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Minority to hit the street if locked-up medical supplies are not cleared within two weeks

The Ranking member on the Health Committee of Parliament Kwabena Minta Akando has given indications that the Minority side would hit the street to demonstrate if medications locked-up at the port are not totally cleared.

According to him the Minority reasonable enough and would adhere to the two weeks request by the Health Minister to do the needful.

Addressing members of the Parliamentary Press Corps on Thursday, June 20, 2024, he pointed out that the Minority will not relent on its effort to ensure medications locked up at the port are totally cleared.

“We have heard the pleading of the Minister of Health that we should give him two weeks; it does not make sense for the Minister to ask for two weeks, for medical commodities that have been at the port for one year”.

Again, within the two weeks’ timeline, all containers containing the commodities should be cleared from the port; not some as they have been doing; clear few and go and sleep, we would not tolerate that, he added.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

No load shedding – Minister tells Parliament House

The Minister for Energy Dr. Mathew Opoku Prempeh has told Parliament that as at the time an urgent question was filed to question if the country was going through load shedding, there was no load shedding as indicated by the Electricity Company of Ghana.

According to him he has been on the floor of the House on three occasions to answer the urgent question filed in the name of the Member of Parliament for Tamale North.

He further pointed out that per the reasons given by the ECG, there were outages due to a number of reasons and they were mostly localized outages.

He pointed out a perfect example to be East Legon which is a residential area but has some industries in the vicinity, leading to over loaded lines and transformers being over loaded, thus, transformers needed to be upgraded to contain the overload.

“There are power leakages which cause complete power shutdown, plan maintenance on Amandi power plant ongoing at the same time GRICo also requested a shutdown.

ECG said they were not load shedding because those outages were not planned so they could not have come out to say they were load shedding”.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

First female Deputy Majority Leader

Hon Sarah Adwoa Safo Member of Parliament for Dome/Kwabenya is the first female to ascend to the number 2 position as Deputy Majority Leader under the Fourth Republic in Ghana and was in the 7th Parliament of the Fourth Republican Constitution of Ghana.

Sarah Adwoa Safo, a lawyer by profession, born on December 28, 1981 is a Ghanaian lawyer and politician. She is the New Patriotic Party Member of Parliament (2013–2024) for the Dome Kwabenya Constituency of the Greater Accra Region of Ghana.

She obtained an L.L.B from the University of Ghana, B.L from the Ghana Law School and an L.L.M from George Washington University U.S.A.

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Minority caucus endorses ‘hands off our hotel’ demonstration

The Minority in Ghana’s Parliament has endorsed Tuesday’s June 18, 2024, demonstration dabbed “hands off our hotels”.

According to the Minority, the demonstration has been called to protest against the Akufo-Addo/Dr. Bawumia led government’s shady sale of state-owned hotels to a cabinet Minister of Agriculture, Bryan Acheampong.

In a statement signed by the Minority chief whip, Governs Kwame Agbodza pointed out that the deal which is a transfer of a profitable state-owned hotel to a cabinet minister further confirms the cronyism, official corruption and state capture which have become the hallmark of the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) government.

This adds to the long list of questionable arrangements which make Ghanaians wonder whether members of the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government are committed to improving the lot of the people or only see political power as an avenue to enrich themselves by grabbing state-owned businesses and strategic state assets for themselves.

“We therefore want to use this opportunity to indicate the Minority’s strong opposition to the sale of these hotels to the Minister of Agriculture, Hon Bryan Acheampong, and urge the public to join Tuesday’s ‘Hands Off Our Hotels’ demonstration to send a strong signal to the government that the people of Ghana take exception to this shady deal, the Minority emphasized.

Ghanamps.com

Dompreh encourages Minority whip to encourage his colleagues to rally support for Agenda 111 project

Majority chief whip Frank Annoh Dompreh has commended his colleague the Minority chief whip Governs Kwame Agbodza for believing in Agenda 111 when he said the funds used for digging a big hole purported for the national cathedral could have been used for Agenda 111 policy of the NPP government to build one hundred and elven hospitals.

According to him it’s refreshing; and he urged him to convince his other colleagues to come on board in support of the Agenda 111 policy, since the policy is indeed practicable and it’s a critical project that would affect the health infrastructure of this country.

