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Poland demands nearly $1.3t in World War II damages from Germany

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Polish Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau

Polish Foreign Minister Zbigniew Rau has signed a diplomatic note to Germany concerning reparations for World War II, formalising Poland’s demand for compensation before a visit by Berlin’s top diplomat.

 

Monday’s move comes after Poland’s ruling nationalists last month estimated Germany owed the country 6.2 trillion zlotys ($1.26 trillion). Germany, Poland’s biggest trade partner, has said all financial claims linked to the war had been settled.

 

“[The note] expresses the position of the Polish minister of foreign affairs that the parties should take immediate steps to permanently and effectively … settle the issue of the consequences of aggression and German occupation,” Rau told a news conference.

 

Lukasz Jasina, Poland’s foreign ministry spokesman, told reporters that Rau would raise the issue with his German counterpart Annalena Baerbock during her visit to Warsaw on Tuesday.

 

About six million Poles, including three million Polish Jews, were killed during the war and Warsaw was razed to the ground following a 1944 uprising in which about 200,000 civilians died.

 

Credit: Aljazeera.com

Armenia, Azerbaijan top diplomats hold peace talks in Geneva

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Mirzoyan (2nd R) and Bayramov (2nd L) and their respective delegations meet in Geneva

The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan have held talks in Geneva on a future peace treaty, according to officials in Baku and Yerevan, following recent deadly clashes between the arch-foes.

 

Last month, at least 286 people were killed on both sides before a United States-brokered truce ended the worst clashes since the Caucasus neighbours’ 2020 war.

 

Baku and Yerevan fought two wars – in 2020 and in the 1990s – over the contested region of Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian-populated enclave of Azerbaijan.

 

Armenia’s Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov met on Sunday in Geneva to begin “drafting the text of the peace treaty”, the foreign ministry in Baku said on Monday.

 

It said the talks followed up the EU-mediated meeting on August 31 in Brussels between Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

 

Azerbaijan called for “full withdrawal of the Armenian armed units from the territories of Azerbaijan, the opening of transport and communication lines”, the ministry said in a statement.

 

Credit: Aljazeera.com

Brazil’s Lula and Bolsonaro face run-off after tight result

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Brazil's Lula and Bolsonaro in tight race

Brazil’s election is going into a second round in which left-winger Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva will face far-right incumbent Jair Bolsonaro. With almost all the votes counted, Lula had won 48% against Bolsonaro’s 43% – a much closer result than opinion polls had suggested.

But Lula fell short of the more than 50% of valid votes needed to prevent a run-off.

Voters now have four weeks to decide which of the two should lead Brazil.

Winning outright in the first round was always going to be a tall order for any candidate – the last time it happened was 24 years ago.

But President Bolsonaro and Lula had given their supporters hope that they could achieve just that. For Lula, who could not run in the 2018 election because he was in prison after being convicted on corruption charges which were later annulled – this spells a remarkable comeback.

Credit: bbc.com

Chechen leader vows to send teenage sons to fight with Russian forces

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Ramzan Kadyrov says it is time his teenage sons experience a real battle

Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov says his three sons, aged 14, 15 and 16, will soon travel to the Ukraine front line to fight with Russian forces. Kadyrov is a strong ally of Vladimir Putin, although has recently criticised Russian military leadership.

On social media, he wrote that a father should teach his sons how to protect their family, people and fatherland.

Russia has signed a UN treaty aimed at preventing children under the age of 18 from taking direct part in hostilities.

Using children under the age of 15 to participate in hostilities is considered a war crime by the International Criminal Court. However Russia does not recognise its jurisdiction.

In a long post on the Telegram messaging app, Kadyrov said his sons’ military training began when they were much younger, and the time had come for them to experience a real battle.

He also took aim at those “empty-worded” people who claimed the Chechen leader’s loved-ones were not taking part in the military operation in Ukraine.

The post was accompanied by a slickly-produced video of his sons firing various weapons at a training ground.

