FP- ICGLR Speaker arrives in Angola

The Speaker of the Forum of Parliaments of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (FP-ICGLR) Jemma Nunu Kumba arrived in Luanda Sunday for a five-day working visit.

Jemma Nunu Kumba, who is accompanied by a delegation of the organ, was welcomed by the first vice speaker of National Assembly, Américo Cuononoca.

Jemma Kumba said that the visit to Angola is part of the effort for the parliamentarians to interact.

She said that she will take advantage of her stay in Angola to present to the President of the Republic, João Lourenço, the declaration from the last forum held in South Sudan.

The agenda also includes a meeting with the Speaker of the National Assembly, Carolina Cerqueira, to exchange experiences.

FP-ICGLR is an inter-parliamentary organisation that brings together national parliaments from the 12 Member States.

They are Angola, Burundi, Central African Republic (CAR), Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Republic of Sudan, Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia.

The Forum was established on 4 December, 2008 in Kigali, Rwanda, following the signing of the Inter-Parliamentary Agreement.

The body comprises the Plenary Assembly, the Plenary Assembly Bureau, the Conference of the Speakers, the Executive Committee, Commissions and the General Secretariat.

Angola was officially invited to be a member of the Parliamentary Forum of the Conference on the Great Lakes Region in January 2013.

It joined the organisation in November 2014.

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)

Diplomat José Agostinho Neto dies

Diplomat José Agostinho Neto, brother of Angola’s first president, died Saturday in Lisbon, Portugal, aged 85, due to illness.

In a note sent to ANGOP Sunday, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MIREX), which announced the misfortune, expressed “deep sadness and high compassion” and expresses its heartfelt condolences to the family.

In the document, signed by the Angolan top diplomat Teté António, recalls that “Tio Loló”, as he was affectionately known, was Angola’s extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador to the Republics of Congo, Tanzania and Botswana.

A diligent member of the ruling MPLA party, the ambassador was also a BPC – Banco de Poupança e Crédito (Savings and Credit Bank) member and non-executive director of the António Agostinho Neto Foundation (FAAA), where he looked after the legacy of his older brother.

“On behalf of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Department, the entire diplomatic class and other officials, I express my condolence to bereaved family”, Teté António’s message reads out.

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)

Ghana suspends COVID-19 health declaration form for international travellers

The COVID-19 health declaration form for international travellers to Ghana has been suspended with effect from May 20, 2023.

Also, pre-departure testing and tests at all points of entry are no longer a requirement for all passengers.

These were contained in a letter addressed to all media houses with the headline ‘lifting of COVID-19 restrictions at all points of entry in Ghana’ and signed by Dr Patrick Kuma-Aboagye, Director General of the Ghana Health Service.

According to the letter, these decisions were taken at a National COVID-19 Task Force meeting held on 17th May 2023, on the global and national COVID-19 situation.

The letter said for constant vigilance of protection of persons from COVID-19, the following measures were to be maintained.

It noted that the COVID-19 vaccination drive would continue and persons with symptoms of cough, fever and sore throat would be tested for both flu and COVID-19 at all sentinel sites across all the 16 regions of the country.

‘Surveillance will continue to help us identify any COVID-19 variants of concern.

‘Persons with complaints of fever, cough or sore throat should report to the nearest health facility for management,’ the letter advised.

It said persons who tested positive for COVID-19 were to be managed with existing protocols.

The letter intimated that Ghana has had outbreaks of Marburg virus disease, Lassa fever, monkeypox, measles, and yellow fever since the declaration of COVID-19 as public health emergency of public concern.

It noted that the health system in the country had maintained sufficient capacity in the midst of these threats.

It said the Ministry of Health and the Ghana Health Service with support from its partners would continue to ensure operational readiness and flexibility to respond during surges of COVID-19.

It said the GHS would also maintain other essential health services and prepared for the emergency of new variants of increased capacity.

According to the letter, the World Health Organization announced on May 5, 2023, that COVID-19 was no longer a Public Health Emergency International Concern (PHEIC) globally.

It said there were decreasing numbers of concerns of death and hospitalization with levels of population immunity against SARS Co.v-2.