He further pointed out that the call for investigation into the ‘big hole’ dug for the national cathedral by Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa is a call in the right direction and the Majority Leader Alexander Afenyo-Markin should consider it.

He was however quick to point out that currently there is no motion before the floor of the House on the issue concerning the national cathedral and the Adaklu MP who is in support of the issues raised by his colleague is a member of the Business Committee and knows what to do.

“You either fill a question or you make your point as a member of the Business Committee so that this issue would be considered. But for now you are on your own; it’s not officially before the House. How do we investigate a matter that is not before us?” He queried.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Minority whip calls for investigation into NHIA ICT budget

The Minority chief whip Governs Kwame Agbodza is advocating that Parliament set up a committee to investigate budget allocated to the National Health Insurance Authority on its ICT since the amount allocated is more than a budget for a lot of ministries.

According to him the NHIA ICT budget has always been in the hundreds of millions of Ghana cedis; and it is like the ICT infrastructure is replaced every year. Sometimes it is three hundred million Ghana cedis; other times two hundred million Ghana cedis.

“So, we should set up a committee to look into it; why NHIA spends so much of that amount, how can we justify that and ensure that money is not being wasted? The presiding chair indicated that it was viable proposal as a condition precedent. We were going to set up a committee since then we’ve not heard the leader setting up the committee”, Agbodza stated.

“Again, looking at the budget line since I have been in the House since 2013, members have had cause to complain about the budget size of the NHIA on ICT.”

Responding to the Minority chief whip as he presented the business statement on the floor of the House and the issue came up, Majority Leader Alexander Afenyo-Markin pointed out that the day the matter in question came up on the floor of the House he referred it to the chair presiding and he indicated that the matter was not properly before the House and that if a call is being made for an investigation, “we know what to do. It is not for me to act in a matter that is being described, let our colleagues use the proper channel and we will all support it”, he pointed out.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Bedzrah blames sub-regional conflicts on boundaries demarcation

Member of Parliament for Ho West Emmanuel Kwasi Bedzrah has attributed wars and conflicts within the sub-region to boundaries that are not well demarcated, and used his constituency in Ghana that shares boundary with Togo as an example.

Mr Bedzrah who was contributing to a statement by the Lands and Natural Resources Minister to mark the fourteenth Africa Boarder Day also pointed out that there is a town in his constituency where citizens of both Ghana and Togo live together as one people. The only thing that divides the two towns is a boundary post and that still makes it difficult to know which side is Ghana and which side is Togo.

“I decided to build a school block there for them to learn English; half belongs to Togo and the other half to Ghana. The Ghana side people did not take it easy with me, they were of the view that I was taking over the land of Volta Akyem and Ashanti people”.

“They were thinking I was taking over the land completely. Even in the 2016 election, my opponent went to the town to create problem for me; when it comes to issue of elections it creates problem for us. At Haligba Togbe you cannot say this people belong to Ghana or Togo”, he emphasized.

Again, they have one chief who presides over both Ghana and Togo and our border demarcation should be done with this background at our mind that, if you have people at the border line deal with it carefully. There is one town at Agotime Ziope where the main road going to Akatsi North divides Ghana from Togo even that, he said.

More interesting is the fact that the Ghanaian electrical polls are cited in Togo land; you can buy food with either Ghana cedis or Togo CFA. These imaginary lines are creating problems for us in our sub-region. “The Minister and Boundary Commission should have a human face when it comes to the demarcation of our borders lines”.

According to the MP, “there is also another town called Hawluta, a border town; the immigration people were harassing my people in that community. They see them as Togolese, but they are Ghanaians. We should be careful that it does not get to election time and we start demarcating imaginary border towns, we will have problem with ourselves. We are all the same people, he cautioned.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Parliament to engage EC, NCCE ahead of election 2024

Ahead of Ghana’s general elections, Speaker of the House Rt. Hon Alban K. Sumana Bagbin has given indications that the House will have an engagement with constitutionally created bodies like the electoral Commission, Commission for Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) to discuss how the legislature can collaborate and work with them.

This, he added is important to inspire confidence and faith in the electoral process as well as create free, fair and credible elections on December 7, 2024.

