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Minister denies sacking Sports Directors from his office

The Greater Accra Regional Minister Nii Armah Ashittey has dismissed reports that he drove away District Sports Directors from his office on Wednesday.

It was alleged that, Mr. Nortey Dowuna who is the Chairman of the Greater Accra Handball Association and some delegation together with the Greater Accra Regional Sports Director were driven out from Mr. Ashittey’s office when they went to seek financial support in preparation for the upcoming National Unity Games.

The Minister who is also the Member of Parliament for Klotey Korley indeed confirmed that the District Directors of Sports came to his office on Wednesday requesting financial support for the Unity Games.

He explained to Asempa Sports on Thursday that, he did not drive them out of his office as reported by the Directors but only told them it would have been better if they had brought written petition for their request, since he is required to account for whatever goes in and out of the Ministry.

He said it came as a surprise to him when he heard the Sports Directors – who spent over an hour in his office – claiming that he sacked them.

The games will kick off on Sunday 17th to Wednesday 27th July 2011, in Accra with 20 different sporting activities with all the ten regions in the country participating.

Source: Asempa Sports

I don’t believe in contraceptive – Balado Manu

The use of contraceptives as a means of birth control offended the biblical command that enjoined humans to procreate and fill the earth as sand on the shoreline, Mr Balado Manu, Member for Ahafo Ano South, said on Friday.

“As a Catholic, I don’t believe in family planning, not the use of contraceptives,” he said adding, “after all, God says we must procreate as sands on the beaches.”

Mr Manu who was contributing to a statement by the Parliamentary Caucus on Population and Development, said the problem was not the incessant soaring of the population, but lack of attempts on the part of government to take good care of the people.

Government, he said, must be up and doing in harnessing the resources of the state to the advantage of the people and noted that God has just given Ghana oil to support the economy and also called on the government to use the resources judiciously for the good of the people.

Dr Ahmed Yakubu Alhassan, NDC member for Mion, said population issues must focus on quality of life, food security, health care, education and employment.

He noted that there was a strong connection between population and food security because people must be fed enough to give off their best.

Dr Mathew Prempeh, NPP member for Mahyia, said the key issue of population growth was food security, and charged the government to ensure that the good agricultural policies of the previous administration were not discontinued.

He noted that water security was a critical element of population security adding, the practice whereby mining companies pollute water bodies must be checked.

He said government must invest in water harvesting to ensure that there was adequate water for the people.

Dr Prempeh said government must pursue energy security by providing adequate energy for the population and enforce the laws on property right.

Mr Ahmed Ibrahim, NDC member for Tain, said Ghana’s population was increasing while resources that must support the population were dwindling at an alarming rate.

According to him, trees were cut along rivers, making them to dry up, and called on Ghanaians to plant more trees.

He said government must take issues of education very serious because an uneducated population would rather be a burden on the state.

Mr George Kuntu Blankson, Deputy Majority Chief Whip, who presented the statement, said 2015 was a critical year for Ghana as she tried to reach the bench mark set for the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

He said the realization of the MDGs hinged on to a large extent the response of Ghana to population dynamics citing the example that there must be a strong correlation between high fertility rates and poverty.

“Failure to strengthen population programmes will put our 2015 agenda into jeopardy,” he said.

The world observes World Population Day July, 11 annually to draw attention to population issues.

This year’s celebration focuses on global population which is projected to reach seven billion by 2011.

AAF/GNA

GHC 50 million for biometric voters register

The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning Dr. Kwabena Duffour has stated that government has released funds to enable the Electoral Commission implement the new biometric voting register as the country looks to advance the cause of democracy through transparent, free and fair elections.

The minister made this revelation on the floor of parliament when he presented a supplementary budget to the House worth GH¢1,463,123,559.

