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Japan court orders retrial of longest-serving death row convict over 1966 murder case

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Former professional boxer Iwao Hakamada (right), seen in 2019, spent more than five decades on death row.

The world’s longest-serving death row convict was on Monday granted a retrial by a Japanese court in the latest twist in a legal saga dating back to the 1960s.

Iwao Hakamada, 87, spent nearly five decades waiting for the hangman’s call following his 1968 conviction for quadruple murder before new evidence led to his release seven years ago.

The Tokyo High Court ruled Monday that “Hakamada cannot possibly be identified as the culprit,” given the main evidence presented to finalize his death penalty was unreliable, Kiyomi Tsunagoe, a lawyer on his defense team, told CNN.

She added that the Tokyo court upheld the decision not to return Hakamada to prison, given that he would likely be found not guilty.

“Hakamada’s case is known globally, and there always remained the risk that he could be sent back to prison and face the death penalty again, despite evidence pointing to his innocence,” Tsunagoe said.

Japan’s criminal justice system has a 99.9% conviction rate and is heavily reliant on confessions. The country is the only major developed democracy outside the United States that imposes capital punishment.

In 1966, Hakamada was accused of robbery, arson and the murder of his boss, his boss’ wife and their two children. The family was found stabbed to death in their incinerated home in Shizuoka, central Japan.

The former professional boxer-turned-factory worker initially admitted to all charges before changing his plea at trial. He was sentenced to death in a 2-1 decision by judges, despite repeatedly alleging that police had fabricated evidence and forced him to confess by beating and threatening him. The one dissenting judge stepped down from the bar six months later, demoralized by his inability to stop the sentencing.

Source: cnn.com

Saudi Arabia executes Jordanian man after allegedly giving forced confession

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Jordanian national Hussein Abu Al-Khair was sentenced to death in 2015

Saudi Arabia has executed a Jordanian man whose family say he was tortured into confessing to drugs charges.

Hussein Abu al-Khair, 57, had eight children and was a driver for a wealthy Saudi.

He was arrested in 2014 while crossing the border from Jordan into Saudi Arabia, accused of smuggling amphetamines.

He was later sentenced to death, after a trial criticised by Amnesty International as “grossly unfair”.

His sister, Zeinab Abul Al-Khair, said he had told her from jail that he had been strung up by his feet and beaten.

“He never imagined a forced confession would be allowed in his trial,” she told me earlier this year.

His case has drawn international concern, with fears for his fate growing after Saudi Arabia last November ended an unofficial moratorium on the use of the death penalty for drugs offences. Within a fortnight, 17 men were executed on such charges.

The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention had found that Mr Abu al-Khair’s detention lacked legal basis.

And in late 2022, the UN Human Rights office appealed for his release.

It says the use of the death penalty for drug offences is incompatible with international norms and standards.

Source: bbc.com

Teargas fired outside ex-PM Imran Khan’s residence in Pakistan

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Imran Khan leaving a court in Lahore last month

Police on Tuesday fired teargas and water cannon as hundreds of members and supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tahreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party gathered outside his Zaman Park residence.

Television images showed police approaching Khan’s residence accompanied by an armoured vehicle. Khan’s supporters were also seen throwing stones at the police.

Syed Shehzad Nadeem Bukhari, a senior officer in the Islamabad Police, told reporters the officers intended to arrest Khan, 70.

“We are here to fulfil the warrant and to arrest Imran Khan,” he said.

Minutes later, Khan posted a video message on Twitter, saying his supporters should fight for their rights – “for real freedom” – if he is arrested.

“Police are here to send me to jail. They think if Imran Khan goes to jail, this nation will go to sleep. You have to prove them wrong,” he said in the video.

“[If] something happens to me, if they send me to jail, or if I am killed, you have to show you can fight without me as well,” Khan said.

Police earlier said they were going to Khan’s house to hand over the two arrest warrants issued by a court in Islamabad on Monday in corruption and “terrorism” cases.

One of the warrants relates to Khan allegedly threatening a female judge during one of his speeches last year. The other concerns accusations that Khan sold state gifts and concealed assets while in office as prime minister, an office he held from 2018 to 2022.

