asked me to read the bulletin.

As every schoolboy did, I had practised the opening lines many time beforehand; ?This is the Gold Coast Broadcasting Service. The time is one o’clock. Here is the news read by Cameron Duodu? They watched me carefully from behind a glass panel as, thrilled to bits, I said those lines.

I knew they would hear any noise I made, as it would be caught by the microphone, and instinctively realising that any nervousness ? or otherwise ? would count, I was very careful in handling the papers.

The news bulletin itself was of world news and they wanted to know whether I could read it fluently and meaningfully. It contained two ?trap? (difficult) foreign names in particular that I remember ? Eisenhower and Adlai Stevenson.

I sailed through these without pausing, because I listened to the BBC every day. I also pretended that I was reading a real news bulletin, and paused in the middle of the bulletin to announce, rather ponderously, ?This news broadcast comes to you from the GBC, Accra.?

My performance impressed them greatly and I overheard Mr Gadzekpo, who had a strong voice, say from behind the glass door, ?He must listen a lot!?

So I wasn’t surprised when Mr Millar congratulated me warmly when I came out. He was the sort of boss who could get you to eat out of his hand. He knew that everyone who joined the GBC wanted to read the news so that his voice could be heard all over the country, and that, if I wasn’t appointed a news reader, I would be disappointed.

So what he said to me ? straight away, no ‘go and we shall write to you’ business ? was ?Cameron, we would like you to go to the newsroom, which needs strengthening.?

Wow! The DG thought I could help to ?strengthen? the newsroom? Cool, man.

When I took up my job in the newsroom, we were still at the Old Broadcasting House, near Flagstaff House. We were in wooden sheds built on stilts.

It was thrilling to meet in the flesh, the owners of the voices one had heard on the radio so many times: Kwame Amamoo, Appeah Kubi, Robert Owusu, Ashie Kotey and others, and those who read the news in Twi and Fanti, whom I had been listening to ? Adanse Pippim, Kweku Budu Ewusi Dadzie, and others.

In the newsroom itself, among the old hands I met were a cool, elegant man called Robert Tabi, who was from Kwabeng, near my home town.

He died unexpectedly, at his desk, about a year after I’d joined. Then there were Kwadwo Awere, Dankwa Smith, Osei Acheampong and my lifelong friend Charles Segbefia. We cracked jokes as we worked. Except when one of three men was present.

The roost was ruled by a triumvirate headed by the Head of News, Ian Wilson, the Chief Editor, Eric Adjorlolo and an Editor, Shang Simpson. I think at the time I joined, Shang was only a Sub-Editor, but even then, his authority was unquestioned. He ruled the newsroom by the sheer force of his personality.

He called us, the underlings, not by our first names, but by our surnames. And when he called you, he made sure you knew he had called you: ?DUODU!? And you practically ran to him. He was such a terror that eventually, we all called him ?God?! But he was extremely efficient, and did most of the work that both Wilson and Adjorlolo should have been doing.

Wilson went to so many cocktail parties that we called his secretary, Mr K K Ketsubor, ?KK Accept? (which was the only three words Wilson scribbled on every single invitation he received to a cocktail party.) We laughed at him a lot, behind his back, saying that so long as he had Shang to run the newsroom for him, he would attend every party in the world.

Adjorlolo too liked parties, and he had the irritating habit of sometimes, ringing up, when we were about to finish a bulletin, and dictating details about a party he was attending and asking us to include it in the bulletin.

We knew he would ask the host and those whose names he mentioned to go and listen to the bulletin, and hear their names read out on the air. This show of vanity diminished our respect for him.

But he was a very friendly and generous man.

Credit: By Cameron Duodu

Resigned Supreme Court judge sues Chief Justice, others

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wpid-law-and-justice.jpgA resigned Supreme Court Judge, Justice F.Y. Kpegah has sued the Chief Justice, the Attorney-General, the Judicial Secretary and the Director of Finance at the Judicial Service for failing to facilitate his loan application.

In a suit filed at the Fast Track High Court on January 15, 2010, Justice Kpegah is asking the court for “an order reviewing the decision taken collectively by (Mrs Georgina Wood, Justice Alex Opoku-Acheampong, Prosper Adeti and Betty Mould Iddrisu 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th respondents respectively) against [him by] refusing his request to them to recommend his loan application to his bankers and also guarantee that his salary will continue to be paid into his account until his liability to his bankers is discharged.”