Credit: bbc.com

Iran protests: Supreme leader blames unrest on US and Israel

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Iran Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

Iran’s supreme leader has blamed the US and Israel for the anti-government protests sweeping the country, in his first public comments on the unrest. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said “riots” had been “engineered” by Iran’s arch-enemies and their allies, and alleged that Qurans had been burned. He also called on security forces to be ready to deal with further unrest.

The protests – the biggest challenge to his rule for a decade – were sparked by the death in custody of a woman.

Mahsa Amini, 22, fell into a coma hours after being detained by morality police on 13 September in Tehran for allegedly breaking the strict law requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab, or headscarf. She died three days later.

Her family has alleged that officers beat her head with a baton and banged her head against one of their vehicles. The police have said there is no evidence of any mistreatment and that she suffered “sudden heart failure”. Addressing a graduation ceremony of police and armed forces cadets on Monday, the supreme leader said Ms Amini’s death “broke our hearts”.

“But what is not normal is that some people have made the streets dangerous, burned the Quran, removed hijabs from veiled women and set fire to mosques and cars.”

Credit: bbc.com

Health and Nutrition Benefits of Sesame Seeds

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Sesame seeds

Sesame seeds are tiny, oil-rich seeds that grow in pods on the Sesamum indicum plant.

Unhulled seeds have the outer, edible husk intact, while hulled seeds come without the husk.

The hull gives the seeds a golden-brown hue. Hulled seeds have an off-white color but turn brown when roasted.

Sesame seeds have many potential health benefits and have been used in folk medicine for thousands of years. They may protect against heart disease, diabetes, and arthritis.

However, you may need to eat significant amounts — a small handful per day — to gain health benefits.

Here are 15 health benefits of sesame seeds.

  1. Good Source of Fiber

Three tablespoons (30 grams) of unhulled sesame seeds provide 3.5 grams of fiber, which is 12% of the Reference Daily Intake (RDI).

Since the average fiber intake in the United States is only half of the RDI, eating sesame seeds regularly could help increase your fiber intake.

Fiber is well known for supporting digestive health. Additionally, growing evidence suggests that fiber may play a role in reducing your risk of heart disease, certain cancers, obesity, and type 2 diabetes.

  1. May Lower Cholesterol and Triglycerides

Some studies suggest that regularly eating sesame seeds may help decrease high cholesterol and triglycerides — which are risk factors for heart disease.

Sesame seeds consist of 15% saturated fat, 41% polyunsaturated fat, and 39% monounsaturated fat.

Research indicates that eating more polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fat relative to saturated fat may help lower your cholesterol and reduce heart disease risk.

What’s more, sesame seeds contain two types of plant compounds — lignans and phytosterols — that may also have cholesterol-lowering effects.

When 38 people with high blood lipids ate 5 tablespoons (40 grams) of hulled sesame seeds daily for 2 months, they experienced a 10% reduction in “bad” LDL cholesterol and an 8% reduction in triglycerides compared to the placebo group.

  1. Nutritious Source of Plant Protein

Sesame seeds supply 5 grams of protein per 3-tablespoon (30-gram) serving.

To maximize protein availability, opt for hulled, roasted sesame seeds. The hulling and roasting processes reduce oxalates and phytates — compounds that hamper your digestion and absorption of protein.

Protein is essential for your health, as it helps build everything from muscles to hormones.

Notably, sesame seeds are low in lysine, an essential amino acid more abundant in animal products. However, vegans and vegetarians can compensate by consuming high-lysine plant proteins — particularly legumes, such as kidney beans and chickpeas.

On the other hand, sesame seeds are high in methionine and cysteine, two amino acids that legumes don’t provide in large amounts.

  1. May Help Lower Blood Pressure

High blood pressure is a major risk factor for heart disease and stroke.

Sesame seeds are high in magnesium, which may help lower blood pressure.

Additionally, lignans, vitamin E, and other antioxidants in sesame seeds may help prevent plaque buildup in your arteries, potentially maintaining healthy blood pressure.

In one study, people with high blood pressure consumed 2.5 grams of powdered, black sesame seeds — a less common variety — in capsule form every day.

