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GIS honors officers for rescuing colleagues at Bawku

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Immigration Officers in a picture with the four honored officers in uniform

The Ghana Immigration Service (GIS)has honoured and promoted four officers in recognition of their courage and selfishness during a rescue operation.The officers exhibited exceptional bravery while attempting to save three fellow colleagues, who had been targeted by unidentified assailants in Bawku on April 3, 2023.

Assistant Inspector Eric Ayidiya, 30, of the Polimakom border post and Inspector Lawrence Afari, 42, of the Kulungugu post were two of the three officers whose car was fired upon by unidentified gunmen, while they were en route to buy food. Both of them sustained injuries and sought treatment at the Bawku Presbyterian Hospital.

Dignitaries in a picture with the four honored officers

Inspector Philip Motey, a third officer, was attacked and later died at the age of 42. He was laid to rest last Saturday.

The officers who rescued their colleagues; Chief Superintendent (C/Supt.) Michael Brewu Ampofoh was promoted to the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Immigration.

Assistant Inspector Harris Quartey was promoted to the rank of Inspector; Immigration Control Officer (ICO), Wisdom Elorm Addo was promoted to the rank of Assistant Inspector, whilst Assistant Immigration Control Officer Grade II Emmanuel Forson was promoted to the rank of Assistant Immigration Control Officer Grade I.

All four officers also received citations, certificates and plaques, recognising their work.

The Controller-General of Immigration, Kwame Asuah Takyi, in an address said on the evening of April 3, 2023 at about 19:51 hours, Chief Superintendent Michal BrewuAmpofoh received a distress call from one Assistant Inspector Eric Afari who informed the Bawku Command of the attack by the unknown gunmen, who fired several shots at their vehicle, killing Inspector Phillip Motey and injuring two others.

Mr Takyi commended Chief Superintendent Ampofo and the three others for their swift response despite the perilous situation.

“Quickly, Chief Supt. Ampofo and team of other three officers rushed to the scene while keeping touch with Assistant Inspector Laurence Afari through his phone, receiving directions and reassuring them that help was coming until the team got there… while it shocked me as well as many others how the immigration response team got there faster, in spite of the danger on their way,” he said.

He encouraged other officers to follow the example of the four by not turning their backs on fellow colleagues when their assistance is needed especially, in volatile areas of duty, such as Bawku.

“All security personnel should hold and teach that we must not turn our backs on our colleagues in any way or form when our help is most needed. I say this because we all know about the situation in the Bawku area and the danger that the conflict poses to security officials and residents as a whole,” he said.

On her part, Mrs. Adelaide Anno-Kumi, the Chief Director at the Ministry of Interior, in an address, on behalf of the Minister, Ambrose Dery, commended the immigration service for recognising the heroic move by the four officers as stipulated in regulation 171D (2016) L.I. 2245 of the Ghana Immigration Service.

The Ministry of Interior, according to Madam Anno-Kumi, has acknowledged the threats faced by immigration service personnel who labor around-the-clock to ensure that the nation’s borders are secure and guarded against all kinds of cross-border crime.

She revealed the governments resolve to keep retooling the agency to carry out its duty as planned.

In a media interview, the recently promoted Michael Brewu Ampofoh stated that while he was happy to be recognised for his efforts, he considered this award and promotion as an additional responsibility that demanded more work and dedication.

How Kpessa Whyte escaped custodial sentence

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Professor Henrietta Mensa-Bonsu and Dr Kpessa Whyte

It was a frightening moment when the Research Fellow at the Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana (UG) and a member of National Democratic Congress (NDC), Prof. Michael Kpessa Whyte was called by the Supreme Court Clerk at 9:42am to go into the dock;which he once mounted to testify in the presidential election petition in 2021.

Soberly, the History and Politics professor, after mounting the box, refused to sit down, although he was asked to do so.

Wearing a black suite over white shirt, with an ocean blue tie, the Contemnor fixed his gaze on the five-panel members of the bench, whilst his charges were read to him; such as scandalising the court, ridiculing the court and prejudicing the court.

The charges were in connection with a certain incendiary comment he tweeted about the judiciary on May 19, 2023 and for which Prof Whyte was cited for contempt.

