Soldier arrested over attempted robbery at mining site


The swift intervention of some Nyamesom miners near Kwabenakwa averted a robbery attack at a mining site in Obuasi.

A soldier was allegedly arrested in connection with the robbery attempt whilst three of his alleged accomplices escaped.

Lance Corporal Eric Opoku of the Airborne, Tamale, together with his colleagues, one of whom he mentioned as Musah Jafa of the Tema Naval Base, told the police allegedly that they had gone to the site to get their ‘chop money’.

A police brief said the four in their military uniforms had worn white long Muslim dresses called ‘jalabia’ over their uniforms and were armed with pump action gun, knives, among other weapons.

It said they had entered the mining site allegedly amidst gun shots, necessitating a distress call to the Police, who quickly responded.

The brief said the police met the callee and other 20 civilians who had arrested one of the culprits.

According to the brief, the suspect told the police that he was currently on operation at Bawku and that he was on a-14-
day leave.

He allegedly said he and the others had gone to the site to look for ‘chop money’ and that they gave warning shots to scare workers at the site.

Opoku also told the police allegedly that he and his alleged accomplices took hostage of the excavator operator, but luck eluded him, and he was grabbed whilst the rest escaped.

The suspect, since his arrest on March 24, 2024, is assisting Police in investigations, especially in getting the other members of the gang.

Source: Ghana News Agency

MTN Group announces plans to exit two African countries


By Charity Nginyu

In its 2023 financial report, MTN Group, a leading telecommunication giant, has disclosed its intention to divest from smaller markets within the West and Central African region, Guinea-Bissau and Guinea-Conakry.

A spokesperson for MTN Group confirmed the impending sale of its business segments in the specified African countries but refrained from disclosing the financial details surrounding the transaction. However, it was confirmed that the sale has been accepted by Telecel, a prominent Africa-focused telecommunication service provider.

The decision to sell off its operations in these countries is expected to streamline MTN’s operations and enable a sharper focus on key markets such as Ghana, Cameroon, and Cote d’Ivoire.

These markets, reports say, collectively contribute 18.6% to the company’s revenue and have been identified as strongholds within the West and Central African region.

It is reported that the divestment from Guinea-Bissau and Guinea-Conakry, which together contribute 7
.3% to MTN Group’s revenue, will allow the company to reallocate resources and expertise to bolster its presence in markets with higher revenue generation potential.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

African nations need political awakening to tackle the debt issue


Adebayo Olukoshi, a professor of governance at the University of Witwatersrand, South Africa, has challenged African leaders to respond to the call for a strong political will to lift their countries out of the cyclical debt situation.

According to a 2023 report by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), more than half of Sub-Saharan Africa’s low-income countries are at high risk or already in debt distress.

The report also revealed that the debt ratios of most Sub-Saharan African countries had increased from an average of 30 per cent in 2013 to nearly 60 per cent in 2022.

Currently, Ethiopia, Ghana, Malawi, Nigeria, Zambia, and other African countries are implementing various loan-support programmes with the IMF and going through a debt restructuring process.

However, Prof Olukoshi emphasised that Africa would require a local political awakening to overcome the debt problem and put the continent on the path of debt sustainability and economic stability.

He made the remarks during a media interview on the
sidelines of a three-day conference in Accra on Africa’s debt crisis and international financial architecture reform on Wednesday.

The International Development Economics Associates (IDEAs) is organising the conference in collaboration with the African Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD) and the Ghanaian government.

‘It’s important that we break this cycle, and the starting point is political awakening; an awakening that provides a framework in which leadership vision can then be developed,’ he said.

Prof Olukoshi stated that Africa, as the world’s most endowed continent in terms of human and natural resources, should stop ‘going around with a begging bowl from one generation to the other.’

‘If we [Africa] wake up to the realisation that enough is enough, and that we cannot continue with this cycle, then we can begin to take the necessary measures to break the structures of dependence,’ he said.

According to Prof. Olukoshi, median exports from Africa to the rest of the world amounted to m
ore than US$60 billion, including nurses and doctors, while others cross the Sahel and Mediterranean ‘only to go and pick fruits in foreign countries.’

 ‘Why do you continue to produce raw materials which you don’t process, export more capital from Africa to the rest of the world and go begging? he quizzed.

He underscored the need for the continent to increase productivity and regulate its export of human resources and raw materials to the rest of the world.

Mr Charles Abugre, Executive Director of IDEAs, noted that it had only been 20 years since the Multilateral Debt Relief initiative ended, and many African countries are now facing debt crises.

The solution to the challenges, he said, was largely dependent on good political and bureaucratic leadership, which the three-day conference would emphasise.

The conference would, therefore, provide a platform to learn from the past, determine how best to restructure debt to prevent insolvency and develop alternatives to external loan support programmes on debt
sustainability.

This would be done through panel and roundtable discussions among political scientists, academics, economists, policymakers, and civil society organizations (CSOs).