At the end of one month, they experienced a 6% decrease in systolic blood pressure — the top number of a blood pressure reading — compared to the placebo group.

  1. May Support Healthy Bones

Sesame seeds — both unhulled and hulled — are rich in several nutrients that boost bone health, though the calcium is mainly in the hull.

However, sesame seeds contain natural compounds called oxalates and phytates, antinutrients that reduce the absorption of these minerals.

To limit these compounds’ impact, try soaking, roasting, or sprouting the seeds.

One study found that sprouting reduced phytate and oxalate concentration by about 50% in both hulled and unhulled sesame seeds.

  1. May Reduce Inflammation

Sesame seeds may fight inflammation.

Long-term, low-level inflammation may play a role in many chronic conditions, including obesity and cancer, as well as heart and kidney disease.

When people with kidney disease ate a mixture of 18 grams of flax seeds and 6 grams each of sesame and pumpkin seeds daily for 3 months, their inflammatory markers dropped 51‒79%.

However, because this study tested a mixture of seeds, the anti-inflammatory impact of sesame seeds alone is uncertain.

Still, animal studies of sesame seed oil also suggest anti-inflammatory effects.

This may be due to sesamin, a compound found in sesame seeds and their oil.

  1. Good Source of B Vitamins

Sesame seeds are a good source of certain B vitamins, which are distributed both in the hull and seed.

Removing the hull may either concentrate or remove some of the B vitamins.

  1. May Aid Blood Cell Formation

To make red blood cells, your body needs several nutrients — including ones found in sesame seeds.

  1. May Aid Blood Sugar Control

Sesame seeds are low in carbs while high in protein and healthy fats — all of which may support blood sugar control.

Additionally, these seeds contain pinoresinol, a compound that may help regulate blood sugar by inhibiting the action of the digestive enzyme maltase.

Maltase breaks down the sugar maltose, which is used as a sweetener for some food products. It’s also produced in your gut from the digestion of starchy foods like bread and pasta.

If pinoresinol inhibits your digestion of maltose, this may result in lower blood sugar levels. However, human studies are needed.

  1. Rich in Antioxidants

Animal and human studies suggest that consuming sesame seeds may increase the overall amount of antioxidant activity in your blood.

The lignans in sesame seeds function as antioxidants, which help fight oxidative stress — a chemical reaction that may damage your cells and increase your risk of many chronic diseases.

Additionally, sesame seeds contain a form of vitamin E called gamma-tocopherol, an antioxidant that may be especially protective against heart disease..

  1. May Support Your Immune System

Sesame seeds are a good source of several nutrients crucial for your immune system, including zinc, selenium, copper, iron, vitamin B6, and vitamin E.

For example, your body needs zinc to develop and activate certain white blood cells that recognize and attack invading microbes.

Keep in mind that even mild to moderate zinc deficiency can impair immune system activity.

Sesame seeds supply about 20% of the RDI for zinc in a 3-tablespoon (30-gram) serving.

  1. May Soothe Arthritic Knee Pain

Osteoarthritis is the most common cause of joint pain and frequently affects the knees.

Several factors may play a role in arthritis, including inflammation and oxidative damage to the cartilage that cushions joints.

Sesamin, a compound in sesame seeds, has anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects that may protect your cartilage.

In a 2-month study, people with knee arthritis ate 5 tablespoons (40 grams) of sesame seed powder daily alongside drug therapy. They experienced a 63% decrease in knee pain compared to only a 22% decrease for the group on drug therapy alone.

Additionally, the sesame seed group showed greater improvement in a simple mobility test and larger reductions in certain inflammatory markers compared to the control group.

  1. May Support Thyroid Health

Sesame seeds are a good source of selenium, supplying 18% of the RDI in both unhulled and hulled seeds.

Your thyroid gland contains the highest concentration of selenium of any organ in your body. This mineral plays a vital role in making thyroid hormones.

In addition, sesame seeds are a good source of iron, copper, zinc, and vitamin B6, which also support the production of thyroid hormones and aid thyroid health.