In fact, the Clerk, with some level of reservation read the tweet as follows: “They have succeeded in turning a Supreme Court into a Stupid Court. Common sense is now a scarce commodity.

“A major element in the death of democracies is partisanship in the delivery of justice. Our judges need lessons in political philosophy and ethics. Time will tell.”

The comment follows a judgment of the Supreme Court that GyakyeQuayson’s name should be expunged from the records of Parliament, as the representative of the people of Assin North Constituency in the Central region, on the ticket of the National Democratic Congress (NDC).

When the Contemnor was asked whether he pleaded guilty or not, he initially pleaded not guilty and then changed his plea to guilty with explanation, before finally pleading guilty.

The panel of judges ordered that the charges were read to the Contemnor again, but the latter refused and maintained his last plea.

The panel, made up of Justices Mariama Owusu, Lovelace Johnson, Prof Henrietta Mensa-Bonsu, Samuel Asiedu and George Koomson, proceeded to convict the Contemnor on his own plea of guilty.

The Apex Court, however, cautioned and discharged the convict, based on his strong remorse and humility, retraction of the said contemptuous comment and rendering of apology, which was published on the front page of the Ghanaian Times Newspaper, as well as repeating the apology at the medium he used to make the scandalous remark.

After reading their decision, the Court held that whilst the judiciary is not beyond critique, it was also appropriate that the citizens appreciate the important role it plays.

It added that the Court is very accountable in discharging its constitutional mandate. It also took cognizance of various comments that were written under the contemnor’s post and urged him not to lead them into temptation.

The convict’s legal representative, Dr. Justice Srem Sai, pleaded with the court to have mercy.

According to him after the convict received the summons, he caused publications to be made, apologising to the Court.

“We pray for the mitigation of sentence. My Lord, immediately the matter was brought to his attention he did issue a clear, unreserved apology, which we have accordingly brought to the court’s registry, addressed to the acting Chief Justice.

“He has taken steps to have the apology published on the front page of the Ghanaian Times. He rendered the apology at page 3.”

Further, the Contemnor immediately pulled down the tweet and published the apology about three times, in the same day, using the same medium.

My Lords, it is our humble prayer, in all humility, we plead for mercy. We are also undertaking that such a sad and regrettable occurrence will not occur again. We commit to defending the integrity of this honourable Court.”

The Director of Ghana School of Law, Barima Yaw Kodie Oppong, also pleaded with the court on behalf of the Contemnor.

GNAAP apologises to NaCCA, Parents over controversial History Textbook

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John Akwasi Amponsah - National President of GNAAP addressing the media

The Ghana National Association of Authors and Publishers has rendered an unqualified apology to the general public especially parents and National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) over the publication of a history textbook for basic schools, which is seen as teaching anti-Christian contents to the pupils.

The association intends to appoint a committee scrutinise contents of all textbooks to avoid publishing topics that could cause problems for pupils to protect the image and book development in Ghana.

Mr John Akwasi Amponsah, National President of the association, at a press conference stated that the members cannot sit unconcerned, but would not judge who is wrong or right.

The book, History of Ghana for Basic Schools, Learner’s Book 4, is reported to have listed disadvantages of Christianity, which the Deputy Education Minister, Ntim Fordjour, has condemned and described as obnoxious.

The book, authored by one Francis Benjamin Appiah and Henry David Appiah of Excellent Publication and Stationery Ltd has sparked controversy on social media, after the writers claimed religion is a major cause of conflict globally.

The authors stated, among others,the disadvantages of religion, that Christianity has led to increase in poverty in the country.

The National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) in response to the book said the version sighted was not what they approved.

Meanwhile, the President of Ghana National Association of Authors and Publishers stressed that they have accepted all concerns raised by the public and promised to work on it accordingly.

He insisted that, the Association accepts the criticisms in good faith and rendered unqualified apology to the Ministry of Education, NaCCA, the Christian Council, Nananom and any Ghanaian who finds the statements in the book as obnoxious.

He disclosed that, for many years, Ghanaians have had confidence in textbook developers and have found their works useful and for that matter, pleaded with Ghanaians and all stakeholders to continue to have the confidence in their products and services.

