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US envoy ‘will not be admitted’ to Nicaragua, vice president says

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Nicaragua President Daniel Ortega

Nicaragua will not allow the new United States ambassador to enter the country due to his “interfering” attitude, Vice President Rosario Murillo has reiterated, amid months of escalating tensions between the two nations.

The US envoy, Hugo Rodriguez, “will not under any circumstances be admitted into our Nicaragua”, said Murillo, who is also the wife of President Daniel Ortega.

 

“Let that be clear to the imperialists,” she said on Friday, reading a statement from the foreign office on state media, as reported by the AFP news agency.

 

The US Senate confirmed Rodriguez’s nomination to the ambassador post on Thursday, despite Nicaragua saying in July that it would reject it.

 

The diplomatic fight comes as the Biden administration has imposed a slew of sanctions, including US visa restrictions, on Nicaraguan state officials and their relatives over a crackdown on opposition politicians and human rights activists in the Central American nation.

 

Ortega has overseen a sweeping arrest campaign that targeted opposition leaders and presidential hopefuls in the lead-up to a November 2021 vote that saw the longtime leader re-elected to a fourth consecutive term as president.

But Washington and its allies, including the European Union, slammed the vote as a “farce”.

 

Credit: aljazeera.com

Burkina coup-makers accuse France of supporting counterattack

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Soldiers stand guard in an armoured vehicle in Ouagadougou

The army officers who seized power in Burkina Faso say toppled military leader Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba is planning a counteroffensive from a “French base”.

 

Gunshots rang out Saturday in the capital Ouagadougou amid signs of lingering tensions, a day after the officers overthrew the man who seized power in a coup only nine months earlier.

 

“[Damiba] is believed to have taken refuge in the French base at Kamboinsin in order to plan a counteroffensive to stir up trouble in our defence and security forces,” the coup-makers said in a statement read on national television and signed by Captain Ibrahim Traore, the country’s new leader.

 

An hour before the televised comments, the French embassy issued a statement “firmly denying any involvement of the French army in the events”. It also denied “rumours that Burkinabe authorities have been hosted or are under the protection of French military”.

 

France is Burkina Faso’s former coloniser. Angry protesters attacked the French embassy in Ouagadougou late Saturday. Video on social media showed residents with lit torches outside the perimeter and other images showed part of the compound ablaze.

 

Credit: aljazeera.com

Brazil votes in tense election, with Lula tipped to win

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People stand in line to cast their votes outside a polling station, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Polls have opened for one of the most divisive presidential elections in Brazil’s history, with former left-wing president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva tipped to beat far-right leader Jair Bolsonaro.

 

About 156 million people are eligible to cast their ballots in these elections. Leftist front-runner Da Silva, who is popularly known as Lula, who cast his vote on Sunday, said he is running for president “to get the country back to normal” after four years under Bolsonaro.

 

“We don’t want more hate, more discord. We want a country at peace,” said the 76-year-old ex-president, who is seeking a comeback after leading Brazil from 2003 to 2010.

 

“This country needs to recover the right to be happy.” Recent opinion polls have given Lula a commanding lead – the last Datafolha survey published Saturday found that 50 percent of respondents who intend to vote for a candidate said they would vote for Lula, against 36 percent for Bolsonaro.

Credit: aljazeera.com

Venezuela frees jailed Americans in prisoner swap

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Franqui Flores and Efrain Antonio Campo Flores - nephews of Venezuela's first lady - were arrested in 2015

Venezuela has freed seven jailed Americans in exchange for the release of two relatives of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, the two countries have confirmed.

The swap included five American oil executives, US officials said.

The Americans were exchanged for two of Mr Maduro’s wife’s nephews, who were serving 18-year sentences in the US on drug charges, the officials said.

Venezuela said two men “unjustly” held in the US were freed.

It added that a group of US citizens were released for “humanitarian reasons”.

The swap included executives of Venezuela’s US-based oil company, Citgo, in addition to US Marine veteran Matthew Heath and another American citizen named Osman Khan, US officials said. The oil executives – Tomeu Vadell, Jose Luis Zambrano, Alirio Zambrano, Jorge Toledo and Jose Pereira – were jailed five years ago, after being summoned to a meeting in Caracas, where they were charged with terrorism.

President Joe Biden said in a statement that the “wrongfully detained” Americans would soon be reunited with their relatives.

Credit: bbc.com

Russian troops forced out of eastern Ukraine town

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Ukraine's forces have mounted a sweeping counter-attack to re-take territory in the east

Russia has withdrawn its troops from the strategic Ukrainian town of Lyman, in a move seen as a significant setback for its campaign in the east. The retreat came amid fears thousands of soldiers would be encircled in the town, Russia’s defence ministry said.