It noted that though covid-19 remained a global health threat, it was time for countries to transition from emergency mode to managing covid-19 alongside other infectious diseases.

The letter revealed that there had been a sustained decline in COVID-19 cases in the country over the five past months.

It said as of May 15, 2023, there were only 18 active cases none of which was severe or critical adding that the only covid-19 death in 2023 was in January.

The letter noted that since January 2023, there had been 187,089 international passengers arriving in the country of which more than 98 per cent were either fully vaccinated or persons below 18 years of age who were exempted from testing based on the national guide.

As a result, it said only 3,890 were required to be tested out of which 24 tested positive.

It continued that as of May 19, 2023, more than 13.5 million had received at least a dose of the COVID-19 vaccine whilst 10.5 million persons were fully vaccinated, and 4.5 million persons had taken the vaccine.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Keep the environment clean to avoid outbreaks of diseases – Bono Minister

Madam Justina Owusu-Banahene, the Bono Regional Minister has advised the public to observe personal hygiene and keep their surroundings clean as the rains set in.

With the onset of the rains, the Regional Minister reminded that a filthy environment could cause an outbreak of communicable diseases, hence the need for the public to desilt choked gutters and always weed and sweep dirty environments.

The Regional Minister also cautioned the public against putting structures and buildings at waterways and unauthorized places to prevent flooding.

In an interview with the media in Sunyani, Madam Owusu-Banahene emphasised cleaner environment and improved hygiene guaranteed good health and safe life.

She said proper environmental sanitation remained collective and shared responsibility and prevented outbreaks of diseases such as malaria, typhoid and cholera.

The Regional Minister called on everybody to prioritize environmental sanitation by avoiding indiscriminate disposal of solid and liquid waste and also ensured gutters were not choked with solid materials for improved drainage systems.

‘When we dispose of debris indiscriminately, it turns to choke gutters and thereby, makes it extremely difficult for liquid waste to flow freely. An unkept environment also served as fertile breeding places for mosquitos and contributed to malaria and other preventable diseases,’ Madam Owusu-Banahene stated.

‘Good sanitation practices are essential for our health and the overall development of our region, as the rains set in therefore crucial that we take collective action to prevent flooding in the city,’ she said.

Madam Owusu-Banahene called on traditional and opinion leaders to mobilize their people to undertake periodic clean-up exercises and also intensify awareness creation on personal hygiene.

She also asked the various district and municipal assemblies to collaborate with chiefs and queens and supported them with sanitation equipment such as dustbins and rakes.

Madam Owusu-Banahene stressed the commitment of the government towards the implementation of proper and sustainable waste management initiatives and advised everybody to take responsibility and manage waste properly.

Source: Ghana News Agency

ActionAid Ghana urges women to contest in district-level elections

Mr Foster Adase-Adjei, the ActionAid Ghana Programmes Officer for Volta and Oti regions, has urged women and persons with disability to develop a keen interest in the 2023 District Assembly and Unit Committee elections and participate in the contest.

He said their participation would help promote equality and inclusion in local governance, ensuring that no one was left behind in Ghana’s development.

As part of ActionAid Ghana’s (AAG) efforts towards women’s rights, the programmes team in the two regions were organising community-based sensitisation with a focus on women and persons with disability to propel them for the upcoming district-level elections.

Mr Adase-Adjei said this at Koru, a farming community in the Kadjebi District of the Oti Region, during a community engagement.

The NGO is collaborating with the Kadjebi District Directorate of the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) to have the exercise done.

‘Open literature had it that women and persons with disability are the most marginalised in our societies from decisions that affect their lives to access and control over resources,’ he said.

‘They are also discriminated against, deepening their vulnerability.’

‘We believe that when women too are given the opportunity to lead, they can change the very status quo that discriminates against them.’

Mr Daniel Agbesi Latsu, the Kadjebi District Director of the NCCE, said the Commission’s involvement in the programme was in fulfilment of Article 24 (2e) of the 1992 Constitution, to promote gender and disability balance in compliance with the Sustainable Development Goal Five (SDG 5).

He said voting was a constitutional right and to vote was a civic duty, in which everyone must participate fully.

