Friday, June 27, 2008

I'LL BRIDGE GAP BETWEEN NPP AND VOLTA REGION (PAGE 15)

THE flag bearer of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has said it is ironic that some people are trying to put a wedge between the NPP and the people of the Volta Region.
He said he was back in the region to ensure that the gap between the party and the region was bridged.
The flag bearer, who was speaking at a well-attended rally at Kadjebi in the Volta Region as part of his campaign tour of the northern part of the region, also introduced the parliamentary candidate for the Akan Constituency, Mr Kofi Adjei Ntim, to the people.
He said the NPP was determined to make inroads into the region to guarantee it victory in this year’s general election.
Nana Akufo-Addo was not happy that since parliamentary and presidential elections got under way in 1992, the NPP had only been able to get one member of parliament from the Nkwanta North Constituency.
He said the NPP would continue to build on ideals such as the rule of law, good governance and respect for human rights to win the hearts and minds of the people of the region.
He, therefore, called on them to keep faith with the party to ensure unity and development.
He promised to give them a good road from Kadjebi to the Northern Region and expressed concern over the rampant boat accidents on the Volta Lake.
He further promised to link Dambai and Kete-Krachi with a bridge which would also facilitate the movement of people, goods and business.
The NPP flag bearer took time off his schedule to interact with the staff and students of Ntrobuman Senior High School where he promised to donate a bus through the GETFund to enhance academic work in the school.
Wherever he went during the week-long tour of northern Volta, he was cheered by enthusiastic crowds who came out in their numbers.
The tour took him through Krachi East and West, Nkwanta South and North and Kadjebi.
For his part, Mr Alan Kyerematen said the country needed the best person to lead it to prosperity.
He, therefore, appealed to the people to make the best judgement and vote wisely.

PATRONISE SCHOOLS CLOSER TO YOU (PAGE 11)

THE Director-General of the Ghana Education Service, Mr Samuel Bannerman-Mensah, has asked communities to patronise schools closer to them.
“It is the indigenes of this place that should rather lead in making this school their first choice among all others for the attention of other students, qualified staff and support”, he admonished.
The Director-General was addressing the 40th Anniversary and Speech and Prize- giving Day of the Leklebi Senior High School at Leklebi in the Hohoe District during which 148 people were rewarded for their selfless contribution to the school.
He told the gathering that the government was aware of the needs of schools and was responding to them and with time, additional facilities would be provided for the school.
Mr Bannerman-Mensah announced that schools were being refurbished with the provision of logistical support to facilitate the teaching of Information Communication Technology (ICT).
The Director-General said very soon 200 buses would be distributed to senior high schools and three technical schools.
Already, he said, teacher training colleges had received their fair share of institutional vehicles while 23 technical schools had also recently been provided.
The guest speaker, Professor Mawutor Avoke, reiterated the importance of education which, he said, was the reliable means of attaining national development.
“Land and physical capital, though important, could be dormant unless human beings use them,” he said.
He asked the students to strive hard to achieve academic excellence through hard work, determination and perseverance.
He also asked parents to be supportive of their children by giving them nutritious food, shelter and clothing.
Prof. Avoke asked teachers to support their students through motivation.
“Teaching should not be about inculcating knowledge alone but adopting a humanistic approach that seeks the total welfare of all students,” he said.
The community, he said, could encourage students to learn by instituting scholarship schemes where deserving students would be awarded prizes annually.
The Headmaster of the school, Mr Thomas Odikro, in his report, said the school started in 1967 with 32 students and through the commitment and determination of the Leklebi community it was saved from near collapse.
He expressed gratitude to Vice-President Aliu Mahama, for fulfilling a promise to provide a double-cabin Nissan Pick-up for the school and the VALCO for giving them a new bus.
He announced that the GETFund-sponsored two-storey girls dormitory was nearing completion.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

WORKSHOP ON ADULT REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH HELD AT HOHOE (PAGE 40)

A Day’s workshop on Adolescent Reproductive Health (ARH) Right and Gender Issues from the Islamic Perspective has ended at Hohoe in the Volta Region.
The workshop, organised for Muslims by the Coalition of Muslim Organisation, Ghana (COMOG), under a programme “Gender and Human Rights from the Islamic Perspective,” was sponsored by the United Nations Fund for Population Activities (UNFPA).
A total of 150 participants, comprising Imams community heads, youth and women leaders, attended the forum to share ideas and to discuss measures of intensifying education as a strategy and tool for youth development.
Opening the workshop, an executive member of COMOG, Manam Abdul Rahman, called on the participants to work in harmony to create an enabling environment for the youth to make an informed choice on ARH issues.
He was also of the view that the equality preached by Islam had won for it many converts.
Manam Rahman noted that as far as Islam was concerned, all people were equal before the law and would be given equal punishment for committing the same offence.
In a 12 point resolution, the Muslims pledged their firm support to the government and also promised to keep their communities clean.
They also promised to register massively under the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) and to patronise the National Identification exercise as well.
On education, they said they would endeavour to educate their children, including the girl-child.
They condemned all acts of violence be they religious, political or social.
The resolution urged all qualified people who had not yet registered for the December 7 general election to do so and pledged to support a violence-free campaign in the run-up to the election.
Some of the topics treated at the workshop were “Rights of parents, ”Rights of children, ”Mutual Rights of Husband and Wife”, “Rights of Orphans” and “Rights of Kin”.
The others were “Rights of Neighbours,” “Rights of the sick and disabled“ and Rights of slaves and servants”.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