On Eve of Transition, Nigerian Chef Cooks Up A Storm

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Opinion

After weeks of being at daggers drawn over the results of the last general elections and with only days to the inauguration of a new government on May 29, one of Nigeria’s three biggest pastimes – food – appears to be bringing people together again.

On a good day, the country swoons over football or music. In the last two weeks, however, Nigerians up and down the food chain have been flocking to the pot of 27-year-old Hilda Bassey Effiong, fondly called Hilda Baci, who is on the verge of confirmation as the new holder of the Guinness World Records for the longest cooking time.

Nigeria’s president-elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the two other leading contestants – former Vice President Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP); and Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP) – who have not seen eye-to-eye since the February 25 presidential poll, all lined up nicely behind Hilda’s kitchen from May 11 to 15, invoking the national can-do spirit on social media. For a moment, they buried the hatchet.

Also, celebrities riven by partisan politics, friends and family, and ordinary folks, defied at least two nights of heavy downpour in Lagos to cheer Hilda. A country deeply divided by the outcome of the elections appears to have found a common ground in Hilda’s recipe.

After four days of dicing, marinating, boiling, frying, baking and grilling, Hilda toppled the 87 hours 45 minutes individual cooking record set by Indian chef, Lata Tandon, three years ago. The Nigerian set a new record of 100 cooking hours, with 55 recipes and more than 100 meals.

Yet, when Hilda first announced she was going to challenge the record it sounded like a joke, even to her. “I’ve been obsessed about the Guinness Book of Records,” she told TVC, a Nigerian TV station. “It was out of obsession that I randomly asked my brother about five years ago who the holder of the world’s longest cooking record was.”

In a country where four in ten are poor, attempting a record in most fields is a long shot. Hilda had seen misery upfront, especially during COVID 19 when she supported less privileged communities in Lagos with 3000 meals at her own expense and came down with the virus. She certainly does not belong in the class once controversially described by President Muhammadu Buhari as “lazy youths.”

Her mother, Lynda Ndukwe, eked out a living from selling food in open space before she later started “Calabar Pot”, a makeshift eatery in Abuja’s middle-class working area.

Mrs. Ndukwe struggled to put her children through school and by the time they finished, she had barely enough left in the tank. All she could offer any adventurous child at this time were her prayers and best wishes, though once when Hilda competed for a beauty pageant, her mother parcelled traditional costumes to her over hundreds of miles.

Though Hilda had tried to make a career as supporting actor, TV presenter, restaurateur, and Big Brother Africa left-out, if she was ever going to get a shot at her dream of toppling Tandon, the cook-a-thon record holder, she needed to be in form, a far cry from where she was two years ago.

She was having weight problems and had undergone liposuction, a process which she later described as one of the darkest periods of her life. To come through that period and announce a plan to challenge the world’s record holder, a task that would test even the very fit seemed like a bridge too far.

Yet, Hilda was willing to try. Before her surgery that year, she competed in the continent’s hottest culinary warfare – that triangular title race among Senegal, Ghana and Nigeria over a dish of long-grain rice mixed with spicy stew aptly named the Jollof Face-off Competition.

Hilda, representing Nigeria, beat Ghana’s Leslie Kumordzie to win the prize money of $5,000, which seeded her dream for a modest online restaurant service, “@Myfoodbyhilda”, with the tagline, “Made with love”.

But love alone won’t pay bills. Or make dreams happen. Hilda took her fate in her own hands and left Abuja, her comfort zone where she had been with her mother, on a journey to the unknown.

“Moving to Lagos was definitely a turning point for me,” she told The Nation newspaper in an interview shortly before she announced her cook-a-thon date. “The challenges I faced pretty much prepared me for this point. I did a nine-to-five and worked two jobs at a point. I worked as a cook. When I quit, I started my own show on DSTV. It was called ‘Dine on a Budget.’”

Lagos, Nigeria’s hustle capital described in local folklore as the teaching place of the laggard and slothful, taught Hilda more than how to dream big. It instilled in her the appetite to pursue her dream and also opened her up to a wider network.

After operating from a tiny restaurant in the first two years, using mainly home delivery service, she opened her first big spot in 2022 with four staff and kept her fire burning by offering online culinary lessons. She even awarded cash prizes to the best performing students.