Justice Kpegah, according to the Editor-In-Chief of the Ghanaian Observer newspaper, Egbert Faibille, who spoke to Joy FM’s Super Morning Show host Kojo Oppong-Nkrumah, wrote a letter dated January 6, 2010 to the CJ asking for salary advance to enable him complete his family house.

In response to the letter, the Chief Justice writing on January 14, 2010, stated that, “The management and payment of monthly pension of retired judges who qualify to retire on their salaries is entirely the responsibility of the pension unit of the Controller and Accountant General’s Department and not the Judicial Service. It is in the light of this that whenever a judge retires from the Judicial Service, the name of the judge is deleted from the Service’s active payroll.”

The letter among other things concluded that “The Judicial Service does not therefore sign undertakings for loans for retired judges and magistrates who are on retirement or separated from the service and no longer on the Service’s payroll to enable such judges, magistrates and officers access financial assistance from institutions.”

Unhappy with the response, Justice Kpegah applied to the High Court for a judicial review.

In his application to the court, the retired Judge said the refusal of the respondents to recommend his loan application nearly cost two of his sons – who obtained admissions to the University of London – their education.

He said the decision also caused him financial embarrassment as he had to rely on the benevolence of a friend to raise the GH?70,000 that was required to pay the fees for his sons.

Justice Kpegah in his affidavit said since his resignation from the Judicial Service as a Supreme Court Judge on December 4, 2008 “on the grounds that the independence of the judiciary? had been compromised as a result of executive interference” and corruption in government, “the 1st respondent (Georgina Wood), who is the head of the Judicial Service became inexplicably hostile to me and froze my gratuity and salary on the erroneous ground that since I ‘resigned’ rather than ‘retired’ I was not entitled to same.”

The decision to freeze his gratuity and salary simply because he resigned, Justice Kpegah contended, was in contravention of Article 145 (3) of the 1992 Constitution which states that “A Justice of the superior court of judicature or a chairman of a regional tribunal may resign from his office by a letter signed by him and addressed to the president.”

It is therefore his contention that the CJ’s argument that the Judicial Service could not guarantee his loan application was untenable.

But Egbert Faibille says there is some contradiction in Justice Kpegah’s submissions to the court.

He said whilst the letter asking for the salary advance stated the reason as to complete the renovation of Justice Kpegah’s family home, his affidavit claims that the money was needed to facilitate the education of his sons.

A date is yet to be set for hearing.

Story by Malik Abass Daabu

ILO addresses Parliament?on financing local economic development in Ghana

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By?Stephen Odoi-Larbi – Ghanaian Chronicle

The Local branch of the International Labour Organization (ILO) on Tuesday presented 600 copies of two publications on ‘Financing Local Economic Development in Ghana’ to Parliament.

The two publications; one a 123 page document on financing local economic development deals with old problems and new strategies in bringing local government and local businesses together to find common solutions to local socio-economic challenges.

The other, a 12 page handbook on ‘Promoting Employment Through Enterprise Development’, highlights the various opportunities of employment at the local level that helps to improve standards of living.

The two publications, according to the International Project Expert of the ILO, Nii Moi Thompson, was developed against the backdrop of the rising public expectations in constituencies across the country over better economic and employment opportunities.

?We deem the presentation timely and the publications relevant in view of Parliament’s growing interest in local economic development against the backdrop of rising public expectations in constituencies across the country, over better economic and employment opportunities,? he noted.

Ghana’s economy is made up of 170 local economies (Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies) that are highly dependent on government for their sustainability.

These local economies are, therefore, affected by national policies emanating either from Parliament or the Executive, and have an effect on the ability of local businesses and local governments to make the kinds of investments they need.

But Mr. Thompson believes sustaining these local economies require as a matter of urgency and of necessity, a certain level of investment and reinvestment by both the private and public sectors.

For example, he said many districts complain that deductions from their shares of the District Assemblies Common Fund by the national government impede their ability to invest in infrastructure to facilitate local economic development.

This, according to him, has undermined the ability of local economies to grow and create enough jobs for the young men and women in their jurisdictions, adding ?out of desperation, these young men and women then head for the cities and towns in search of non-existent jobs.?