Source: Aljazeera.com

Uganda considers bill to criminalize identifying as LGBTQ

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A Ugandan man with a sticker on his face takes part in the annual gay pride in Entebbe

Uganda’s parliament on Thursday took up a bill that would criminalize identifying as LGBTQ, with lawmakers saying the current ban on same-sex relations does not go far enough.

Anti-LGBTQ sentiment is deeply entrenched in the highly conservative and religious east African nation, with same-sex relations punishable by up to life in prison.

More than 30 African countries ban same-sex relations, but Uganda’s law, if passed, would appear to be the first to criminalize merely identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ), according to Human Rights Watch.

A photo taken on September 5, 2017 shows the stage during the Nyege Nyege Festival, the annual four-day international music festival, in Jinja, Uganda. – The Ugandan authorities announced on September 4, 2018 the ban of one of East Africa’s most important electronic music festivals, as they they believe it promotes sex, homosexuality and other practices that are considered immoral, but which the organizers are defending. (Photo by Ian Duncan

The proposed Ugandan law was introduced as a private lawmaker’s bill and aims to allow the country to fight “threats to the traditional, heterosexual family”, according to a copy seen by Reuters.

It punishes with up to 10 years in prison any person who “holds out as a lesbian, gay, transgender, a queer or any other sexual or gender identity that is contrary to the binary categories of male and female”.

It also criminalizes the “promotion” of homosexuality and “abetting” and “conspiring” to engage in same-sex relations.

Source: cnn.com

French bin strike: Paris holds its nose as waste piles up

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Half of the districts of Paris have been hit by the refuse collectors' strike

The bins are overflowing in large areas of Paris a week into a strike by waste collectors, with thousands of tonnes of rubbish sitting abandoned on the streets of the French capital.

“It’s dirty, it attracts rats and cockroaches,” one Parisian complained on French radio.

The workers are striking over the Macron government’s proposals to raise the pension age from 62 to 64.

Other cities including Nantes, Rennes and Le Havre are also affected.

Refuse collectors joined the pension strikes a week ago and the Paris authority says half of the city’s districts, which are covered by council workers, have been hit by the action. Three waste treatment sites have been blockaded and a fourth partially closed.

On Monday, the Paris authority said 5,600 tonnes of waste had yet to be collected.

One commentator on Europe1 radio described the situation as an all-you-can-eat buffet for the six million rats of Paris, double the human population.

In the 10 districts covered by private companies the service was running almost normally, Paris council said. Some reports indicated activists were trying to prevent collections from going ahead.

And one private company was also seen on Monday night by news channel BFMTV picking up waste in one of the big central districts, the sixth, which is normally covered by council workers. Similar bin collections were going on in two other districts on the western fringe of the city.

Leading council official Emmanuel Grégoire said the situation was complicated but the authority was prioritising intervention for public safety, with a focus on clearing food markets, bin bags lying on the ground and ensuring pedestrian safety.

“The strike triggers a change in rat behaviour,” specialist Romain Lasseur told Le Parisien newspaper. “They’ll rummage around in bins, reproduce there, and leave their urine and droppings. We have a worrying health risk for refuse collectors and the general population.”

Source: bbc.com

Feature: Russia’s economy holds up, but growing challenges test Putin

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Russian President Putin

Western sanctions have hit Russian banks, wealthy individuals and technology imports. But after a year of far-reaching restrictions aimed at degrading Moscow’s war chest, economic life for ordinary Russians doesn’t look all that different than it did before the invasion of Ukraine.

There’s no mass unemployment, no plunging currency, no lines in front of failing banks. The assortment at the supermarket is little changed, with international brands still available or local substitutes taking their place.

Crowds might have thinned at some Moscow malls, but not drastically. Some foreign companies like McDonald’s and Starbucks have been taken over by local owners who slapped different names on essentially the same menu.

“Economically, nothing has changed,” said Vladimir Zharov, 53, who works in television. “I work as I used to work, I go shopping as I used to. Well, maybe the prices have risen a little bit, but not in such a way that it is very noticeable.”

Russia’s economy has weathered the West’s unprecedented economic sanctions far better than expected. But with restrictions finally tightening on the Kremlin’s chief money maker — oil — the months ahead will be an even tougher test of President Vladimir Putin’s fortress economy.

