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Concert Party’s Ice Kenkey passes on

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Ice Kenkey

Veteran comic actor, Kwaku Danquah, known widely as Ice Kenkey who was famous for his role in Keysoap Concert Party in the 1990s has passed on.

He played supporting role in ‘Key Soap Concert Party’ with the likes of Nkomode, Bishop Bob Okala, Bob Santo and others.

News of Ice Kenkey’s death was reported on June 9, 2022. According to a friend of Ice Kenkey who spoke to Peace FM in an interview which was monitored by The Chronicle, the Actor choked on pizza and was rushed to the hospital.

Owusu Ansah further mentioned that, the Actor died two days after he was rushed to the hospital.

Also, a member of his family has confirmed Ice Kenkey’s sudden demise, which he states has created a void.

The comedian was a native of Akuapem Larteh.

Before his death, not much was heard of him but at the peak of his career, he toured parts of Europe and the USA with Kumawood Actor, Agya Koo, and several others entertaining people with their plays.

Ice Kenkey has been in the acting business for 18 years. He is the founder of Powerlight Concert Party. His band travelled the U.S.A and Europe in 2009.

His fans and some colleagues in the movie industry have expressed their condolences via social media.

Major work on Takoradi CNC in 2 months; Edna Nyame

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Janet Edna Nyame, Executive Director for the National Commission on Culture National Commission on Culture

Following a promise by the Minister of Tourism, Arts and Culture, Mohammed Awal to the people of the Western Region to witness a major facelift of the Centre for National Culture (CNC) in Takoradi within a year which was due on June 5, 2022, the Creative Arts Players in Western Region went mad at the Minister for a broken promise.

Defending the broken promise by her sector Minister, the Executive Director for National Commission on Culture, Janet Edna Nyame has said that the Minister is committed to the promise and further promised the people of Takoradi that, in the next two months, there will be major works on the facility which has been deserted for over 30 years.

Madam Nyame who is from the Western Region mentioned that, she feels quite embarrassed anytime the issue of the CNC comes up, especially when the Takoradi branch is mentioned because as someone who heads the sector, her region should have been the first to witness the best of CNCs in Ghana.

Madam Nyame says there will be major works on the Takoradi CNC in the next 2 months. Answering why the delay in the renovation, the Executive Director said it dates back to history. According to her, the National Commission on Culture was an autonomous body until the creation of the Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture when it was made an agency of the Ministry.

“It was initially under the presidency and was autonomous, we had budget to implement our policies and other projects but it’s now been aligned to Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture so we have to look up to them for budget and other approvals.” Madam Nyame mentioned.

“CNC was built in all the previous 10 regions in Ghana. Apart from Cape Coast, Greater Accra and Kumasi, the rest have not been completed. Since the commission now is under the ministry, all the previous Ministers of the sector have tried to finish the centers but face challenges. During the tenure of Catherine Afeku, the national festival for arts and culture was held in Eastern Region so some work was done there. Aside that, none of the CNCs have witnessed any renovationso it is not Western Region alone” Madam Edna Nyame intimated.

“Awal Mohammed has promised to finish at least two of the centers before he leaves office. He mentioned Western Region and Northern Region so he is committed to his promise to the people of Western Region. He has not abandoned the promise even though it has delayed” Madam Nyame added.

“AESL who are the consultants have given us the budget and roadmap to the completion of the CNCs. Maximum two months, you’ll see works on the CNC in Takoradi,” she promised in an interview on Empire FM with Feeling Daddy which was monitored by The Chronicle.

No school on period days

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OPINION

I was born in the mid-nineties, the time girl’s education was not common, and if they got the chance to go to school, some parents could only afford Secondary School education.

It was the days when girls were forced to learn how to cook than to learn because the only means to measure once girlhood was how their food tasted.

They were reserved for the kitchen and others were used as a source of wealth creation by their parent, they were married off to rich old men for fat pride price.

At the time, the call for equal education was not as loud as it is today. The United Nation (UN) women, an organisation that is dedicated to gender equality, was not in existence, so there was not enough champion for girls’ and women’s progress specifically.