The presentation to Parliament, according to the International Project Expert of the ILO was to help shape members’ contributions to the on-going public debate over Ghana’s decentralization process, as well as the impending review of the 1992 Constitution.

The books were received on behalf of the leadership of Parliament by the Minister of Local Government and MP for Wa West, Mr. Joseph Yieleh Chireh, together with Mr. Gershon Kofi Bediako Gbediame, MP for Nkwanta South and Mr. Akoto Osei, MP for Tafo.

The three, in their remarks, shared in the belief that Parliamentarians have a lot of responsibility in shaping policy and, therefore, thanked ILO for the presentation, which according to them will serve as a resource material that will help them ?influence policy? on developmental issues.

No internal audit at NHIS in six years – Ametor Quayme

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The Deputy Head of Corporate Affairs at the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) has attributed reported gross financial malfeasance at the authority to the failure of officials to carry out internal audits over six years.

Mr Eric Ametor Quayme said since 2004, there has been no audit of the financial accounts of the authority, resulting in various forms of mismanagement and misapplication of funds.

?The sad state of affairs within the National Health Insurance Scheme across the country? is that since they were established they have never, never been audited and this has given the leeway to the scheme to misapply or misuse, or even let me say, steal state money, government money?which has been given to them to operate with,? Mr Ametor Quayme said.

He was speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show.
The NHIA has for some time now come under the spotlight but mostly for the wrong reasons.

Early on, issues of the supply of fake drugs have tied into reports of service providers making false claims from the authority, a situation which triggered the suspension of some service providers.

According to him, the authority has now embarked on an intensive ?clinical audit? to ensure that expenditures service providers have submitted correspond with the true cost of services provided.

The NHIA official also touched on reports of extravagant expenditures by the current administration of the authority headed by Mr Sylvester Mensah.

The Searchlight newspaper has carried a serialized exposition on the NHIA suggesting that Mr Mensah and his team have within months of assuming post bought for their own use, luxurious vehicles and rented posh apartments.

On the authority‘s decision to spend $72,000 to rent accommodation for Mr Mensah, Mr Ametor Quayme said due diligence was done to ensure financial prudence.

?We did not have a government accommodation then so it became necessary for the authority to actually find him accommodation which is normal with all state institutions of this kind. So that was the reason why the authority went ahead and procured a duty-post accommodation for him,? he said.

?My understanding is that the authority is making preparations to put up its own staff residence for the Chief Executive Officer,? he said adding that a request by the authority to the Water Resources, Works and Housing Ministry for accommodation had been turned down.

Asked whether Chief Executive, Ras Boateng is being investigated as reported by the media, Mr Ametor Quayme said he was not aware of any investigations.?

Story by Fiifi Koomson/Myjoyonline/Ghana

ILO equips leaders of small scale business associations

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Dr. Nii Moi Thompson, International Project Expert of the Local Economic Development (LED) of the International Labour Organization ((ILO), expressed concern on Monday the slow pace with which problems associated with the informal sector were addressed even though it forms about 80-90% of the nation?s workforce and could accelerate economic development.

He said it was in recognition of this that the ILO in collaboration with the government and other stakeholders partnered to evolve means of addressing those problems under its ?Decent Work Country Programme? to help create jobs and eradicate poverty.

Dr. Thompson said this when he opened a five-day technical training workshop in Cape Coast.

It was for the leaders of small scale business associations from the Gomoa West District.

He said the high poverty levels in the Central Region could be a thing of the past if Metropolitan, Municipal and District assemblies (MMDAs) could collaborate with these associations and explore ways to boost local enterprises.

He said the ?Decent Work Country Programme? was being implemented in eight districts in the Central Region and that it would soon move to other regions.

Mr Thompson urged the beneficiary districts to avail themselves of the training workshops that seeks to build their capacities for economic progression of their districts.

Dr. Thompson said field visits by his office to the Gomoa West District revealed that existing small business associations lacked the capabilities to deliver effective services to make them vibrant to improve the socio-economic status of its members and to facilitate job creation.

He said lack of office accommodation for instance was hampering effective administration while the leaders also lacked the requisite knowledge on issues such as administrative and financial management and therefore the workshop will help them to address the anomaly.

Mr. Emmanuel Baisie, National Project Officer of LED of the ILO, urged small and business scale entrepreneurs to join associations for them to have an umbrella body to regulate their activities, source funds and also benefit from such training programmes.

Source: GNA