Economists say sanctions on Russian fossil fuels only now taking full effect — such as a price cap on oil — should eat into earnings that fund the military’s attacks on Ukraine. Some analysts predict signs of trouble — strained government finances or a sinking currency — could emerge in the coming months.

But other economists say the Kremlin has significant reserves of money that haven’t been hit by sanctions, while links to new trade partners in Asia have quickly taken shape. They say Russia isn’t likely to run out of money this year but instead will face a slow slide into years of economic stagnation.

“It will have enough money under any kind of reasonable scenario,” Chris Weafer, CEO and Russian economy analyst at the consulting firm Macro-Advisory, said in a recent online discussion held by bneIntelliNews.

Russia will keep bringing in oil income, even at lower prices, so “there is no pressure on the Kremlin today to end this conflict because of economic pressures,” he said.

As the economy teeters between sanctions and resilience, what everyday Russians can buy has stayed remarkably the same.

Apple has stopped selling products in Russia, but Wild berries, the country’s biggest online retailer, offers the iPhone 14 for about the same price as in Europe. Online retailer Svaznoy lists Apple Air Pods Pro.

Furniture and home goods remaining after IKEA exited Russia are being sold off on the Yandex website. Nespresso coffee capsules have run short after Swiss-based Nestle stopped shipping them, but knockoffs are available.

Labels on cans of Budweiser and Leffe beer on sale in Moscow indicate they were brewed by ABInBev’s local partner — even though the company wrote off a stake in its Russian joint venture and put it up for sale. Coke bottled in Poland is still available; local “colas,” too.

ABInBev says it’s no longer getting money from the venture and that Leffe production has been halted. Wild berries and Svyaznoy didn’t answer emails asking about their sourcing.

But it’s clear goods are skirting sanctions through imports from third countries that aren’t penalizing Russia. For example, Armenia’s exports to Russia jumped 49% in the first half of 2022. Chinese smartphones and vehicles are increasingly available.

The auto industry is facing bigger hurdles to adapt. Western automakers, including Renault, Volkswagen and Mercedes-Benz, have halted production, with sales plunging 63% and local entities taking over some factories and bidding for others.

Foreign cars are still available but far fewer of them and for higher prices, said Andrei Olkhovsky, CEO of Avtodom, which has 36 dealerships in Moscow, St. Petersburg and Krasnodar.

“Shipments of the Porsche brand, as for those of other manufacturers, aren’t possible through official channels,” he said. “Whatever is on the market is scattered offerings of cars that were imported by individual persons or through friendly countries by official channels.”

Unlike European automakers, some corporations are far from bailing.

While 191 foreign companies have left Russia and 1,169 are working to do so, some 1,223 are staying and 496 are taking a wait-and-see approach, according to a database compiled by the Kyiv School of Economics.

Companies are facing public pressure from Kyiv and Washington, but some have found it’s not so easy to line up a Russian buyer or say they’re selling essentials like food.

Moscow residents, meanwhile, have downplayed the impact of sanctions.

“Maybe it hasn’t affected me yet,” 63-year-old retiree Alexander Yeryomenko said. “I think that we will endure everything.”

Dmitry, a 33-year-old who declined to give his last name, said only clothing brands had changed.

“We have had even worse periods of time in history, and we coped,” he said, but added that “we need to develop our own production and not to depend on the import of products.”

One big reason for Russia’s resilience: record fossil fuel earnings of $325 billion last year as prices spiked. The surging costs stemmed from fears that the war would mean a severe loss of energy from the world’s third-largest oil producer.

That revenue, coupled with a collapse in what Russia could import because of sanctions, pushed the country into a record trade surplus — meaning what Russia earned from sales to other countries far outweighed its purchases abroad.

The boon helped bolster the ruble after a temporary post-invasion crash and provided cash for government spending on pensions, salaries and — above all — the military.

The Kremlin already had taken steps to sanctions-proof the economy after facing some penalties for annexing Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula in 2014. Companies began sourcing parts and food at home and the government built up huge piles of cash from selling oil and natural gas. About half of that money has been frozen, however, because it was held overseas.

Those measures helped blunt predictions of a 11% to 15% collapse in economic output. The economy shrank 2.1% last year, Russia’s statistics agency said. The International Monetary Fund predicts 0.3% growth this year — not great, but hardly disastrous.