No one cared about who a girl wanted to be in the future, the focus was more about the tomorrow of the boy child because he will end up fathering a home while the girls’ role will be taking care of the children and ensuring there was always freshly cooked food on the table.

I remember in our “mama ne dada- (mummy and daddy) ”; a form of play children born in the 90’s entertained themselves with on Saturdays, the boys were career men and the girls paraded themselves as housewives or market women because that was what we were exposed to. Our parents were traders who left home at 4 am and returned at 8 pm.

The girls I grew up including Sedenam, my bosom friend was part of the group of girls who had already started seeing our period- the only thing we were told by our mothers was to stay away from boys who spoke in a heavy voice.

Fast forward we got to a stage in the 2000s where the call for girl child education was amplified more than it was in the 90s, but this time around they had to fight for equal access.

According to a report by United Nations Children’s Funds (UNICEF), 95 per cent of girls living in rural communities in Ghana miss 20 per cent of school because they did not have access to sanitary pads.

Now let’s break down the numbers, one out of every ten girls you meet has missed or is missing school due to period poverty.

Menstruation occurs between four to seven days every month which means a girl who does not have access to menstrual materials; disposable sanitary pads, reusable pads, menstrual cups, or tampons will be absent from school for four to seven days every month which affects her education.

Most of these girls come from a home where eating a nutritious meal is a big deal, it is hard to afford food, therefore buying a sanitary a pad is a secondary issue.

I met Akua in February 2021 at Asaratoase I visited in the Central Region of Ghana for our period poverty and menstrual hygiene intervention program. She is the firstborn among three girls whose parents are farmers.

She told me how it was difficult for her mother to afford sanitary pads for all of them every month, thus compelling them to use tissues and rags during their periods.

According to her, the rags and tissues were very uncomfortable as it easily soiled her uniform.

To avoid being humiliated in class, she has no other option than to skip school during her period, a situation she said, was consequently having an adverse impact on her academic performance.

In order to avert that situation, she decided to help the other farmers in her community after school to enable her raise money to buy sanitary pads to maintain her period.

She also revealed how other girls in her community were having sex with men for money to buy sanitary pad.

World Bank has estimated that 11.5 million women and girls in Ghana lack hygiene management facilities that aid in healthy menstrual hygiene management. Most primary and secondary schools’ education and other public spaces do not have change rooms and proper sanitary pad disposal that gives girls the luxury and comfort they desire during that time of the month.

Menstruation is an integral part of every girl’s existence yet girls and women are facing inhumane activities and injustice.

Not only are they absenting themselves from school, but they are also prevented from cooking, praying, sleeping beside their husbands, crossing rivers, and partaking in some social activities, violating their rights. Period poverty is a global issue affecting the socio-economic development of women and girls.

In the quest to support menstruating girls and ensure they have access to equal education, The Orange Girl Foundation, a non-governmental organisation (NGO), has started a journey of fighting period poverty by ensuring girls do not stay out of school due to lack of sanitary materials.

The organisation has introduced the reusable pad which is a more sustainable way of curbing period poverty and promoting girls’ education.

In a 21st century world, the sanitary pad should not be a reason girls will miss school, let’s reserve that for the 90s.

No sex for pad!

By Ethel Nanayaa Afrakuma Amoako Baffoe  

Blackout across major cities as National Grid collapses again

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Blackout across major cities

Major cities across the country, including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), experienced a blackout on Sunday following another collapse of the national grid.

The affected cities where there was an outage include those under the domain of Jos Electricity Distribution (JED) Company, Enugu Electricity Distribution Company Plc, and Eko Electricity Distribution Company,  among others.

In various notices to their customers, the electricity distribution companies disclosed that the collapse occurred at about 6:47pm on Sunday.

“The Management of Jos Electricity Distribution Plc wishes to inform the general public that the current outage being witnessed is a result of system collapse,” JED informed its customers in a statement by its spokesman, Dr Friday Elijah.

“We hope to restore supply as soon as supply is restored. Thanks for your understanding and cooperation.”