Source: Ghana News Agency

Western Region NRSA embarks on ‘Stay Alive Easter Campaign’


The Western Regional Office of the National Road Safety Authority (NRSA) has embarked on a campaign to educate road users, especially drivers, on the need to observe safety rules and regulations during the Easter holidays.

The ‘Stay Alive Easter Campaign,’ being undertaken throughout the Easter period, is being done in collaboration with the Western Regional Motor Traffic and Transport Department (MTTD) of the Ghana Police Service and the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority (DVLA).

Some of the activities carried out as part of the campaign included pre-departure checks, highway enforcement, and vantage point sensitisation, which were all geared towards promoting good road practices among drivers, with a focus on speeding limits.

Mr Victor Kojo Bilson, the Western Regional Head of the NRSA, told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in an interview that the Authority focused on ensuring that drivers sped within the appropriate limits because it had identified overspeeding as one of the main causes of road traffic
crashes during festive seasons.

He said: ‘We want drivers to understand the negative effects of overspeeding in the sense that the faster you go, the higher the severity of potential crashes.’

He advised drivers to always abide by the laid down rules on speeding, saying ‘The only way to stay alive during the Easter holidays is for our drivers to reduce speeding and take travellers to their various destinations safely’.

Mr Bilson also encouraged drivers to ensure that their vehicles met the approved road-worthy standards to help guarantee the safety of passengers.

‘If your tyres, wipers, lights and other parts of your vehicles are not functioning well, you have no business transporting people from one place to another. We must ensure our vehicles are worthy of the roads for our safety,’ he noted.

The Western Region NRSA Head cautioned drivers against violating road safety rules, saying offenders would be severely dealt with.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Atangana Kouna recovers wealth – President Paul Biya


By Eratus Ndueh

Released last July 2022, after spending four years in prison, the former Minister of water and energy, Basile Atangana Kouna, has been granted permission to recover his property – vehicles, cash and bank accounts, worth several hundreds of million FCFA.

The instruction was recently given by Ferdinand Ngoh Ngoh, the Secretary General at the Presidency of the Republic of Cameroon, to the Minister of Justice, Laurent Esso, via a correspondence under instructions of President Paul Biya, which ordered the restitution of nearly one billion CFA seized from the accounts of Basile Atangana Kouna.

Suspected of embezzlement of public funds, illegal emigration and violation of the legal code by the country’s justice system, Basile Atangana Kouna fled at night in March 2018 to Nigeria where he was arrested. He was later brought back, prosecuted and charged, then sent to the Kondengui central prison in Yaounde. After delayed proceedings under the same presidential instructions, Kouna’s accounts were seiz
ed following the requisitions of the investigating judge of the Special Criminal Court (TCS).

The money seized included 971,000 euros and USD 222,256 which converts to just over FCFA 754 million. In addition to this money, several luxury vehicles were seized from the homes of Basile Atangana Kouna in Douala and Yaoundé, as well as from his relatives.

It is yet unclear where the former Minister of water and energy and also former Director General of the National Water Corporation, CAMWATER, could be at this moment but he was lastly seen in his residence in France.

Source: Cameroon News Agency

Veep commissions first phase of Duayaw Nkwanta Fire Academy and Training school


Alhaji Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, the Vice President of the Republic of Ghana on Tuesday commissioned the first phase of the Duayaw Nkwanta Fire Academy and Training School (FATS) at the Tano North Municipality of the Ahafo Region.

The first phase of the project included a three-story classroom block with administration offices, a kitchen, dining hall, a training square, and a two-story dormitory for both male and female trainees.

FATS was initiated in 2015 by the late Nana Boakye Tromo III, the esteemed Omanhene and President of the Duayaw Nkwanta Traditional Council in the Ahafo Region, together with his revered elders who generously donated a vast expanse of land totaling 30.28 acres to the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS).

The ceremonial sod-cutting was performed by the then Chief Fire Officer, Dr. Albert Brown Gaisie after a feasibility study conducted in 2016 to pave the way for the commencement of the ambitious project.

However, logistical, and financial hurdles delayed the project’s initiation until
the year 2020 when the clarion call from the Chiefs reignited the flames of commitment.

DCFO Samuel Nana Brenya (Rtd) and the GNFS management then reaffirmed their dedication, culminating in a historic visit by the then late Chief Fire Officer, Edwin Ekow Blankson, to assure the Chiefs of the Service’s resolute commitment.

Finally, on March 15, 2023, the ground was broken to mark the commencement of the construction of Duayaw Nkwanta FATS.

Nana Boakye Bonsu, the Akwamuhene and the Acting President of Duayaw Nkwanta Traditional Council, conveyed the council’s appreciation to the government for the construction of such impressive edifices.

Nana Bonsu emphasized the importance of considering recruiting individuals from the Municipality and the Ahafo region and expressed the hope that these individuals recruited to the school would be dedicated to advancing the service and upholding its values.

Source: Ghana News Agency