  1. May Aid Hormone Balance During Menopause

Sesame seeds contain phytoestrogens, plant compounds that are similar to the hormone estrogen.

Therefore, sesame seeds might be beneficial for women when estrogen levels drop during menopause. For example, phytoestrogens may help counteract hot flashes and other symptoms of low estrogen (60Trusted Source).

What’s more, these compounds may decrease your risk of certain diseases — such as breast cancer — during menopause. However, further research is needed.

  1. Easy to Add to Your Diet

Sesame seeds can give a nutty flavor and subtle crunch to many dishes.

To enhance the flavor and nutrient availability of sesame seeds, roast them at 350℉ (180℃) for a few minutes, stirring periodically, until they reach a light, golden brown.

Source: www.healthline.com

Feature: Turning the white space into blue; Pushing the Ghanaian boundaries in the mining sector

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Feature

The Local Content and Local Participation Regulation 2013, (LI 2204) is most often cited in speeches and grandiose political rhetoric about the need to empower indigenous Ghanaians in the petroleum sector.

But little is heard of the practical steps being taken to create the next oil and gas avatars in Ghana. Worse still, the few shining lights pushing the boundaries in the petroleum sector are doing so in the dark with their heads bowed deep into the virgin oil industry.

Interestingly, the mining industry in Ghana has been around for a long while yet its local content and local participation architecture are not significantly different from the oil and gas, if not worse.

Industry experts believe it is the imperious foreign-dominated experiences in the mining sector that informed the promulgation of the local content law in the petroleum sector to ensure participation by indigenous Ghanaians in the sector.

It is for this reason that ‘Turning the white space into blue’ and the story behind should be of interest to all well-meaning Ghanaians interested in tracking how young indigenous locals are blazing the trail in a sector dominated by ex-pats, a sector which holds the key to turning the economic fortunes of our country.

The phrase may sound like a painter’s impressionable work of art, or just maybe a poet’s little hook to keep the mood in a drama studio.

But for the crack team of young Ghanaian oilfield engineers, ‘Turning the white space into blue’ is an incredible game changer, a multi-million drilling strategy that brings the oil, gas sector, and the mining industry into ‘holy business matrimony’ with a promise of a fruitful return on investment.

At a time when the country is begging for local capacity to be developed in the oil, gas, and mining sectors, this crack team of young Ghanaian engineers led by Cephas Konadu, Product and Service Delivery Manager at Schlumberger is pushing the boundaries in these two uniquely similar but different sectors much to the admiration of ex-pats in the field.

Adept with the oil and gas drilling expertise that drives the rig several thousands of meters in the deep blue sea and striking oil in commercial quantities across the coasts of Ghana, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Senegal, Mauritania, Nigeria, Cameroon and Tanzania, Mr Konadu and his team were faced with a new challenge- mining for precious yellow metals using the expertise and tools deployed in the oil sector. That was akin to handing a rifle to a red cross officer in the heat of battle, hoping his last gasp effort will save the day.

That was how the white space (mining) was turned into blue (oil and gas) in a fascinating, mining adventure in Ahafo. All these happened in the year of the global pandemic giving credence to the popular saying that adversity is the mother of invention.

Covid 19 and the Chambers Data

Like many other sectors, the mining sector received its fair share of reported outbreaks of Covid 19 in the mines in the early days of the pandemic which disrupted investment and business activities for most mine owners.

As a result, the 2020 Mining Industry Statistics and Data report published by the Ghana Chamber of Mines states in part: “A simultaneous contraction in the output of both large and small-scale gold mines occasioned the highest year-on-year decline in the yellow metal’s production since 2004.

The quantum of gold production attributable to the large-scale sector waned by 4.8 per cent to 2.847 million ounces in 2020 from 2.989 million ounces in 2019.

The descent in the output of the large-scale producers was primarily a reflection of the broad downturn in production by most mines, which is primarily explained by the spill-over effects of COVID-19 and mine-specific factors.”