Recapturing Lyman could let Ukrainian soldiers reach more contested territory in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenky said on Sunday the town had been “completely cleared” of Russian troops. Video footage shared online on Saturday – before the Russian retreat was announced – showed Ukrainian soldiers waving their national flag on the outskirts of the town.

Lyman had been used as a logistics hub by Russia, making its recapture all the more significant to Ukrainian forces.

The battlefield setback prompted the Chechen leader and hardline Moscow ally, Ramzan Kadyrov, to comment that Russia should consider using low-yield nuclear weapons in the face of such defeats.

Lyman is in Donetsk – one of four partially-occupied Ukrainian regions which Russia declared it was annexing on Friday. Ukraine and its Western allies have dismissed the move as an illegal land-grab.

Credit: bbc.com

Feature: Inadequate Educational Facilities; Our Unending Challenge

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Yaw Osei Adutwum, Minister for Education

Education they say is the key to success. Is the success being seen? Is the education giving out proper? Education is the act or process of imparting or acquiring general knowledge, developing the powers of reasoning and judgment, and generally of preparing oneself or others intellectually for mature life.  It is also where a person develops skills essential to daily living,

Learns social norms, develops judgment and reasoning, and learns how to discern right from wrong.

The importance of education in our lives goes far beyond what we can read in a textbook. Education also provides children with knowledge such as how to produce artwork and make music. Education allows us to analyse what’s in front of us, and even learn from our mistakes

People with higher education and varied experience are more likely to get high-paying, expert jobs. Studying hard throughout school and studies shows that one will not be afraid of hard work and will be able to fulfill goals. Employers see this as a huge advantage as they all prefer a responsible and knowledgeable workforce. Once one graduate, he or she can start searching for jobs that will give them the opportunity to practice what they’ve learnt and, at the same time, secures sufficient pay for their needs.

Ghana had the opportunity to showcase to the world its preparedness to manage its own affairs through home grown Human Resources after the independence. The evidence of our own capacity to man our sectors has been a product of educational system, bearing such fruits as other countries within the African region coming into Ghana to study. This enviable position of Ghana has witnessed praises and kept it as benchmark for education within the West African sub-region for a long time.

Yet, Doryumu a town located at the Shia-Osudoku district in the Greater Accra Region lacks good educational system. There are two government schools and other private schools. Most of the people in the community can’t afford the private schools.

The government school’s building is in a bad state to the extent that when it rains children might have to go home. These buildings have no doors and windows.

As a result, most young people in the community have no education. This has led to early marriage among young girls in the community. When parents are not able to afford their ward’s fees, they then drop out, then get a husband then marry.

The Assembly Member of the community, Jacob Boatey, recently said financial problem has been the major thing that doesn’t make children go to school. He says before Covid-19 they planned to organise a program which will bring all the people in the community that has been successful together and organise a fundraising for the children and build the government schools but couldn’t come on.

Some basic schools in the district are understaffed due to newly posted teachers rejecting their posting as a result of the bad road network and inadequate accommodation facilities.

The peculiar nature of the district –whereby the various communities are scattered makes it very difficult for teachers to accept postings due to underlying factors such as poor road networks and challenges in seeking decent accommodation.

This education gap shows how children from the poorest communities are missing opportunities to learn and grow into productive, happy adults. Because the children from the poorest households are not building the skills they need to learn, they face poorer education outcomes and remain trapped in the poverty cycle.

Education has always proven to be a very important tool for development in any country. In Ghana, however, although the government has taken steps to ensure the realizations of quality education, there is still a lot of work to be done as the Ghanaian educational sector is facing several challenges, especially in rural areas.

As many other rural villages experience their own obstacles in the educational sector. Without looking at the management side, the basic facilities for children to access the education are very poor and deplorable. Lack of school building and its facilities, lack of human resources to fill the minimum criteria of the school, long-distance between homes and school, lack of books/resources, library facilities, computer lab, etc. have turned out to be the obstacles for communities in rural areas in Ghana.

Most of the existing schools are not well maintained, therefore, the buildings are not safe enough for children and teachers to conduct the teaching and learning process. Some of the schools have no room for the basic school components to manage the resources and its facilities. The distance between school and home is also a challenge.

The departure from quality in the above initiatives is the lack of inadequate corresponding systems to ensure students are equipped with the skills, knowledge acquisition, in the first instance, making room for mass enrollment requires the requisite space to accommodate the students. When classrooms are limited or admissions are greater than classrooms space, the obvious outcomes will be poorly trained students as a result of mismatch the students teacher ratio and overcrowded classrooms.