By March this year when Hilda officially announced her intention to challenge Tandon’s record, she had amassed both a culinary army of supporters and some experience for the task. She also spent hours in mental and physical drills. But as she would find when the cook-a-thon started, the taste of a marathon is in the grind.

“I almost gave up six hours after I started,” Hilda told LEADERSHIP. “I was tired and couldn’t go on. But I was encouraged by my mother who stood by me for 14 hours and gave me strength.”

Her mother and the country were rooting for her. In five days, her Instagram followers grew from 50k to 1.2m. In the days after she reached the 100 hours mark, the accolades and offers of endorsement have not stopped coming.

“One of my biggest goals is that I want Nigerian recipes to be propagated across the world,” she said. “I want it to be a normal thing to make Egusi (melon) soup in an American environment, to walk into any random supermarket and find Nigerian ingredients. I also want to inspire young people, especially girls.”

Yet, even before her dish is cold or her record is confirmed by Guinness World Records, which sometimes takes up to 12 weeks, competitors are snapping at her heels.

Two chefs – Liberian Wonyean Aloycious Gaye, and Kenyan chef Maliha Mohammed (who twice broke the cooking marathon record), have signalled they would challenge Hilda, drawing Nigerian trolls who are angry that competitors can’t wait to rain on Hilda’s parade.

The culinary queen is obviously offering her cheerleaders what is absent in the menu of politicians. And they’re not in a hurry to leave her table.

Azu Ishiekwene 

Ishiekwene is Editor-In-Chief of LEADERSHIP

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect The Chronicle’s stance.

Court sentences Hotel owner, two others to death over killing of student

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Hilton Hotel owner sentenced to death

The Osun State High Court has sentenced the owner of Hilton Hotel and Resort, Ile-Ife, Abdulrahman Adedoyin, to death by hanging over the murder of a post-graduate student of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Timothy Adegoke.

The hotelier was sentenced to death alongside two others who were found guilty of murder and conspiracy to commit murder.

Mr Adegoke, a Business Administration (MBA) student, travelled from Abuja to Ile-Ife to write his examination. He lodged in the hotel, where he hoped to stay out the period of the examinations. But was declared missing by the police on 7 November 2021.

Few days later, the Osun State police command released a statement disclosing that the 37-year-old student was found dead. The details of the circumstances of his death were not disclosed in the statement.

Credit: premiumtimesng.com

Reps back Tinubu on subsidy removal, seek Nigerians’ patience

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House of Reps

The House Of Representatives on Tuesday commended the decision of President Bola Tinubu on fuel subsidy removal. This followed a motion of urgent public importance by a member, Jimoh Olajide.

The House further appealed to Nigerians to be patient and prayerful to allow the President deliver on his promises.

On Monday during his inaugural speech at the Eagle Square in Abuja, Tinubu said the era of subsidy payment on fuel has ended, adding that the 2023 Budget made no provision for fuel subsidy and more so, subsidy payment is no longer justifiable.

“The fuel subsidy is gone,” Tinubu said, noting that his government would instead channel funds into infrastructure and other areas to strengthen the economy.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) has since backed Tinubu on the removal of fuel subsidy.

However, the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) said the President cannot unilaterally take a decision on subsidy removal, saying that there was a reason the immediate past administration of Muhammadu Buhari pushed the “sensitive issue” to the new government.

Fuel queues have since resurfaced across the country since the presidential pronouncement as Nigerians forage for the premium product.

Credit: channelstv.com

My cabinet members feared being jailed by Buhari –Goodluck Jonathan

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Goodluck Jonathan

Former President Goodluck Jonathan said members of his cabinet feared being jailed when the immediate past President,  Muhammadu Buhari, won election in 2015.

Jonathan, while speaking in an interview aired by Arise TV on Monday, said some of his cabinet members even felt he would run away, but he stayed in the country.

Jonathan said, “In my own time especially in the 2015 elections, my ministers, my senior officers, people who worked with me; there was this fear that having lost the election, what would be our fate? Would the new government just throw all of us into jail without giving a fair hearing? Because government is next to the court and can decide to do anything.”

The former president said the “tense atmosphere” his team faced during the transition period in 2015 was not faced by the outgone government of Buhari.