ASUBONTEN RURAL BANK ADJUDGED THE BEST (PAGE 29)

The Association of Rural Banks has declared the Asubonten Rural Bank at Worawora in the Jasikan District of the Volta Region the best rural bank in the country for the first quarter out of the 122 rural banks country-wide.
The Supervising Manager of the bank, Mr Joshua Odoom, said the bank was among the 122 rural banks that were adjudged.
The Volta Region has 11 rural banks.
According to him, during the last quarter of last year Asubonten placed fourth, while in September that same year it placed second.
Mr Odoom said the Monitoring Unit of the ARB Bank took into account the balance sheet and profit and loss statements of all the rural banks.
The manager said the bank wanted to deepen its micro-finance operations and enhance its deposit mobilisation and clientele base.
He said presently 660 women in the Kpando, Hohoe and Krachi-East districts had benefited from a GH¢320,900.00 facility to improve on their farms and start new businesses this year.
“The challenges are immense but there is reason for optimism. Already, there are encouraging developments towards improving the trading environment for the private sector,” he said.
He said at the moment the bank had lines with the Western Union Money Transfer at its Hohoe and Worawora branches and was yet to have similar facility at the other branches at Kpando and Dambai.
But he cautioned, “When you take loans from the bank, you must pay them back for others also to benefit.”

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

JASICO RAISES FUNDS IN AID OF STAFF BUNGALOWS (PAGE 21)

THE Jasikan College of Education (JASICO) has realised GH¢5,000 at a fund-raising rally in aid of development projects.
The college has targeted GH¢25,000 to start the construction of staff bungalows.
Due to shortage of staff accommodation, only 17 of the tutors are currently living on campus.
At the rally, the Chairman of the Board of Governors of JASICO, Nana Oware Owusu IV, expressed gratitude to the Students Representative Council (SRC) of the college for the projects it had undertaken in the institution.
He said in 1994, the SRC raised a platform at the dining hall and a podium while the 1995 year group also bought a mower with the 1996 group providing the college with a corn mill.
According to him, the 1997 year group provided a public address system, 98 water tanks, 99 plastic chairs and a 21-inch television set for the staff common room of the college while the 2002 group donated a set of Agbadza drums, among other things, to the institution.
Nana Owusu stated that the SRC of 2003 provided a television set to the college, the 2004 group also donated water tanks while the 2005 SRC started walling the campus with the 2006 group providing five double canopies and a computer.
The Board Chairman added that the SRC of 2007 donated 200 plastic chairs and a generator for the college.
The Principal of the college, Mr Gabriel Wotodzor, said as a measure of solving part of the accommodation problem, the students had completed one bungalow and they were constructing another.
He appealed to old students and the college’s Parent-Teacher Association to contribute in cash and in kind towards the institution’s development.
The Jasikan District Director of Education, Mr P.M.K. Afesi, expressed concern about the poor results of the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) in the district.

Monday, June 16, 2008

LIONS, LIBERTY DRAW (BACK PAGE)

VISITING Liberty Professionals left a good impression in their thrilling but uncompromising Onetouch duel when they drew 1-1 with Heart of Lions at the Kpando Stadium.
David Addo and Maxwell Mensah strung together a combination of passes for Latif Salifu to finish off the move across the goal line, beating goalkeeper Adjetey Mozart in the 15th minute.
After recess, the Lions roared back strongly and levelled the score in the 67th minute when substitute Sulemana Ibrahim’s header beat goalkeeper Patrick Antwi.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

GRAPHIC DESIGNER IN COURT FOR FRAUD (PAGE 25)

A 29-year-old graphic designer, Antoine Novelty Kwaku Kpodo, who allegedly posed as a BNI official and duped a tailor of GH¢2,000 has been granted bail in the sum of GH¢10,000 by the Hohoe Circuit Court.
Kpodo pleaded not guilty and he is to re-appear before the court on June 24, 2008.
Prosecuting, Superintendent of Police, Mr Anthony Shelley Darkey, told the court, presided over by Mr Samuel Sarpong-Appiah, that on February 26, 2008, the Ghana Commercial Bank at Hohoe was robbed by armed robbers of GH¢105,202.60.
He said when the robbers were running away, some of the money, wrapped in plastic bags, fell and got scattered.
At about 7 p.m. the same day, Wisdom Agbakpey, the tailor, who was returning from work chanced on GH¢2,000 in a plastic bag, he said.
The prosecutor said hearing of it, Kpodo, on March 3, 2008, went to Agbakpey’s house at about 7.30 p.m. and posed as a BNI official from the Hohoe office.
There, he claimed he was to investigate the robbery at the GCB and also to find out who took some of the money that got scattered.
The prosecutor said Kpodo then demanded the money to be presented to the authorities and Agbakpey obliged.
Later, it came to the notice of Agbakpey that the money never reached the authorities.
On April 4, 2008, Agbakpey saw Kpodo in town and alerted the police. He, however, escaped arrest.
But luck run out for Kpodo on May 30, 2008, when he was arrested by the police at his hideout upon a tip-off.

DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS INAUGURATED AT DODO-AMANFROM (PAGE 23)

A number of projects valued at GH¢259,400 have been inaugurated at Dodo-Amanfrom in the Kadjebi District of the Volta Region.
The projects are three school blocks and seven boreholes.
The Kadjebi District Chief Executive (DCE), Mr Kofi Adjei Ntim, who inaugurated the projects at separate ceremonies, pledged his commitment to the development progress of the area.
He mentioned some of the achievements of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) government as the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) and free medical care for pregnant women, adding that very soon people under 19 years of age would receive free medical care.
Mr Ntim, therefore, advised the people to vote massively for the government and him as their parliamentarian in the upcoming general election in order to enjoy more development projects.
“If you vote for me and the NPP flag bearer candidate, more development projects will follow,” he said.
Mr Ntim called on politicians to refrain from insulting their opponents but should base their campaigns on issues.
He appealed for peace and unity in the area before, during and after the general election.
Mr Ntim used the occasion to formally introduce himself to the people as the NPP parliamentary nominee for the Akan Constituency.
The Kadjebi District Director of Education, Mr P.M.K. Dotse, commended the government for the provision of educational infrastructure in the country to enhance teaching and learning in schools.
He called on teachers to work harder to justify the huge investment the government was making in education.
The Headmaster of Dodo Amanfrom E.P. Primary School, Mr Daniel Osei, commended the DCE for putting up the school block to enhance teaching and learning.

Monday, June 9, 2008

WORK ON HOHOE TOWN ROADS PROGRESSES (PAGE 35)

WORK on the three-kilometre Hohoe town roads in the Volta Region is progressing steadily.
The Managing Director of Survivors Construction Limited, Mr Castro Dela Ahorsu, executor of the project, told the Daily Graphic that 65 per cent of the job had been completed.
He was reacting to the concerns raised by the people of Hohoe about the slow pace of work and the dust which had engulfed the town.
Mr Ahorsu stated that the contract involved the construction of three kilometres of the main road in the town and said he had already finished constructing the drains and slabs.
He said within the next three weeks, he would start with prima sealing and expressed the hope that the entire project would be completed by the end of July, this year.
Touching on the type of materials he was using for the project, he said the Ghana Highway Authority (GHA) had given approval for these.
The Technical Assistant in charge of Materials of the GHA at Ho, Mr Wisdom Amuzu, confirmed the approval of the materials being used for the project.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

KADJEBI-ASATO SHS HOLDS AWARDS CEREMONY (PAGE 22)

THE Managment of the Kadjebi-Asato Senior High School (SHS) in the Volta Region has organised an awards ceremony in the school during which 67 hardworking students and teachers were honoured for their meritorious services.
Each of the students received parcels containing books, and some had cash in addition to the parcels.
One tutor, Madam Nancy Attu-Asiedu, who was retiring after 32 years service, was presented with a large-size deep freezer, while another, Mr Mbomedony Alanja, who teaches Principles of Cost Accounting, took home a coloured television set.
In a speech, the Headmaster of the school, Mr Musah Yamba Issahaku, said for five continuous years, the school had been scoring 100 per cent passes in the final examinations.
"As the final year students walked out of the examination halls after the recent external examinations, I saw broad smiles and cheerfulness on their faces. This gives me an impression that this year's results would be one of the best in recent times, " he said.
Mr Issahaku praised the students who had just completed their courses, and described them as the most disciplined, and said he was optimistic that their discipline would be translated into remarkable academic performance, when the results were released in September, this year.
Mr Issahaku pointed out that discipline and academic excellence had been their watch word."
He noted that but for the timely in intervention of the parent-teacher association (PTA), which provided GH¢10,000.00 for the running of the school the institution would have closed down due to the government’s delay in releasing feeding grants.
The headmaster appealed to the government and the Ghana Education Trust Fund (GETFund) to provide the school with means of transport since the school had become a “junior university” with a large number of students.
The Chairman of the Board of Governors of the school, Nana Otuo Siribour II, commended the school authorities for their hard work.
He advised the students to make good use of their time while in the school by attending classes regularly, adding “if you don't make profitable use of the opportunity, then you are destroying your future.”
Nana Otuo Siribour announced that the school had acquired 689 acres of land in readiness for any type of tertiary educational institution.
Earlier, the School Prefect, Master Joseph Kanda, had on behalf of the Students Representative Council (SRC) presented two lawn mowers valued at GH¢1,600.00 to the school.