The big change could come from new energy penalties. The Group of Seven major democracies had avoided wide-ranging sanctions against Russian oil for fear of sending energy prices higher and fuelling inflation.

The solution was a $60-per-barrel price cap on Russian oil heading to countries like China, India and Turkey, which took effect in December. Then came a similar cap and European embargo on Moscow’s diesel fuel and other refined oil products last month.

Estimates differ on how hard those measures will hit. Experts at the Kyiv School of Economics say Russia’s economy will face a “turning point” this year as oil and gas revenue falls by 50% and the trade surplus plunges to $80 billion from $257 billion last year.

They say it’s already happening: Oil tax revenue fell 48% in January from a year earlier, according to the International Energy Agency.

Other economists are skeptical of a breaking point this year.

Moscow could likely weather even a short-term plunge in oil earnings, said Janis Kluge, a Russian economy expert at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.

Even cutting Russian oil revenue by a third “would be a severe hit to GDP, but it would not bankrupt the state and it would not lead to a crash,” he said. “I think from now on, we are talking about gradual changes to the economy.”

He said the real impact will be long term. The loss of Western technology such as advanced computer chips means an economy permanently stuck in low gear.

Russia may have successfully restarted factories after the Western exodus, “but the business case for producing something sophisticated in Russia is gone, and it’s not coming back,” Kluge said.

By DAVID McHUGH

Source- Yahoo News

Today’s Champions League Round of 16

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Real Madrid vs Liverpool

Real Madrid hold psychological advantage over Liverpool as they clash today

Real Madrid not only hold a three-goal advantage over Liverpool after the first leg, but they hold a psychological advantage over the Reds, having won six of their last seven UEFA Champions League meetings against them.

But one positive for Liverpool is that they have won at Real Madrid before. They are one of only four English teams to win away at the Spanish giants in European competition, along with Arsenal, Man City and Chelsea. Real Madrid have progressed from 26 of their previous 27 European Cup/Champions League knockout ties when winning the first leg away from home, with the exception being defeat to Ajax at this stage in 2018-19 (2-1 away, 1-4 at home), so they’ll be looking to celebrate their 300th match in the UEFA Champions League with another progression in this tie. Liverpool can gain some confidence that they have achieved the seemingly impossible task of overcoming a three-goal first leg deficit in the UCL before. They are one only four sides to progress from a UCL tie having lost the first leg by three or more goals, beating Real’s rivals Barcelona 4-0 in the second leg of their semi-final tie at Anfield after losing the first leg 3-0 away.

Perhaps treading with caution given what happened to their Catalonian counterparts four years ago, Real Madrid can rest easy in the knowledge that Klopp’s current Liverpool crop do not strike the same fear into the hearts of opposing teams, especially with their measly away record in 2023.

Ancelotti’s side cannot expect to keep a vengeful Reds team at bay, especially given their own patchy spell, but Los Blancos in the Champions League is normally always a foregone conclusion, and the return of Benzema should only make their second-leg win all the more emphatic en route to a place in the last eight. Name a better combination than Karim Benzema and the knockout stages of the Champions League.

The French striker comes alive when it matters most and is the master at magicking moments out of nothing.

Credit: theanalyst.com

Napoli to secure quarter-finals spot as they host Frankfurt

Napoli players

Still reigning supreme in Italy, Serie A leaders Napoli aim to secure a spot in the Champions League quarter-finals on Wednesday, when they host Eintracht Frankfurt at Stadio Maradona.

Following a 2-0 win in Germany, the Scudetto favourites start the second leg of their last-16 tie in the driving seat, but their visitors can draw upon last year’s Europa League heroics for inspiration.

Napoli’s two-goal victory in Frankfurt was not only their first ever victory over Eintracht, following two previous losses, but also leaves them on the verge of reaching the Champions League’s last eight for the very first time.

Strikes either side of the break, from star striker Victor Osimhen and captain Giovanni Di Lorenzo, secured the Partenopei a significant advantage against opposition reduced to 10 men when Randal Kolo Muani was sent off in the 58th minute.