Again, a paper written on behalf of the Africa Development Bank titled; “The impact of Covid 19 on Mining; Case studies of four African countries” stated: “In 2020 there was a decline in gold production from both large and small-scale producers.

The large-scale sector declined by 6% whilst the small-scale sector declined by 20.4%. Overall, Ghana’s total gold output for 2020 fell by 11%. The declines were largely due to the observation of Covid 19 health protocols including social distancing.”

This gives a bird’s eye view of the devastating impact Covid 19 had on the mining sector in 2020. Companies, therefore, needed to think outside the box in order to remain relevant in business.

A mine in Ahafo showed the way in the pandemic. Even though the mine is known largely for its conventional vertical drilling method, it was ready to look beyond the obvious, and the most comfortable.

They had to do something drastically ingenious that is acceptable within the mining laws of Ghana and well within the local content and Covid 19 protocols.  That is where Cephas Konadu and his team at Schlumberger moved in from the oil wells to the rocky mines.

The Chilean Mine Disaster

Schlumberger is a leader in the delivery of technology and services in the global energy sector and has perfected the directional drilling technology (mostly used in the oilfield). This time though, the mine in Ahafo wanted that drilling technology to be used in mining for gold.

It was a tough call but according to Cephas Konadu, there was no better, greater motivation than to deploy the directional drilling technology in a mining field known for its vertical drilling conventions.

As a local and head of the Schlumberger Drilling and Measurements segment for West Africa (excluding Nigeria) at the time, this call to duty was a test on his credentials as a local, a challenge to fly, not just the flag of Ghana but that of Schlumberger by doing what the mine in Ahafo had never done before.

Schlumberger is no stranger at all to taking calculated risks. Ten years ago, the company used the same directional drilling technology to save the lives of 33 Chilean miners who were trapped for 69 days in the collapsed San Jose mine.

If that strategy saved the lives of miners in a desperate situation, it can also be used to extract the finest of gold even in the midst of a pandemic. One of the noticeable differences between the two adventures was that the latter was to be supervised by locals, a challenge Mr. Konadu led, managed and executed to perfection.

“I had never been to the mines before, but I was convinced that if I could drill into a 5000-6000m depth of oil reservoir and gush out black gold (oil) in commercial quantities, drilling 650m for yellow metals should not be all that difficult,” Cephas Konadu added.

These were the exact words of motivation anyone needed for a job like that but sometimes the dreams of our aspirations and the realities that come with it, are always miles apart. “It was when we got to the mines that we realized the enormity of the task at hand.”

“After our preliminary survey of the mine, we realized the equipment at hand were incompatible with the job specification,” he stated, adding but it was not time for excuses.

“I wasn’t going back to tell Schlumberger the job cannot be done. We had to improvise. We needed more auxiliary equipment. We had to fabricate existing equipment to be able to get the job started.”

Why Directional Drilling?

With Covid 19, there was the need to reduce manpower at the mines whilst still operating at optimum levels if a company desires to remain competitive in business.

It took 3 men from Schlumberger about three months maximum to complete the task at hand (from planning to execution), using the directional drilling method and tools, and the outcome was phenomenal. This task was impossible for the mines to achieve with their current and conventional drilling technology.

Directional drilling required a higher level of innovation, expertise and investment, but the return on the investment was always intimately overwhelming.

Even though the rig was mounted at one point of the mine, we had to deviate at an inclination of 53 degrees with a constant azimuth of 180 degrees in order to hit the target. That way we didn’t have to dig multiple trenches in the mine, Cephas Konadu explained.

Safety in a deviation

If the Chilean mine disaster, as well as the many media reports about the mine collapse in Ghana, are anything to go by, safety in the mine was always going to be top on the agenda.

Cephas Konadu and the team at Schlumberger as well as the operators at the Ahafo Mine, were well aware of the monumental risks in the sector, including the risks involved in the project they were about to embark on.

In spite of the palpable risks, Cephas Konadu stated that the directional drilling strategy they executed minimized any potential risks during the drilling operation.