Sunday’s collapse is the latest in the series of breakdowns of the national grid since the beginning of the year. In some cases, the national grid collapsed more than twice in a month.

The Minister of Power, Abubakar Aliyu, after a similar collapse in April, said the government had been making efforts to improve the power supply in the country.

Credit: channelstv.com

Nigeria issues ‘Code of Practice’ to regulate ‘online platforms’

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Online platforms

The National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) has announced that it has issued a ‘Code of Practice’ for Interactive Computer Service Platforms/Internet Intermediaries including online platforms.

The agency stated this in a statement by its spokesperson, Hadiza Umar, on Monday.

“The new global reality is that the activities conducted on these Online Platforms wield enormous influence over our society, social interaction, and economic choices,” Mrs Umar wrote. “Hence, the Code of Practice is an intervention to recalibrate the relationship of Online Platforms with Nigerians in order to maximise mutual benefits for our nation, while promoting a sustainable digital economy.”

The announcement could face criticism from Nigerians who have been sceptical of the Buhari administration since it declared its intention to regulate the media, particularly online media, many of which have helped hold the government accountable.

PREMIUM TIMES reported how the information minister, Lai Mohammed, told the National Assembly to amend the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) law to enable the agency to regulate online media.

NBC currently regulates broadcast media and has been criticised for imposing controversial fines on broadcast stations.

As part of its new code, NITDA says online platforms must “Provide a comprehensive compliance mechanism to avoid publication of prohibited contents and unethical behaviour on their platform.”

This is in line with international best practices as obtainable in democratic nations such as the United State of America, United Kingdom, European Union, and United Nations.

The Code of Practice was developed in collaboration with the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) and National Broadcasting Commission (NBC), as well as input from Interactive Computer Service Platforms such as Twitter, Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, Google, and Tik Tok amongst others.

Credit: premiumtimesng.com

Gunmen abduct Anglican Bishop, wife, driver

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Gunmen

The Police Command in Oyo State, says the command has begun a manhunt on the abductors of Oluwaseun Aderogba, the Anglican Bishop of Jebba Diocese, Kwara State, his wife and driver.

The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Adewale Osifeso, stated this while confirming the incident in a statement on Monday.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Mr Aderogba, his wife and driver were kidnapped on Sunday, at about 9.00 p.m. on New Oyo/Ogbomoso Expressway.

The incident comes two weeks after the Methodist Prelate Samuel Kanu-Uche, and two others were kidnapped. The kidnappers collected N100 million, according to Mr Kanu-Uche, before their release.

The Anglican Bishop’s chaplain, who was with the victims when the incident happened, said their vehicle developed a fault some few kilometers to Oyo, when they were traveling from Ogun State to Jebba, and before help could come some armed men came from the bush and surrounded them.

He said that he was lucky because he was not visible because of his black cassock and fell flat on the ground to hide while the abductors marched the Bishop, wife and driver to the bush.

The PPRO said that preliminary investigations revealed that the victim’s vehicle allegedly developed a mechanical fault, while traveling from Yewa, Ogun State, to Jebba, Kwara State, enroute an isolated area on New Oyo/Ogbomoso Expressway.

He said the Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of Operations of the Command, was in charge of the rescue operation that began since 9 a.m. of Sunday.

Mr Osifeso said that all the tactical teams of the Command’s Anti-Kidnapping Squad, Ambush Squad, Puff Adder, Police Mobile Force (PMF), Counter Terrorism Unit (CTU) and Conventional Police personnel, along with local hunters and vigilantes, were all involved in the rescue operations.

Credit: dailypost.ng

2023 presidency: My manifesto not ready –Tinubu disowns document in circulation

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President Bola Tinubu

The All Progressives Congress, APC, presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu has distanced himself from a purported 2023 campaign manifesto in circulation.

Tinubu said the purported document in circulation was not his 2023 campaign manifesto and was not endorsed by him.

He explained that the document was a mere draft proposal and suggestions on the programmes he should implement if elected President.