‘The level of voter apathy and disinterest in the district level polls by the electorates, over the years, are a threat and setback to the development of democratic governance in the country,’ he said.

On qualifications, Mr Latsu said a candidate must be a registered voter, a citizen of not less than 18 years of age, and an ordinary resident in the district in which he/she seeks elections, among other things.

‘Educational qualification should not be a barrier in contesting since district assemblies conduct their businesses in English and in any Ghanaian Language common to the communities in the district.’

On roles of an assembly member, he said, he/she must maintain close contact with the electoral area, consult the people on issues to be discussed in the district assembly and seek their views, opinions and proposals to present to the assembly.

Mr Latsu, who was a former Assemblyman for the Keyime Electoral Area in the Agortime-Ziope District of the Volta Region, explained that a member must meet the electorate before each meeting of the assembly and then report back to them.

The report should include the general decisions of the assembly and its executive committees and actions he/she had taken to solve problems raised by residents in the electoral area.

The Local Government Law, 1988 (PNDCL 207) introduced the District Assemblies Concept with the view to giving a boost to the decentralisation and local governance in Ghana, hence disinterest in the polls would defeat the intent.

Mr Boniface Klomegah, former Assemblyman for Okrakrom Electoral Area, on behalf of the community, commended the NCCE for the programme and called for more such programmes to enlighten the people.

Similar programmes were held at Kpalime Kofe and Ampeyo communities, as well as the Assemblies of God Church at Kadjebi, and the Church of Pentecost at Menuso, among others.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Western Regional Network of Ministers, others walk against LGBTQ+

Hundreds of Christians took to the major streets of the Sekondi – Takoradi Metropolis to register a strong stand against homosexuality and any other sexual behaviours, which are in contravention with their faith and Ghanaian norms.

Drawn from the Western Regional Network of Ministers, churches and councils, the protestors held placards reading; ‘LGBTQ is a taboo’, ‘God created Adam and Eve and not Adam and Steve’, and ‘Even animals don’t practice LGBTQ+’.

Others read; ‘Say no to any form of unnatural intimacy,’ ‘Normal women marry men’, and ‘Leave a good Legacy for your generation,’ to register their abhorrence of the practice, which they describe as an affront to God’s will and purpose for procreation and multiplication.

The walk, which started at the Asempa Hotel in Takoradi, ended at the Western Regional Coordinating Council in Sekondi.

Bishop Emmanuel Kwesi Ansah, the Methodist Bishop of Sekondi and Chairman of the Network, then presented an official paper to the Western Regional Minister, Mr Kwabena Okyere Darko-Mensah.

Bishop Ansah reminded Ghanaians of how God punished the City of Sodom and Gomorrah, many years ago, for the ‘same uncouth sexual pattern in deviance to the natural order.’

‘This is why we expect the Government to give a sense of urgency to our crusade against LGBTQIA+ and to facilitate the passing into law the Promotion of Proper Human Sex Rights and Ghanaian Family Values before Parliament,’ he said.

The Network was determined to rid the Western Region, a main industrial and tourist attraction to many and the Nation in general, of those cancerous vices, Bishop Ansah said.

He said Ghanaian culture and traditions and the dictates of the Christian faith must stand supreme to any idealogy of rights and freedoms.

‘The leadership of the Churches in the Western Region had resolved to take a firm and resolute position on the matter in order not to disappoint the Christian faith.’

Bishop Ansah informed the Minister that the Network was putting in place counselling centres to offer help to perpetrators or victims in absolute confidentiality to enable them to reconstruct their lives.

The centres will also intensify prayers on the subject and visit educational institutions to educate the youth on the need to eschew the vice.

He called on the church to deepen its commitment to the teaching of Christian family values.

The Network would ultimately develop a homosexuality document for the teaching of children, youth and adults in all churches, he noted.

Mr Darko-Mensah, who welcomed the team, said the Government was mindful of the sensibilities, cultural and constitutional requirements as a sovereign nation and would not, in any way, compromise those guiding principles.

He pledged to inform the President about the Network’s aspirations for the nation.

Later, the leadership prayed for the Government and citizens and asked for God’s blessings for a peaceful and congenial atmosphere in Ghana.

Source: Ghana News Agency