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South Tongu risks losing about 5 towns to sea erosion — MP

Member of Parliament (MP) for South Tongu, Kobena Mensah Woyome  said the country risks losing about five communities in the coastal part of the constituency if urgent steps are not taken to avert the sea from washing away those communities.

He said because the areas is the estuary where the river empties into the sea, the devastating effect of the tidal waves, coupled with the effect of the rivers own actions on the communities around the coastal part of the constituency poses grave danger to people living there.

He said a tour of the area yesterday in the company of the chiefs and the District Chief Executive attests that the situation is getting serious as some towns are being submerged forcing people to start moving their items with the hope of eventually relocating.

The area, he indicated extend from Anyanui all the way to Kedzi.

Making a contribution during a press briefing organised by the Minority MPs from the Volta Region, on the plight of the affected communities and government’s inactions, he said he had to call the VRA to also move into action to intervene because they have a responsibility towards communities around the estuary, stating that VRA has sited a dredger at Adafor but for so many years they have not being working and not helping the communities.

He the inaction of VRA is having serious effects on the people. There have been meeting, there have been discussions and there have been promises by the VRA and Ministry of Energy, in fact they come in and make promises, but nothing comes out of it. As my colleague earlier said, the rhetoric I think it must end now because people’s live and properties are at stake, and there is the need for action now”

Dominic Shirimori/Ghanamps.com

Commence the Blekusu Coastal Protection Project to give hope to the people – Gomashie

Madam Dzifa Gomashie, Member of Parliament for Ketu South, one of the constituencies affected by the devastation of last Sunday’s tidal wave is calling for an immediate commencement of the Phase II of the sea defence project (Blekusu Project).

The 8 kilometers Blekusu Coastal Protection Project, which forms the second face, she noted, is the only and sustainable way of solving the recurring problem bedeviling coastal communities in those three constituencies.

 Speaking on the floor of the House on Tuesday, November 9, 2021 on the unfortunate conditions of the affected communities, she said the ” only consolation is the immediate start of the defence project’.

She said many comforting words were said in previous such situations that befell the people in March, May, and in November similar words are being expressed without the accompanying action, and this is getting frustrating.

The MP who admitted shedding tears on seeing the devastation the caused by nature said, even the very community she took the Works and Housing Minister to during previous occurrences has been washed away.

According to her, since Sunday when the disaster occurred, nothing in the form of relief has been sent to the affected people.

However, looking at the extent of damage, government should have moved in swiftly to comfort the people with the necessary relief items.

The Ketu South MP said the long closure of the borders has already worsened the economic lives of the people, many of whom are struggling with their finances, and the current situation would be unbearable without the needed external support.

The MP for Keta who also added to the contribution said even some communities who for the past 40 years never experienced tidal wave disaster have not been spared this time.

He said government through the National Disaster Management Organisation would have to move in soonest to support the over 3000 individuals affected by the disaster.

Dominic Shirimori /Ghanamps.com

Committee working on anti LGBTQI+ to start work next week—Deputy Majority Leader

Deputy Majority Leader, Alexander Kwamena Afenyo Markin has revealed to Parliament   that, the Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Committee would start its work on the anti LGBTQI Bill next week.

According to him the Committee has received about one hundred and fifty memoranda from civil society and some Ghanaians which need to be considered by the Committee before they present their final report.

And further noted that the Committee has agreed to meet with all the ten groups and individuals who presented memorandum and listen to their explanation.

“The Committee would need fifteen weeks to meet all those who have submitted memorandum to the Committee before its final report is prepared and sent to the floor of the House”.

Mr. Afenyo Markin made this known to the House, when the Deputy Minority Whip, .Mr. Ahmed Ibrahim asked for the current position and preparations of the Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Committee on the Anti LGBTQI+ Bill in order to get Ghanaians informed on the Bill.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

2022 annual budget estimate rescheduled to November 15, 2021— Afenyo Markin

The Deputy Majority Leader, Alexander Kwamena Afenyo- Markin has disclosed that the earlier communicated date for the presentation of next year’s budget which was scheduled for November, 17, has been revised to November 15, 2021, as, MPs are to attend a post budget workshop on November 18, 2021.

He made the disclosure on Friday, November 5, 2021 when he presented the business statement for the ensuing week on the floor of the House.

He said, this would enable members of Parliament to equip themselves well in order to contribute meaningfully during the debate on the 2022 annual budget estimate which would begin on 22 of November, 2021.

Meanwhile, nine Ministers are supposed to come to the floor to answer forty-seven (47) questions of which there are nine (9) urgent questions and thirty-eight (38) oral questions.

Roads and Highways Minister is supposed to come to the House to answer ten (10) questions, Food and Agriculture eight (8) Education nine (9), while Energy and Finance are supposed to take six questions each.