“To be fair, the Ahafo mine has strict rules and procedures in mine safety operations and so it was easy adapting our technology within those rules for maximum protection. On a personal level, safety at the rig or mine has always been my biggest concern.

So as part of my requirements for promotion to General Field Engineer position in December 2013, I worked on a project to standardize the operation of the Stabilized Azimuthal Density Neutron (SADN8) tool, one of the most dangerous, yet important radioactive tools used in the oil industry,” Cephas Konadu stated, adding, “even though this particular tool was not used for this project, my standardization has become the globally accepted way by which this tool will be used to minimize accidents at the rig site.”

“So with two engineers on the rig at the mining site with me pushing the buttons from the office we were able to conduct a surgical mine operation without harming a fly,” Cephas Konadu indicated.

The adventure in the Ahafo mine was hugely successful and financially rewarding. But the most breathtaking aspect of it all is the local angle and the expertise deployed to make it successful.

There is no gainsaying the importance of the directional drilling technology in the mines. It is more lucrative in terms of its application.Even if it demands a little more investment, the time saving benefit compared with the orthodox method of drilling operations in the mine is overwhelming.

It is environmentally sound because it minimizes the destruction to the surface areas under exploration and it is safer. What is more, the Ghanaian connection and the local expertise brought to bear in this adventure, remains the single most enthralling development in a foreign-controlled sector.

Source: Nathan Gadugah   

Today’s Uefa Champions League Fixtures & Preview

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Lewandowski and Gavi of Barcelona

Inter Milan, Barcelona in top of the group clash

Level on points and heading into the third matchday of Champions League Group C, European heavyweights Inter Milan and Barcelona clash at San Siro tonight. Both sides have seen off Viktoria Plzen but lost to Bayern Munich, but the hosts have endured their worst Serie A start for 11 years while their Catalan counterparts are unbeaten in seven La Liga games to date.

As Inter have won only once from five meetings with Barcelona in Milan, though, they will need to overcome precedent to pick up maximum points. Defensively vulnerable and often unable to hold on to a lead, Inter are ripe for the taking this week, and Barcelona’s much-improved squad are well-placed to take three points home from San Siro.

Having failed to make it through the group stage of last season’s Champions League, finishing third behind Bayern and Benfica, a rejuvenated Barcelona will not want to suffer the same fate again.

Both sides are afflicted by injuries, but the greater depth available to Xavi means that which ever XI starts on Tuesday should have enough guile and experience to see off an ailing home side.

Credit: sportsmole.co.uk

 

Rricharlison, Tottenham

Tottenham face tricky trip to Eintracht Frankfurt

After a deflating derby day defeat on the weekend, Tottenham Hotspur face a tricky Champions League trip to Eintracht Frankfurt today, in a game that could have major implications in Group D.

While Antonio Conte‘s men fell to a 3-1 defeat at the Emirates Stadium on Saturday, Frankfurt became the first side to defeat early Bundesliga leaders Union Berlin this campaign, with a satisfying 2-0 home win.

While their home form is not fantastic this season, the Europa League holders are clearly a dangerous side, who should not be taken lightly by Conte’s men.

Taking on a Frankfurt side who also have three points in Group D, a positive result in Germany could help to open up a valuable route through to the Champions League knockout stages. With plenty to play for, we expect a buoyant Eintracht Frankfurt to cause Spurs problems coming forward.

However, the Germans have conceded 11 goals at home this season, so are likely to give up a few chances that should be punished by a high-quality forward line.

Credit: sportsmole.co.uk

Mo Salah, Liverpool

Liverpool search for recovery as they play Rangers

Liverpool are set to play Rangers at Anfield in the group stage of the UEFA Champions League. Liverpool come into this game on the back of a 3-3 draw against Roberto De Zerbi’s Brighton & Hove Albion in the English Premier League. Rangers, on the other hand, beat 10-man Hearts 4-0 in the Scottish Premiership. They are bottom of the group in the Champions League, and have lost both their group games so far.

Liverpool have been poor this season by their lofty standards. Jurgen Klopp’s men have looked off the pace in multiple games, and are currently 9th in the league. The likes of Andrew Robertson, Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah have not been at their very best so far.