Having now racked up 22 goals in the competition this season, Napoli return to home soil, where they are unbeaten in their last 11 Champions League home games, winning all three so far this term and scoring at least three goals each time.

With domestic glory apparently in hand, Napoli’s gaze is now set on breaking new ground in Europe, and having blitzed their way through the group stage before winning their first knockout fixture, Spalletti may fancy his team can not only finish the job on Wednesday but also go all the way to Istanbul.

Eintracht now face one of their sternest tests of the season. Napoli’s record at Stadio Maradona is truly formidable, and the home side can seal a place in the quarter-final draw, even without reaching top gear.

Credit: sportsmole.co.uk

‘We don’t talk, he won’t make me play’ …Hazard reveals his relationship with Ancelotti has broken down

Ancelotti (L) admitted Hazard

Eden Hazard has revealed his relationship with Real Madrid boss Carlo Ancelotti has completely broken down and they are no longer on speaking terms, having gone over two months without playing for the European champions.

The former Chelsea star has only featured for 296 minutes in all competitions this season, contributing a single goal and assist.

Hazard’s last appearance for Real Madrid came in the Copa del Rey against fourth tier side CP Cacereno.

Despite being put on the periphery of the squad, Hazard recently announced he has no intention of leaving the club this summer and wants to see out the final year of his contract – worth £470,000 per week.

The 32-year-old has now admitted to Belgian outlet RTBF that he does not speak to head coach Ancelotti amid his absence from the team.

‘There is respect between us,’ Hazard said. ‘But I’m not going to say that we talk to each other, because we don’t talk to each other.

‘But there will always be respect. Even if tomorrow, he doesn’t make me play anymore.

‘I have to have respect for a guy like Carlo Ancelotti. What he represents for football, what he has done in his career, there is no problem.’

When asked about Hazard’s comments ahead of Real Madrid’s Champions League tie with Liverpool, Ancelotti admitted the Belgian’s comments were accurate.

Ancelotti claimed the relationship was ‘not cold’ despite the pair not speaking much, stressing that both parties were still respectful of each other.

‘Hazard has been very honest, we don’t talk much because it could be a matter of character,’ Ancelotti said.

‘The most important thing for me, that if we don’t talk much, he follows me respecting.

‘It’s the most important thing, just like I respect him.

‘He doesn’t play because he has a lot of competition and a player in his position who is playing very well, which is Vinicius.’

Hazard moved to the Spanish giants in 2019 for an initial £88.3m.

Credit: dailymail.co.uk

Fear of insecurity? Defence C’ttee Truncates Visit To Bawku … Makes sudden U-turn in Tamale after receiving security brief from GAF

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Kennedy Ohene Agyapong, chairman of the committee

The Parliamentary Select Committee on Defence and Interior yesterday made a sudden U-turn in Tamale and returned to their base in Accra, thereby truncating their journey to Bawku in the Upper East Region to access the volatile security situation in that part of the country.

A source close to the Committee told The Chronicle that at 11:00 hours yesterday, after receiving security briefing from the General Officer Commanding (GOC) Northern Command of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF), in Tamale, the Committee decided to abort the trip for their own safety.

However, reliable security sources at Bawku told this reporter that those in charge of security in the troubled town were not officially informed about the visit by the committee members.

They nevertheless intercepted intelligence that the Defence the Interior Committee members   were on their way to Bawku.

The Chronicle gathered from multiple sources that despite being left in the dark, the security operatives were prepared to receive the delegation and that they were surprised that the trip was aborted midway in Tamale.

The Select Committee, headed by Assin North Member of Parliament, Kennedy Ohene Agyapong, last week announced that it would be visiting Bawku early this week to assess the security situation.

After Bawku, the Committee would have visited another troubled spot, Ashaiman, to commiserate with the family of murdered Trooper Imoro Sheriff and also to meet the people of Ashaiman affected by the military swoop.

Duffuor promises to revive TOR when elected president

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Dr Kwabena Duffuor

Dr Kwabena Duffuor, former Finance Minister and presidential hopeful has promised to prioritise the restoration of the Tema Oil Refinery (TOR) to full operating capacity, if elected as Flagbearer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) and subsequently President of Ghana.