The school environment is usually not conducive to learning. Classes are overcrowded, water and sanitation facilities are inadequate and trained teachers and school books are in short supply. The poor quality of education is reflected in students’ results. Children living with disabilities face even more challenges and adolescent girls are often denied the chance to complete secondary education.

Regardless of the country, good school facilities help determine the success of students and the effectiveness of a teacher’s lesson. However, with tight budgets and staff costs, the condition of school facilities is often further down the list of priorities.

Studies show that school facilities have an impact on the overall school experience of students and teachers. More studies are beginning to highlight the full impact of a well-equipped learning environment. In turn, school governors and heads have a clearer understanding of the benefits and are giving more attention to the issue.

With the will of the school managers, and the continuing improvements and innovations of school facilities, the learning environment is more interactive and conducive. With good facilities, teachers will be better prepared to adapt to the changing education requirements of their students for the job market.

Many parents often do not consider the quality of school facilities as a factor in choosing a school for their children, looking only at exam rates. Good equipment and facilities are part of a school’s holistic approach to improving the learning environment and balancing academics with other important non-curriculum activities, whether science lab facilities or sports equipment. When a school invests in facilities, the benefits to the school go far beyond the initial capital costs.

Hindatu Adamu, GIJ

Mbappe scores late winner as PSG edge Nice

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PSG are unbeaten in 18 Ligue 1 matches

Kylian Mbappe scored a late winner as Paris St-Germain beat Nice to climb back to the top of the Ligue 1 table. Lionel Messi’s excellent 20-yard free-kick, which left Kasper Schmeichel rooted to the spot, gave the French champions the lead.

Gaetan Laborde pounced from close range with his first Nice goal to give the visitors a surprise leveller. But substitute Mbappe struck in the 83rd minute to seal PSG’s seventh win in a row in all competitions.

The French striker, who replaced Hugo Ekitike just before the hour mark, slotted in from Nordi Mukiele’s cutback.

PSG are yet to lose since Christophe Galtier, who managed Nice last season, replaced Mauricio Pochettino as boss in the summer.

They go top with eight wins and a draw from nine games. Marseille, who drop to second, are also unbeaten with seven wins and two draws.

Credit: bbc.com

Milan beat Empoli in dramatic fashion

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AC Milan players jubilate

Elsewhere, AC Milan rose to third in the table with three goals coming in the final five minutes of their 3-1 win at Empoli.

The champions were leading 1-0 going into injury time after Ante Rebic broke the deadlock in the 79th minute.

Nedim Bajrami netted an equaliser for Empoli in the 92nd minute only for Fode Ballo-Toure to restore Milan’s lead two minutes later.

And Rafeal Leao added a third right before the full-time whistle as Milan eased to their fifth league win of the season.

Milan sit level on points with second-placed Atalanta and three points behind league leaders Napoli, who extended their lead at the top of Serie A with a 3-1 win at home to Torino on Saturday.

Credit: bbc.com

Smalling heads winner as Roma beat Inter

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Chris Smalling has scored two goals for Roma this season

Chris Smalling headed a 78th-minute winner as Roma came from behind to beat Inter Milan at the San Siro and jump to fourth in the Serie A table.

Smalling rose highest to nod in Lorenzo Pellegrini’s free-kick and ensure Roma beat their rivals for the first time since February 2017.

Federico Dimarco had opened the scoring for Inter after 30 minutes.

But the visitors were level nine minutes later through Paulo Dybala’s volley from an acute angle.

Roma’s win saw them go to within four points of leaders Napoli, while Inter remain in seventh, eight points off the top having lost four of their eight Serie A matches so far this season.

Inter had had the better of the game’s chances overall. Hakan Çalhanoglu hit the bar from a free-kick in the 62nd minute, while former Roma striker Eden Dzeko had thought he had opened the scoring in the 11th minute only for his strike to be ruled out by VAR.

Credit: bbc.com

Gallagher return to haunt Crystal Palace as Chelsea win

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Palace felt Thiago Silva should have been sent off for a deliberate handball

Conor Gallagher returned to Selhurst Park to haunt Crystal Palace with a stunning late winner to give Graham Potter a controversial first victory as Chelsea boss. Gallagher, whose impressive form for Palace last season earned him his England debut, was introduced by Potter in the 76th minute for Kai Havertz.

And with the game seemingly petering out for a draw, the 22-year-old midfielder nutmegged Jean-Philippe Mateta before curling a shot into Vicente Guaita’s top corner.

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang also scored his first Chelsea goal on his Premier League return after Odsonne Edouard had poked Palace into an early lead.

However, there was controversy surrounding Aubameyang’s goal as it was set up by Thiago Silva, who Palace felt should have been sent off for a deliberate handball which denied Jordan Ayew a possible goalscoring opportunity.

Credit: bbc.com

The Ghanaian Chronicle