Liverpool should be able to cut loose against Rangers, who appear to be lacking quality to be able to properly compete in Group A.

Klopp’s side are clearly lacking confidence at present after a poor start to the season, but Tuesday’s tie could be the start of a long road to recovery for them.

Credit: sportskeeda.com

Victor Osimhen, Napoli

Group leaders Napoli travel to face Ajax 

Group leaders Napoli travel to face third-placed Ajax at the Amsterdam ArenA.

Ajax have had a promising start to the campaign so far, defeating Scottish side Rangers followed by a narrow defeat away to English giants Liverpool at Anfield. On the other hand, visitors Napoli have disposed of Liverpool with a comfortable victory before easing past Rangers at Ibrox to gain maximum points.

Nevertheless, Ajax find themselves in an encouraging position as the group reaches its midway point. They are the joint-third highest scorers in the competition with five goals, whilst Kudus and Berghuis have been particularly threatening in the final third with two goals and two assists, respectively.

Success in reaching the latter stages of Europe’s premier competition has become more difficult in the last two decades for Ajax. Going into a must-win clash against a dangerous Napoli side, they will be hoping to navigate a positive outcome to give them a major boost in their pursuit of Champions League knockout football.

In what will be a tightly contested game in Amsterdam, we expect both sides to create plenty of chances and to play an open game that could leave them susceptible to counter-attacks.

Nevertheless, Napoli will manage to find a way through the Ajax rearguard due to their sheer quality in the final third.

Credit: sportsmole.co.uk

 

Griezman, Atletico Madrid

Atletico Madrid take on an impressive Club Brugge

Atletico Madrid are back in action with another important UEFA Champions League fixture this week as they take on an impressive Club Brugge side at the Jan Breydel Stadium.

Club Brugge are currently in third place in the Belgian Pro League standings and are yet to hit their stride on the domestic front this season.

Atletico Madrid, on the other hand, are in fifth place in the league table at the moment and have largely failed to meet expectations so far this season.

Atletico Madrid have not been at their best in La Liga this season and have plenty of work to do on the European front. Antoine Griezmann has made an impact off the bench for Diego Simeone so far and will look to make his mark this week.

Club Brugge are perfectly capable of pulling off an upset on their day and are have grown into seasoned European campaigners. Both teams are on an even footing at the moment and could play out a draw.

Credit: sportskeeda.com

The Mankesim murder: Grave Digger Allegedly Arrested

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Georgina Asor Botchwey, Murdered

Information gleaned from a reliable source within the Police Service indicates that the man who dug the grave where the Mankessim murdered person – Georgina Asor Botchway – was buried until her exhumation by the police, has been arrested and assisting with investigations.

According to the source, the suspect, whose name is being withheld, claimed he was contracted by Christopher Ekow Clarke, Tufuhene of Akwakrom, to dig a hole for him and that he did not know they were going to burry a human being there.

The Chronicle also gathered that a nonagenarian spiritualist (woman), who was named by the suspects, have been approached by the police but they did not find any incriminatory evidence at her shrine. Though she is considered a suspect, she was not arrested because of her age.

It is being alleged that the suspects – Christopher Ekow Clarkeand Michael Darko, alias Nana 1 –deceived Georgina Asor Botchway that they would help her travel abroad.

When the young lady finally went to them, they reportedly gave her drink, laced with sedatives, tied her mouth with cloth, after which she was allegedly hit with a stick and she died.

The police source further alleged that the modus operandi of the suspects, Michael Darko, alias Nana 1 and Christopher Ekow Clarke include luring, sedating and killing their victims with a stick or shooting them.

The Chronicle was again told that two locally manufactured pistols, five live ammunition, gunpowder, two syringes, five needles and nine passports, three belonging to the pastor, had been retrieved from the suspects.

Again, for all three persons who the suspects confessed to have had killed, it was only Georgina who was buried. The rest of the bodies were dumped by the roadside.