The Rt. Hon Speaker further identified other bodies to be engaged to include the National Security, Council of State, flagbearers of the various political parties and National officers as well as the presidency.

Again, the police service, he noted should be the security agency to be seen on election day and not the military. The military should be called in only when they are needed; and added further that the military should not be at the polling stations.

He noted that the happenings in the country leading to the 2024 general elections are not good, hence the need to give assurance to Ghanaians. “It is not good that the EC organized an exercise of writing names where people carry gun and knife. What about when we are going to vote and the results are announced and someone else has carried the day and not the other, I am picturing what will happen”, he added.

Furthermore, the joblessness and homelessness, hopelessness of the youth cannot be taken lightly, we must act together and now to prevent a journey to calamity or a journey of no return, he advised.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Boundary Commission working to ensure nation’s boundaries are protected — Minister assures

The Minister for Lands and Natural Resources Samuel A. Jinapor has commended the Ghana Boundary Commission for its work over the years in ensuring that the nation’s international boundaries and territorial sovereignty is always protected.

In a statement on the floor of the House to commemorate this year’s fourteenth Africa Border Day which is marked June 7 every year, following the adoption of the Africa Union Convention on Cross Border Cooperation known as the ‘Niamey Convention’, he affirmed that the Commission has helped the nation to uphold international law to resolve boundary disputes through peaceful cooperation and has been recognized on the continent leading to other countries engaging the Commission to learn from them.

This year’s celebration is on the theme “Educate an African fit for the twenty-first century, building resilient education system for increase access to inclusive, lifelong, quality and relevant learning in Africa”.

The Minister, however, noted that to scale up the work of the commission to achieve greater impact, it is important to engage and empower border communities including traditional authorities, border security communities, municipal and district assemblies in border areas together with other stakeholders to create significant awareness.

Border communities, he noted, often bear the brunt of border-related challenges, including cross-border conflicts illegal migration and transnational organized crime, hence “we can safeguard our boundaries by involving the relevant stakeholders in the decision making process and providing them with the necessary knowledge and resources to foster a sense of ownership and responsibility.”

In addition, education also serves as a powerful tool in promoting inter-cultural dialogue, tolerance and mutual understanding that counter the narrative of hate and division that fuel extremist ideologies.

To create a formidable defense against the forces of violence and extremism, the youth can be empowered to  become active agents of change within their communities, so that the forces of violence and extremism which often target vulnerable populations including the youth in border communities will not be achieved.

Furthermore, by promoting cross-border exchanges, economic cooperation, and joint development projects, we can overcome the barriers that divide us and create stronger, more resilient border communities, he added.

The Minister asserts that the profound words of our first President, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, that “Africa is one continent, one people and one nation,” must continue to inspire us, and lead us to recommit ourselves to the ideals of unity, solidarity, and cooperation that underpin the African Union, while recognizing that our borders are not barriers to be feared but bridges to be crossed in pursuit of a shared future of peace, prosperity, and progress for all Africans.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Majority Leader cautions media against unnecessary sensationalism ahead of election 2024

Majority Leader Alexander Afenyo-Markin has cautioned the media against raising unnecessary political temperature ahead of Ghana’s December 7, 2024, presidential and Parliamentary elections.

He thus admonished the media to ensure that unnecessary issues that would generate tension are not brought to the front burner.

According to him the media should be a restraining tool on politicians as sometimes politicians forget themselves, and get carried away.

“We want votes and we think everything is permissible; it is for you especially the media when you see us as your friends to put the bitter pill on our lips and tell us this will not help the country. If you also do your ‘sayoo and sayoo’ and the country is burning it will burn all of us”, he emphasized.

He made these remarks at a media engagement with members of the Parliamentary Press Corps (PPC) when a media engagement was held with leadership of the House, as a way of briefing the press on what to expect during the third meeting of the fourth session.

He reminded the media that in the even there is crises and they run to Togo, “you cannot speak French, same with Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso. Even if you run to Nigeria your Ghana man accent will give you out, all we have is Ghana, let us value it.”

In addition, he urged civil society to be vibrant and proactive and to be interested in issues of governance, due diligence particularly with issues that affect the public purse when properly done by government will go a long way to better the lives of Ghanaians.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com