The others are Attorney General and Justice Ministry two (2), Transport four (4) and Chieftaincy Religious Affairs one (1) as well as Tourism Arts and Culture one (1).

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Minority jabs the Majority on its attempt to undermine authority of Rt. Hon Speaker

The Minority in Ghana’s Parliament have taken a swipe at the Leadership of the Majority side of the House in its attempt to undermine the authority of the Rt. Hon Speaker Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, and said they are trying to weaken the Institution of Parliament.

According to them, Ghana is governed by law and they, the Minority would always uphold the cardinal principles of natural justice guaranteed under the Constitution.

In a statement issues by the Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu, they serve notice that, “We will continue to uphold and respect those democratic values and ethos”.

Read below the statement issues by the Minority Leader: The Bare Facts

Indeed, the Ghana Police attempted to arrest Hon. Francis Xavier Sosu, the MP for Madina on the 25th of October 2021, the day of the demonstration without reference to Rt. Hon Speaker as required under articles 117 and 118 of the 1992 Constitution.

The MP complained to the House about the Police Service’s attempt to arrest him without following the laid down procedures and the matter was subsequently referred to the Committee of Privileges by the Speaker.

Again, the police attempted to arrest him on Sunday 31st October 2021 while he was worshiping in church. This was in spite of the fact that the police wrote to the Speaker on 27th October, 2021 and the Speaker replied and reiterated the fact that there is a procedure that is to be followed with respect to inviting a Member of Parliament to assist in investigations and until that procedure is followed, he as Speaker would not entertain their request. Criminal summons was subsequently issued against the MP with charges to appear before the court on 8th November, 2021

The Majority Leadership is being mischievous and disingenuous by ignoring the fact that the Police refused to comply with the established protocols of dealing with matters affecting MPs by not first of all contacting the Speaker who would have then made the necessary arrangements for them to meet with the affected MP.

The Majority Leadership has lost its way for abandoning the truth and the facts of this Francis-Xavier Sosu matter. The Rt. Speaker of the 8th Parliament of the Fourth Republic of Ghana has not changed any rule. The request of the Police Service for release of MPs who have complaints lodged against them at the Police Service are invited to the Office of the Speaker. After listening to them, the Speaker will then inform them of the decision to release them to the Police Service for investigation.

Again, the Speaker will then convey his decision to the Investigators and remind them of the practice established by his predecessors of conducting the investigations in the Conference Room of the Speaker in the presence of their lawyers. The MPs are informed of the date to appear and attend to the investigations and to answer the enquiries of the Investigators and the MPs comply This is the practice.

In the case of Hon Francis Xavier Kojo Sosu, the Police Service neither invited him directly nor through the Rt. Hon. Speaker. The Police personnel went to his constituency where he was performing his duties as an MP in the company of Police officers lawfully detailed by the Regional Police Service to provide guidance and protection for him and a procession of youth in the Madina Constituency against the sorry state of roads in the constituency to arrest him. He was then addressing the constituents. In such a situation, the constituents will do everything to protect their MP. His personal bodyguard, lawfully assigned to him by the Parliament Police Protection Unit, a Division of the Ghana Police Service, managed to drive the MP out of danger and to safety.

The Hon Sosu then became a wanted man by the Police. It is on record, that the Speaker contacted the MP who confirmed the story.

Convinced that this conduct of the Police constituted contempt of Parliament, the MP drew the attention of Parliament at a plenary sitting to the breach. By the Standing Orders of Parliament, the Speaker has the discretion to either refer or decline reference to the Privileges Committee. The facts and evidence adduced by the MP in the complaint raised serious concerns that merit investigation by the Parliamentary Committee. The Speaker therefore referred the complaint to the Committee for investigation and report to the House. It is the House that will decide whether the conduct as investigated constituted contempt of Parliament or not. It is not the Speaker who will take that decision. And this is public record.

As to complaint by the Majority Leadership of the Speaker not consulting the Leaders on such matters the law on instructions from suspects to a lawyer or a person in a similar role is privileged information. The Minority is therefore of the firm belief that Speaker was not convinced that these are information subject to disclosure to third parties.

While we believe that the Speaker is open to better knowledge and advice on this matter, we are sure the Speaker doubts the legal validity of the opinion of the Majority Leadership in this matter who totally disagrees with same.

The issuance of this Press Statement by the Majority Caucus leadership is unwarranted for two reasons. Firstly, they are aware that the Speaker and the Leaders are not in the country and secondly a criminal summons has already been issued and as such the police should follow the laid down procedures as per articles 117 and 118.