The second alleged murdered person, Grace Ansah-Akrofi’s mortal remains was deposited by the suspects by the roadside and because she was not from the area, residents could not help the police to identify the body, until the recent incident that made the suspects confirm having a hand in her death.

The third alleged murdered person, which the police are still searching for the body, is a male and a teacher, who had gone missing for almost a year now.

The paper’s sources said the family of the teacher had not made a formal report to the police because after he was lured to Mankessim under the pretext that they will aid him to travel abroad, the suspects compelled him to send a voice to his wife that he was out of the jurisdiction.

The voice note was reportedly retrieved from the suspects’ mobile phone and the wife of the deceased had also confirmed to the police receiving such information when she was contacted.

Regrettably, she still does not know what has actually happened to her husband.It was said that the pastor was the one who drove the car and the chief was the one who dragged the teacher’s body and dumped it at the roadside.

However, it is yet to be established whether the chief went back to the location to pick up the body and deposited it elsewhere, since nothing has been found at the spot.The suspects were alleged to have said they used the deceased for money rituals.

Police statement

Meanwhile, the police have issued a statement in connection with the second murder victim – Gloria Yeboah.

According to the statement, signed by Chief Superintendent of Police, Grace Ansah-Akrofi,  the suspects lured the deceased to Accra on June 17th, 2022 and took her to Mankessim, under the pretext of preparing her to travel to Holland.

However, it said her dream of traveling abroad was short lived, as the suspects subjected her to a gruesome murder, adding “the body of the deceased has been found and Police have been able to locate her family, who had identified her as Gloria Yeboah.”

It added that the police are providing the necessary support to the family in these difficult times, whilst it has also followed a lead on another victim who might have been murdered by the suspects.

“Investigations so far point to the fact that the suspects are involved in ritual murders. They lure their victims, sometimes under the pretext of helping them to travel abroad and then kill them.

“We, therefore, urge any member of the public who have dealt with the suspects or know someone who has ever dealt with them to contact the police on 0243809991 to assist the investigation. We would like the public to note that this is a temporary number dedicated only to this investigation.”

Help gov’t protect our natural resources -Jinapor

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Mr Abu Jinapor addressing the conference
The audience

Samuel A. Jinapor, Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, says the sustainable management of the natural resources of the country requires the collective action of all, including members of the communities where these resources are located.

He said Government’s efforts to manage these resources for the benefit of current and future generations may come to naught, if citizens do not support these actions.

The Minister was speaking at the 40th anniversary celebration of the Faculty of Renewable Natural Resources of Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, in Kumasi on Saturday 1st October, 2022, on the theme “40 Years of Training Natural Resources Managers: A New Age for a New Beginning.”

He said natural resources are so crucial to our very survival, and must be sustainably managed to ensure optimal benefit for current and future generations. He bemoaned the wanton destruction of the environment by illegal miners and illegal loggers, which is negatively impacting our forest and water resources, wildlife, aquatic and marine life, among others.

He said Government has put in place several measures to ensure the protection and sustainable management of these resources, including the ban on the harvesting of Rosewood, the ban on exploratory activities in Forest Reserves, the use of speed boats to patrol water bodies, the introduction of mercury-free Gold Katchas, and the establishment of Small Scale Mining Committees in all mining districts in the country.

Mr. Jinapor, however, said these measures will not yield the desired results if people at the local level continue to connive with others to pollute the water bodies and destroy the environment.

He queried how people could mine in forest reserves or illegally fell trees on the blind side of all the local actors in the community, including the chiefs, assembly members, unit committee members, Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives, the district security apparatus and opinion leaders.

“It is either we are fighting galamsey or we are not. And if we are, it requires a collective action from all of us, not just the President or his Ministers, but more importantly traditional, local and political authorities at all levels, as well as residents of these communities,” the Minister said.

He charged the Faculty to develop programmes that respond to the local challenges and provide strategic and managerial insights into conversations and debates about natural resource management.

He also tasked them to take a lead role in educating, sensitising and re-orienting Ghanaians about the importance of natural resources and the need to preserve them.

The Ghanaian Chronicle