In his address to push for the acceptance of the motion, Dr. Duffour said “based on the budget submitted by the Electoral Commission, over GH¢80 million will be needed for the biometric exercise, of which GH¢50.8 million will be required in 2011. Government has therefore released GH¢50 million to the electoral commission to implement activities preceding the 2012 presidential and parliamentary elections.”

He said government is committed to ensuring that the EC replaces the voters register for the conduct and supervision of the 2012 elections.

Dr. Duffour touched on a number of projects that the government intends to finance with part of the supplementary budget.

He said government has also earmarked an amount of GH¢5 million to the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority (SADA) to continue with the government’s quest to bridge the gap between the north and south in the country.

The Finance Minister, Dr. Kwabena Duffour announced the new strategy that has been adopted by the government in dealing with ‘ghost names’ in the pay roll of the public sector.

Dr Duffour said the public sector wage bill has been rising sharply over the past years in relation to GDP and expenditures, but this was not attributable to wage or salary increases.

He pointed out that one major contributing factor to the failure of past initiatives to remove ‘ghost names’ has been the inadequate mechanisms to effectively identify, delete them and prevent their reappearance.

He said government will use the electronic approach which entails the capturing of biometric data of employees in the payroll system to shed fraud and impersonation.

Dr. Duffuor expressed confidence in this new approach in dealing with ghost names, mentioning that this method has been proven to be successful in most countries that have been experiencing payroll fraud

On the general outlook of the economy, Dr. Duffour indicated that as a result of prudent fiscal and monetary management, government has been able to bring down and maintain inflation at a single unit for the longest period in the nation’s history.

He said the agricultural sector has also seen tremendous growth and that crop yields have increased because of government’s dedication to the sector.

He said government has effectively harnessed available resources and used it efficiently to develop and maintain the economy to drive growth and improve living standards.

Dr. Duffour added that the country recorded one of it’s highest growth rates in history in 2010 with a 7.7% increase in GDP and in the process stimulating business activities, financial intermediates as well as wholesale and retail trade.

According to him, Gross International Reserves increased by $1.6 billion to $4.7 billion at the end of December 2010 translating on the average into 3.8 months of import cover for goods and services.

Domestic revenue as per the 2011 budget outlook was lower than expected as it dropped to 7.6% – lower than the expected target.

Despite all the positives, Dr. Duffour said the total revenue and grants also fell bellow the budget target by 9.4%.

He said the fiscal deficit on cash terms for the 2010 fiscal year was GH¢ 2,999.9 million equivalent to 6.5% of GDP against the target of GH¢ 1,945.1 million which is equivalent to 4.4% of GDP.

Government is however cautious of the fiscal target.

He said “government is mindful of fiscal and debt sustainability, hence the revised fiscal target indicates further reduction from 6.5% of GDP in 2010 to 5.1% in 2011.”

Source: Myjoyonline.com

Obed Asamoah is ungrateful – KT Hammond

The former Deputy Minister of Energy, Kobina Tahir Hammond has described Dr. Obed Yao Asamoah and the NDC returnees as ungrateful people who lack moral uprightness.

Mr. Hammond was quick to add President Mills to the list of ungrateful people expressing his shock at the President, for condoning verbal attacks on the former President despite knowing that it was the same president Rawlings who held his hand, coached him and nurtured him into politics.

He explained that Dr. Obed Asamoah, Goosie Tandoh and Kojo Tsikata left the NDC because former President Rawlings chose and stood by President Mills as the candidate to lead the party, in disagreement with many members who rejected Prof. Mills. He therefore wondered why these same people have returned to the person they fought against.

“I don’t like Rawlings but to sideline and insult him because he disagrees with President Mills after introducing him to politics is the height of disrespect”, he said.

Speaking on Adom FM on Wednesday July 13, Mr. Hammond described Dr. Asamoah as one of the politicians who have benefited hugely from the government of former President Rawlings; having worked as the Foreign Affairs Minister, Attorney General and Minister of Justice, insisting that to turn around against the former President after he had given him such opportunities is an indication of a lack of morality.