Tinubu’s denial was contained in a statement signed by the Director of Media and Communications, Tinubu Campaign Organisation, Bayo Onanuga on Sunday.

He assured that his manifesto would be a more serious document than the one in circulation.

Tinubu disclosed that he would present his manifesto to Nigerians when the document is ready.

The statement reads partly: “I want to place it on record that the manifesto being circulated via social media platforms and already published by a section of the mainstream media is not the official manifesto of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and APC for the 2023 general elections.

“We want to clearly state that the document is an unofficial document and Tinubu cannot be held accountable on any of the issues raised in the document.

“The presidential candidate and APC are currently working on an all-embracing manifesto that will inspire the confidence of Nigerians.

“When the official policy document of Tinubu is ready, it will be formally presented to Nigerians and our candidate will be in a position to defend every word that will be contained therein.”

Last week, Tinubu emerged as the APC presidential candidate after winning the party’s primary election in a landslide victory.

Credit: dailypost.ng

Belgium’s King Philippe ‘regrets’ colonial-era abuses in DRC

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Belgium's King Philippe

Belgium’s King Philippe expressed his “deepest regrets” for the pain inflicted during his country’s colonisation of the Democratic Republic of Congo, but stopped short of formally apologising for exploitation, racism and acts of violence.

“On the occasion of my first trip to the Congo… in front of the Congolese people and those who still suffer today, I wish to reaffirm my deepest regrets for the wounds of the past,” King Philippe said Wednesday, addressing a joint session of parliament in the capital, Kinshasa.

“Even though many Belgians were sincerely committed to loving the Congo and its people deeply, the colonial regime was based on exploitation and domination,” he said, during his first visit to Congo since taking the throne in 2013.

“This regime was one of unequal relations, in itself unjustifiable, marked by paternalism, discrimination and racism.” Philippe’s speech comes two years after he wrote similar regrets in a letter to mark the 60th anniversary of Congo’s independence, going further than any of his predecessors in condemning “acts of violence and cruelty” during Belgium’s colonial rule.

Credit: rfi

Queen Elizabeth becomes 2nd-longest serving monarch

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Queen Elizabeth

The Queen has become the second-longest serving sovereign monarch in history.

As of Monday, she has been on the throne for 70 years and 127 days, second only to Louis XIV of France who became king at the age of four. She overtakes Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who died in 2016, having equalled his reign on Sunday.

She had officially reached 70 years of rule on 6 February, with the extended bank holiday weekend chosen for the Jubilee events. Many of the events – including a pageant, Trooping the Colour and a star-studded concert at Buckingham Palace – involved an outdoor element more suited to summer months. If the Queen is still reigning in May 2024 she would take the title of the longest reigning monarch of a sovereign state.

Louis XIV’s reign of 72 years and 110 days was from 1643 to 1715. But he only started to rule personally in his 20s, in 1661.

The Queen became monarch at the age of 25, following the death of her father in the early hours of 6 February 1952.

Credit: bbc.com

Amnesty accuses Russia of war crimes in Kharkiv

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Amnesty accuses Russia

Amnesty International has accused Russia of war crimes during its efforts to capture the north-eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv.

In a new 40-page report, Amnesty has documented the alleged use of cluster munitions and other indiscriminate means of attack.

“The repeated bombardments of residential neighbourhoods in Kharkiv are indiscriminate attacks which killed and injured hundreds of civilians, and as such constitute war crimes,” the report said.
“This is true both for the strikes carried out using cluster as well as those conducted using other types of unguided rockets and unguided artillery shells, which are indiscriminate when used in the vicinity of concentrations of civilians.”

Amnesty’s researchers say they “documented seven strikes in different areas of Kharkiv, where they found fins and pellets of 9N210 or 9N235 cluster munitions.”

Amnesty also said that Russia has used the PTM-1S, “a small, scatterable anti-personnel mine.”

Donatella Rovera, Amnesty International’s senior crisis response adviser, said that the investigation was “further indication of utter disregard for civilian lives.”

Credit: cnn.com

The Ghanaian Chronicle