The former finance minister, who is one of four contenders for the leadership of the main opposition party, going into the 2024 general elections, was speaking to party delegates during a campaign tour of the greater Accra region this week.

The Tema Oil Refinery (TOR) shut down its operations in June 2018 due to several management issues, including the inability to make available steady supply of crude oil, a main raw material for the refinery.

He believes that TOR is one of Ghana’s biggest national assets, which must not be left to deteriorate, especially at a time that it is essential to bring down the cost of petroleum products critical for the economic well-being of all Ghanaians.

The renowned Economist told NDC party supporters that he will fix TOR and commit to ensuring that the refinery operates efficiently and sustainably, providing affordable fuel to the people of Ghana.

“I understand the importance of TOR to the Ghanaian economy and if given the opportunity to lead, I will work tirelessly to bring it back to full operation.

“The high cost of petroleum products is a significant burden on the average Ghanaian, and we must do everything we can to make fuel prices more affordable,” Dr. Duffuor assured.

He explained that his plan to revive TOR includes a comprehensive review of the refinery’s operations and infrastructure, as well as the implementation of sustainable measures to ensure that the refinery runs efficiently.

He added that he will also work with industry experts to explore alternative sources of crude oil to ensure a steady supply for the refinery.

Dr. Kwabena Duffuor, who was once Governor of the Bank of Ghana, said his plan to revive TOR will not only bring down the cost of petroleum products but also create job opportunities for Ghanaians and contribute to the country’s economic growth.

Supporters of Dr. Duffuor have hailed his commitment to bringing back TOR to full operation as testament to his vision for a better Ghana and his dedication to making life more affordable for all Ghanaians.

As the NDC Presidential primary elections approach, Dr. Duffuor’s pledge to revive TOR is one of the many policy initiatives that he is presenting to the grassroots with the confidence that his vision for a better Ghana will resonate with voters and bring about the change that NDC and Ghana needs at the moment.

Ga Mantse to Alan: I pray that you win the NPP race

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Ga Mantse welcoming Alan to his palace

The Ga Mantse, Nii Tackie Teiko Tsuru II, has assured NPP presidential hopeful, Alan Kyerematen, of his continuous prayers in support of his candidature as flagbearer of the New Patriotic Party (NPP).

“I Pray that you win the contest to become the NPP Flagbearer for the 2024 elections,” the Ga Mantse told the former Trade and Industry Minister, when he led a 21-man delegation to pay a courtesy call on him (Ga Mantse) at his palace at Kaneshie, Accra, on Monday.

The delegation, which comprised of Mr Ayikoi Ottoo, former Attorney-General and Ghana’s High Commissioner to Canada as Spokesperson, called on the Ga Mantse to congratulate him over his successful installation.

It was also to empathise with the Ga Mantse on the passing on to glory of the Queen Mother of the Ga State, Naa Dedei Omaedru III.

The delegation assured the Chiefs and people of the Ga State of Alan Kyerematen’s support during the impending funeral of the late Queen Mother.

The team used the occasion to formally inform the Ga Mantse and the Ga Traditional Council of Mr Kyerematen’s decision to contest as Presidential candidate of NPP when the Party opens nominations for the flagbearership contest later in the year.

 

Members of the delegation include sitting and former members of parliament; Sly Tetteh, Carlos Ahenkora, Dr. Adomako Kissi, Kwaku Agyenim Boateng and Bright Baligi.

Others are; Bonface Saddique, Dr. Alhassan Samari, Yaw Buaben Asamoah, Nana Ohene Ntow, Mr. Stephen Kyerematen, Catherine Afeku, Gifty Klenam, Dr. Samiu Nkrumah, Mr. Kofi Kapito and Mr. Philip London.

The rest are; Okerchiri Adusah, Mr. Richard Nyamaa, Rev. Charles Owusu and Ridwan Abbass.

The Ga Mantse hoped an Alan Kyerematen government would promote an agenda that would be beneficial to the whole of country and ensure greater national inclusiveness.

Nii Tackie Tsuru II, the Ga Mantse, who is also President of the Ga Traditional Council and known in private life as Dr Kelvin Nii Tackie Abia Tackie, was inducted on Saturday May 9, 2020 as the legitimate occupant of the presidency of the Ga Traditional Council.

The Ghanaian Chronicle