Speaking further on why he conceded defeat to Buhari, Jonathan said, “By this time, I already conceded defeat. And I knew why I conceded defeat, because I was more interested in the country than myself.”

Jonathan said it was important for politicians to be more interested in the country than themselves, saying without the country, there would be no president.

According to him, despite the transition of the electoral process from manual to electronic, there were still problems.

He warned that Independent National Electoral Commission must sit up or else the commission would throw Nigeria into conflagration someday.

When asked how Nigeria could come out of electoral controversy through reforms, he said, “The problem we have is INEC and security. And I used to give an example; if two soccer teams are playing and the referee decides to look the other way, they will injure themselves.

Credit: punchng.com

DSS storms EFCC Lagos office, blocks officers’ access

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DSS storms EFCC office

Operatives of the Department of State Security have stormed the Lagos office of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, preventing officials of the anti-graft agency from gaining access to their office in Ikoyi, Lagos.

Impeccable sources in both agencies told The PUNCH that there has been an ongoing rivalry between the DSS and the EFCC over the ownership of the building.

Our correspondent gathered that the DSS operatives stormed the office around 7:00 am on Tuesday, and refused to leave despite dialogue between operatives of both agencies, an impeccable source confirmed the development to our correspondent in a telephone interview.

An official of the EFCC who spoke with our correspondent on the condition of anonymity, said, “There’s been a running battle between us and the DSS over who owns the office because the office was used by them before the EFCC came on board and it was handed over to us.

“But it’s been an administrative issue, and the matter is not in court and hasn’t caused any fracas before now. But we don’t understand why they have to block our office and deny our officials access when a new government just came in.”

“The office used to be ours, and we have been fighting over it for years now, and the EFCC knows,” a DSS source said.

Meanwhile, spokespersons for both agencies, Wilson Uwujaren of the EFCC, and Dr Peter Afunaya of the DSS did not respond to inquiries by our correspondent over the development.

Credit: punchng.com

President Tinubu congratulates Turkish leader Erdogan on re-election

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Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan

President Bola Tinubu has congratulated the President of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, on his reelection. His victory in the historic runoff election extended two decades of his rule until 2028.

Congratulating the Turkish leader in a Twitter post, Tinubu, who was sworn in on Monday as Nigeria’s President, described Erdogan’s electoral victory as an “unmistakable sign that he retains the full trust and confidence of the Turkish people.”

“I wish him a successful tenure and look forward to a collaborative relationship between our nations,” Tinubu added.

The 69-year-old overcame Turkey’s worst economic crisis in a generation and the most powerful opposition alliance to ever face his Islamic-rooted party on his way to his toughest election win.

Streets erupted in car-honking jubilation and tributes poured in from across the world as Turkey’s most important leader in modern history led a sea of supporters in celebratory song outside his presidential palace in Ankara.

“We should come together in unity and solidarity,” Erdogan told the chanting and flag-waving crowd. “We call for this with all our heart.”

Near-complete results showed Erdogan beating secular opposition challenger Kemal Kilicdaroglu by four percentage points.

Credit: channelstv.com

79 unauthorised persons exit underground mine of AngloGold Ashanti Obuasi Mine

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AngloGold Ashanti Ghana has provided some update regarding the alleged illegal miners who encroached on their underground site.
According to the company, following their previous statement issued on May 30, 2023, “an additional 79 unauthorized individuals safely exited the Obuasi Gold mine underground yesterday.”
The individuals, who had entered the underground area without authorization, walked out of the mine through the main exit point of their own accord and are in the custody of the Ghana Police Service, a statement issued today said, adding that, “no injuries were reported.”

Read the rest of the statement below
We are grateful for the collaborative efforts of our security personnel, and the police in ensuring the safe and orderly exit of these individuals.
It is important to reiterate that the main exit ramp from the mine, which is remote from the current active working areas of the mine, remains open allowing any unauthorized persons underground to exit at any time. Those who may still be underground are strongly encouraged to utilize the designated exit points, where public security personnel remain on standby.
The safety and security of our employees and community members remain our top priority and AngloGold Ashanti Ghana stands ready to provide any assistance required by the authorities in ensuring the safe exit of any unauthorized persons underground.

The Ghanaian Chronicle