He said it is unfair for President Mills and his supporters to humiliate former President Rawlings and expect him to campaign for him in the 2012 elections, adding that, it was the same person who signed the party’s manifesto with his blood.

Asked about the future of President Mills, Mr. Hammond advised the former president to leave the NDC and form his own party if he believes he is popular and is capable of growing a party as the National Democratic Congress. He emphasized that the NDC cannot survive without Rawlings.

He accused Dr. Asamoah of double standards citing an incident when Dr. Asamoah insisted on maintaining the criminal libel law in the law books and even saying the repeal will be ‘over his dead body’.

Responding to calls for the NPP to rather focus on their own party and the challenges within it, the Adansi Asokwa MP emphasized that they remain focused but added that there was the need to draw attention to the problems in the NDC to demonstrate to the electorates that the party has lost control over its own internal affairs and cannot resolve the challenges facing the nation.

Asked about Nana Addo’s listening campaign, Mr. Hammond maintained that the party remains the preferred choice to govern the nation in 2012.

He rubbished the factionalism within the NPP, claiming that the NPP is more united and those initial factions that emerged in the party have been dissolved as a result of the entrenched democratic principles of the party.

The Member of Parliament for Ejumako Enyan Esiam and former coordinator of the Get Atta Mills Endorsed (GAME) team in the central region, Ato Forson challenged the NPP to “mind their own business” adding that the NPP has more factions within their party than the NDC.

He described Nana Addo’s Central regional tour as ‘playful’ adding that he is only visiting his own NPP members and cannot win additional votes in the region.

He said the concerns raised by the Konadu 2012 campaign team are baseless, but he added that the party was committed to resolving the minor differences that have emerged after the Sunyani Congress.

Source: Adom News

Parliament reads Renewable Energy Bill the second time

Parliament on Wednesday read the Renewable Energy Bill 2011 the second time and called on government to invest efforts in mitigating the negative environmental impact associated with traditional energy sources.

The 52 clause bill proceeds to the consideration stage where proposed amendments will be discussed on the floor of the House. The bill seeks to support and promote the exploitation, development, utilization and the efficient management of renewable energy sources.

It will also increase the percentage of renewable energy to about 10 per cent in the national energy mix and also regulate the fiscal regime and promote indigenous research and development to reduce the cost of renewable energy technology.

The bill is divided into eight sections that deal with preliminary provisions, special requirements relating to licenses, requirement for electricity generation, establishment and management of a renewable energy fund control, management of bio fuel and wood 96 fuel and miscellaneous provisions.

Mr Ernest Kofi Yaka, Vice Chairman of the Committee on Mines and Energy, in a report he presented on the floor of the House, said the passage of the bill would affirm government’s commitment and assurance to both local and international investors in renewable energy of the viability of their investment.

He said it would also demonstrate the country’s commitment to global climate change mitigation as well as lending support for international environment conventions such as the United Nations Framework for Climate Change, the International Renewable Energy Agency and the ECOWAS Centre for Renewable Energy among others.

Source: KA/GNA

NPP MP to drag Asiedu Nketia to court

The NPP Member of Parliament for the Manhyia Constituency, Dr Mathew Opoku Prempeh, has threatened to drag the NDC’s General Secretary, Johnson Asiedu Nketia, to the Supreme Court to explain comments he made about the recent District Assembly elections.

Mr. Opoku Prempeh’s threat stems from what he describes as a breach of the nation’s Constitution which bars political parties from actively participating in district assembly elections.

The NPP MP indicated that the NDC General Secretary, in his address to the NDC party delegates in Sunyani over the weekend, stated that “overall, NDC sympathizers scored over 60% countrywide” in the district assembly elections – the elections are supposed to be non-partisan.

Citing Article 248 of the Constitution, the Manhyia MP raised the issue on the floor of Parliament on Wednesday July 13 but was advised by the Speaker to take the matter to the courts.