The rule of law is not about selective justice. The rule of law abhors persecution and selective prosecution. What the Minority despise is the fact that only Minority MPs are wrong and are being persecuted. The Minority has no intention to undermine the very laws that has ensured the stability of our society and sustained our democracy. We, therefore, wish to remind the Majority that they cannot continue to connive with the Executive to use the security agencies to abuse some sections of Ghanaians including non-NPP MPs under the cloak of rule of law.

We are inviting the whole country to see how the Majority Leadership in conjunction with the Executive wants to undermine the forward march of our democracy and we call on all Ghanaians to resist this creeping dictatorship in our body politic.

What wrong has the Rt. Hon Speaker done in this whole matter?

On 29th October, 2021 the Rt. Hon Speaker directed the Deputy Director of Legal Services of Parliament to inform the Police that he was unable to release the Hon Member for Madina but added that it is the expectation of the Rt. Hon Speaker that the Ghana Police Service will conduct its investigations mindful of the provisions of articles 117, 118 and 122″

Consequently, the Parliamentary Service of Ghana in a Press Release dated 3rd November, 2021, by a Deputy Clerk (on behalf of the Clerk to Parliament) reiterated the position of the Rt. Hon Speaker and noted that

-Members of Parliament are not above the law. The issue is not that a Member of Parliament cannot be investigated or arrested. The issue is the procedure to follow to investigate or arrest a Member of Parliament.

The Rt. Hon Speaker further added that

—the Police Service requires the support of everyone to conduct their affairs and that support will be granted, provided their services are within the boundaries of the law and rules established by the provisions of the 1992 Constitution and other laws governing democracy and all civilized societies. “

As we have indicated, the Minority will always uphold the rule of law.

The Hon Member for Madina will subject himself to the appropriate lawful authorities when those agencies follow due process. We shall not be cowed into servitude by persons who claim and chat “rule of law”, encourage and champion the “power of arrest” by Police only when the person of interest is a member of the Opposition. Let us all be guided by the provisions in Order 30 of the Standing Orders of Parliament and articles 117, 118 and 122 of the 1992 Constitution. The Majority should not pick and choose the provisions of the Constitution and other laws of the country. They cannot engage in continuous “legal fishing” by picking and interpreting provisions and precedents for their own parochial partisan benefit.

We are disappointed in the Majority for this needless attack on the Office of the Speaker.

We in the Minority will always support a stronger Parliament to serve the public better and to hold the Executive accountable.

Signed:

Mr. Haruna Iddrisu

Hon Minority Leader

4th November, 2021

Ghanamps.com

Mahama advocates for Speaker of ECOWAS to consider Mali and Guinea getting representation

Rapporteur of ECOWAS Parliament’s Committee on Political Affairs, Peace, Security and African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM), Mahama Ayariga is advocating for Speaker of the Parliament to consider getting the transitional government in both Mali and Guinea to get representatives to the Community Parliament as they work to revert back to constitutional government.

According to him it is a matter that the Speaker can decide on and “I would recommend that the Speaker finds ways of getting the government their representatives”.

“It’s better they are represented than they are not represented at all, I think that going back to my international law, we may as West Africa not recognise the military regime, but if the rest of the world does then they become lawful constituted authority of that country”, he said in an interview.

Mr. Ayariga said this in an interview when Ghanamps.com wanted to know what happens to both countries representation despite the coup in those countries the Community Parliament is going on with its activities.

According to him, he sympathizes with the military junta in Guinea Conakry because the transitional period given them by the Authority of Heads of States for them to move to constitutional rule is too short.

And advocate that, they should consider extending their time, “otherwise they would consider extending their time and ECOWAS would lose out morally on all grounds”, he said.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Cashew farmers need better pricing regime to sustain production – Techiman North MP

The Techiman North Member of Parliament, Elizabeth Ofosu-Adjare has asked the government to create enabling environment for the private sector to invest in the cashew industry particular with value addition, adding that the current practice of exporting the raw cashew is not generating enough returns compared to when the country add value to it.

The MP told the media after presenting a statement on the floor of the House on Thursday, November 4, 2021 on the Pricing of Cashew that the current low prices at which farmers sell their cashew is not motivating the farmers, to the extent that some farmers are compelled to leave the cashew on the farm to rot.

According to her, like cocoa, cashew is also a cash crop that can fetch the country huge sums of revenue when the sector is properly enhanced.
It also provides job opportunities to the people from which they earn their income. As such the attention that is given to the cocoa sector would have to be extended to the cashew sector.

She admitted that though in the last 10 years, cashew development has gone up in the country, pricing remains a difficult task; adding that unlike cocoa, there is no way the cashew farmers are able to know how much their cashew would be sold, “and so, it gets to a point where a kilo of cashew goes for one Ghana Cedis, and so what the farmers do is to leave the cashew in the farms to rot.”

“The issue of pricing is still a problem because till today, there is no general pricing or proper pricing of cashew in the country, hence there is always a fight between the cashew farmers, cashew buyers, cashew exporters and cashew processors.