He has however given indications that he would consult the leadership of the NPP to take appropriate action against the NDC General Secretary in the coming days.

In an interview with Citi News, Hon Prempeh claimed the NDC scribe obtained the statistics on how many of the candidates in the district assembly elections were NDC members because the party sponsored candidates.

However, Mr Samuel Ofosu Ampofo, Minister for Local Government, has rubbished the claims of the Manhyia MP, saying “I do not think that, that statement has breached the Constitution in any way.

“We monitored the assembly elections throughout the country and there is no evidence anywhere at all for us to establish that the NDC as a party sponsored candidates to contest the elections.

“The law states that parties cannot sponsor candidates but the Honorable Matthew Opoku Prempeh knows very well that after elections have been conducted, when you enter any district Assembly and you are a Member of Parliament there and your party chairman contested the election and won, you know that that person is an NPP or NDC person.

“If the NDC secretary contested the elections and won on his own merit without party sponsorship, it does not take anything away from him that his allegiance is to the NDC…

“So I do not think that the inference that the NDC General Secretary made, that people who are perceived to be favourably disposed to NDC won the assembly elections is by any stretch of the imagination a breach of the Constitution”.

Source: KA/citifmonline.com

Minority angry over Atta Akyea’s arrest

The Minority in Parliament has issued a stern and unequivocal warning to the government to desist from acts calculated at harassing and humiliating New Patriotic Party’s Members of Parliament.

The Minority caucus in Parliament Wednesday addressed the media and criticised the Attorney General for influencing the arrest of its member, Samuel Atta Akyea, the MP for Abuakwa South.

Mr Atta Akyea, was Tuesday waylaid by the police and arrested while in court for alleged theft and fraudulent breach of trust, pressed against him by a contractor, Joseph Adom of J. Adom Limited a construction firm.

The complainant accused Akyea of allegedly stealing $60,000. The MP has however denied any wrong doing.

He was admitted to GH¢100,000 bail with one surety.

The Speaker of Parliament Mrs Joyce Bamford Addo on Wednesday told the House that she ordered the release of the MP because police acted in violation of the constitution. She explained that the state will need permission from her before it can arrest an MP.

The Minority boiled over the arrest, said information they picked from the police points to the fact that “they effected the arrest at the instance of the Attorney-General”.

The Minority Leader, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, who spoke on behalf of the group, accused the A-G of rampantly exercising his power of arrest, an authority that ought to be used “very sparingly and with a great deal of circumspection”.

The Minority said: “Clearly the NDC has scant regard for due process and procedure; hence the resort to intimidation and unconventional practices.

“We hereby serve notice to the Attorney-General that the era of patapaa prosecution in the infamous public tribunal system, is behind us.”

“The Attorney general has bared his fangs. He is purposed to give a political coloration to a case between Hon. Atta Akyea and Joseph Adom, we can only assure him that such being his resolve, we will also appropriately position ourselves to do legal battle with him.”

The Minority was also not happy that while notable people in the country are admitted to self-recognisance bail, Mr Atta Akyea was granted bail to the tune of GH¢100,000; “One would say [the bail] is most incredulous, and that is prosecution and intimidation in NDC’s time.”

Source: KA/Myjoyonline.com

Speaker assures MPs of maximum protection

The Speaker of Parliament, Mrs Adeline Bamford Addo says she will go every length to provide maximum protection for sitting Members of Parliaments.

She says it is her responsibility to provide protection for all MPs who she superintends over and she will ensure she does not compromise their safety and security.

The speaker’s comment follows ordering for the release of the Member of Parliament (MP) for Abuakwa South, Mr Samuel Atta Akyea after he had been arrested by the Police yesterday for defrauding a customer.

The Speaker on the floor of Parliament today states that she personally called the Inspector General of Police Mr Paul Tawiah Quaye to release the MP as she had not been pre-informed of his arrest.

The Parliamentarians this morning had cause to complain to the Speaker over their own safety and the manner in which their colleague was arrested.

But Mrs Bamford Addo states that she has the MPs welfare at heart and she will ensure they do their legitimate work without any threat to their freedom or lives.

Mr Atta Akyea was yesterday July, 12, 2011arrested and charged with stealing and fraudulent breach of trust by the Commercial Crime Unit of the Ghana Police Service.

The MP who was arrested on the premises of the Accra High Court, where he was scheduled to be witness to a case pending before the court, was later granted bail in the sum of GH¢100,000 with one surety

According to police sources, Mr Akyea was arrested for his alleged role in the embezzlement of US$60,000 earmarked by J. Adom Company Limited for the purchase of a building situated in the Airport Residential Area in Accra.

The MP has however denied the charges.

Story by : Kwadwo Anim/ghanamps.gov.gh

Parliament hails South Sudan

Ghana’s Parliament on Tuesday hailed South Sudan on her attainment of independence after a long and bloody struggle. A statement delivered by Ms Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey, New Patriotic Party member for Weija said “South Sudan became a republic taking its destiny into its own hands.”

The ceremony, according to her, attracted dignitaries across the world including the Secretary General of the United Nations, Mr Ban Ki Moon and Ghana’s Speaker of Parliament Mrs Joyce Bamford–Addo, that saw General Salva Kir Mayardit sworn-in as the first President of the new nation.

She noted that though the major stride had been taken, some key issues such as sharing the oil revenues were still unresolved and the status of the Abyei region could be potential sources of trouble. “The major issue is who controls the oil revenue, majority of the oil fields are in the south but the pipelines to export the oil currently cuts through the north,” she said.

“The festivities are on but the challenges confronting this new and fragile state cannot merely be wished away,” she said, adding that challenges such as citizenship, debt relief, resettlement of more than 150,000 soldiers and militia needed to be dealt with in dispatch.

She noted that the new state was also saddled with fundamental developmental problems such as the lack of basic infrastructure like roads, health and educational facilities. She indicated that the country did not produce anything and was almost wholly depended on oil proceeds. “Decades of wars had resulted in the abandoning of agriculture with much of the food imported from neighboring Kenya and Uganda,” she said.

She said a new nation of 92 per cent illiterate population would hamper its development progress. She noted that though in a precarious situation, the South Sudan’s numerous resources including 80 per cent of Sudan’s oil reserves, large deposits of gold, iron and copper were yet to be exploited.

“We wish South Sudan well,” she said, and called on the international community to offer South Sudan long-term support to fund her essential services.

Source: GNA

Speaker confirms role in Atta Akyea’s release

The Speaker of Parliament, Mrs Adeline Bamford Addo has confirmed that she ordered for the release of the Member of Parliament (MP) for Abuakwa South, Mr Samuel Atta Akyea from the grips of the Police.

According to the Speaker, the arrest of the MP was a breech of parliamentary Act, quoting Article 22 of the Parliamentary Act, she said the speaker ought to be notified in such cases.

Mrs Bamford Addo noted on the floor of Parliament that she personally called the Inspector General of Police Mr Paul Tawiah Quaye to release the MP as she had not been informed prior to the arrest.

Mr Atta Akyea was yesterday July, 12, 2011arrested and charged with stealing and fraudulent breach of trust by the Commercial Crime Unit of the Ghana Police Service.

The MP who was arrested on the premises of the Accra High Court, where he was scheduled to be witness to a case pending before the court, was later granted bail in the sum of GH¢100,000 with one surety

According to police sources, Mr Akyea was arrested for his alleged role in the embezzlement of US$60,000 earmarked by J. Adom Company Limited for the purchase of a building situated in the Airport Residential Area in Accra.

The MP has however denied the charges.

Stoby by : Anita Yaa Boakye / ghanamps.gov.gh