We think the time has come for government to be strong on pricing of cashew like it does for cocoa, because they are all tree crops and are all exportable.”

The Techiman MP again indicated that it is laudable that government has gone a step further and ensured the passage of the Tree Crop Regulatory Act, 2019 (Act1010) which mandated the government to create a board for tree crops including cashew, and to have them in all the regions. But they are not present in all the regions as at yet.

Madam Ofosu-Adjare advised government to learn some best practices from the largest cashew producer in Africa, La Cote d’Ivoire which provides incentives for processing cashew in the country, where as raw exporters of the produce are made to pay some tax.

She also appealed to government to make the Tree Crops Development Authority available in all the regions to regulate the activities of cashew farmers, help institute measures to add value to the cashew, as well as work on better pricing for the commodity.

Ghanamps.com

Ayariga advocates for review on country reports presented in ECOWAS Parliament

A member of Ghana’s delegation to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Parliament, Mahama Ayariga, is advocating for the review of how Country reports are presented in the Parliament.

According to him unless there is a review of how country reports are presented during Ordinary Sessions, “we would continue to have very jaundice report of the various member states which would make it very difficult for MPs to know what is actually happening in member states”.

In an interview, he further proposed that within a member state, if there are ten member delegations from a member state, with two dominant political parties and an independent, the opposition, ruling government and independent members should present their various reports to the Parliament.

“This is better than, they pretending to write a compromise report and present it to the Parliament. Sometimes the truth is buried and I think the reporting mechanisms should change for us to get the different perspectives of development in those countries for us to capture the full picture of the situation in the country.”

Then we can debate it and make the appropriate recommendations for action to be taken, and added that what he is seeing of reports being presented does not reflect what is happening in various member states.

ECOWAS Parliament

 “That is why sometimes we are taken by surprises because the truth is buried; you cannot bury the truth forever it would come out one day”.

 He said in an interview with Ghanamps.com, when questioned about if his suggestion would not take too much time of the Parliament that has a lot to do, that the report should come way ahead of time and not when MPs are in plenary.

“We have been quite inefficient, it is just being efficient, we could get the reports quite well in advance before we meet in Abuja, it is a matter of giving all countries deadline that your report should come this or that date otherwise it would not be admitted then they would make sure the reports come each side would present reports and capture what they have to capture. It is up to you the individual MP to read the report”.

Again, the obligation is for the report to be presented and the individual MPs reading the report. “If you do not do that it is your own problem”, he stated.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Let’s keep away from comments that would escalate police and Sosu’s issue—Afenyo

The Deputy Majority Leader, Alexander Kwamena Afenyo Markin has urged members of Parliament, especially those on the Minority side to stop all forms of comments that would escalate tension on the police and Madina MP, Mr. Francis Xavier Sosu in the media.

According to him, the media would always like to strive hard to get their stories but in order to maintain peace on the matter, members of Parliament should hold themselves from commenting on the matter.

Mr. Afenyo Markin further advised Mr. Sosu to hold himself well in order to cooperate with the appropriate authorities handling the matter in order to get to the bottom of the case since he is not the first person as an MP to have suffered such incident.

His comments came up when the deputy minority Chief Whip and MP for Banda, Mr. Ahmed Ibrahim raised concerns about a press statement from the Majority caucus which was released on Thursday, November 5, 2021.

Mr. Ahmed Ibrahim noted that the Majority caucus’ release seems to implicate the Rt Hon Speaker of Parliament, Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin for being a stumbling block in the way of the police when he refused to releasing the Madina MP, Mr. Sosu to the police to carry their investigations and others processes.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

“Let us elect MMDCEs to avoid nomination and confirmation brouhaha”—Garu MP

Member of Parliament for Garu, Albert Akuka Alalzuuga is advocating for the election of Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executive (MMDCEs) in the wake of the brouhaha that was wittiness at the confirmation of some MMDCEs.

According to him whether it would be on partisan or not, there should be a process of queuing to vote like it’s done for MPs and Presidents during general elections.

When they are elected, he said no one would go fighting around saying he or she deserves to be an MMDCE and the political propaganda would be curbed. “It is not the best for us to continue this way, nomination and confirmation, the confusion we witnessed”, he lamented in an interview.

The former DCE for Garu said what he witnessed in Garu was better as there was no violence despite the first confirmation of the DCE did not go through, but there was heavy presence of the police, “I told them we were heading towards a disaster, one day why should a confirmation of a DCE witness heavy presence of the police?”

Again, “why should someone coming to be an agent of development being a link between the districts, lobbying central government for projects, why should we have such difficulties?”

He recounted that in 2013 as a former DCE, he had only the police commander and the driver with two police personnel witnessing the whole process.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com