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* 29.01.2010

NPP Congress In Limbo

* Source: Daily Guide

THE POSSIBILITY of the Ashanti Regional branch of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) holding its regional delegates’ congress at the Cultural Centre in Kumasi today has once again hit the rocks.

This follows the refusal of a Kumasi High Court 2 to strike out an interlocutory injunction order sought on the congress by Nana Adu Asabere, former Asante Akim North NPP constituency chairman.

On Wednesday, December 23, 2009, Nana Adu Asabere sought an order of interlocutory injunction from the court restraining the national and regional executives of the party from holding the regional delegates’ congress.

His beef at the time was that 14 constituencies in the region were yet to organize their constituency elections to select their officers, hence the organization of a regional delegates’ congress would disenfranchise delegates from those constituencies.

Before Nana Asabere’s action, the party’s national secretariat in conjunction with the regional office had fixed the regional congress for Wednesday, December 30.

This was after the initial slated date of Wednesday, November 15, 2009 could not work due to some outstanding court litigations filed by some of the constituency members.

When the case was first called on Monday, January 11, 2010, the court did not strike out the order but instead extended its duration and adjourned the case to Wednesday, January, 27, 2010.

At that sitting, counsel for the plaintiff, Owusu Sekyere, prayed the court to extend the duration of the order because eight more constituencies were yet to hold their elections.

This was after counsel for the defendants, Sir Dennis Agyei, had pleaded with the court to lift the injunction to enable the defendants organize the regional congress.

The extension of the order again destroyed the plan of the party as it was hoping to organize the congress on Tuesday, January, 19, 2010, to pave way for the national delegates’ congress to be held.

For now, all regions apart from the Ashanti Region have conducted their regional delegates’ congresses to elect officers to oversee the running of the party for the next four years.

Nursing the hope that the court would strike out the injunction order at the sitting yesterday, the National Council, which is the second highest decision-making body of the party, at its meeting in Accra last Friday fixed the much-awaited congress for today.

But this plan was shattered yesterday when the court presided over by Justice Jacob Boon failed to strike out the injunction order which was sought on Wednesday, December 23, 2009.

Determined to convince Justice Boon to strike out the injunction order, Mr. Agyei told the court that all constituencies in the region except one have conducted their elections.

Still trying to persuade the court to lift the injunction order, the Ashanti Regional President of the Ghana Bar Association (GBA) drew the court’s attention to the fact that Article 7 of the party’s constitution stipulates that the party can hold a regional congress when one third of the delegates are confirmed.

Contending that the plaintiff’s action had become mute with respect to time, Mr. Agyei pleaded with the court to consider the supreme interest of the party, not individuals, and therefore lift the injunction to enable the party hold its congress.

He contended that the party is working according to a schedule; therefore, the continuous postponement of the regional congress due to the injunction was throwing the party’s plans out of gear.

Mr. Agyei stressed that the constant adjournment of the Ashanti regional congress is creating untold inconveniences for the party because it was likely to affect the party’s scheduled national delegates’ congress.

Taking his turn to address the court, the counsel for the plaintiff, Mr. Owusu Sekyere, prayed the court not to lift the injunction, arguing that the concerns of his client are still relevant.

He explained that once there is still a constituency which is yet to hold its elections; it would not be fair for the party to conduct the congress because delegates from that constituency would be disenfranchised.

Mr. Sekyere rebutted Mr. Agyei’s contention that Article 7 of the party’s constitution gives authorization for a regional congress to be held when one third of delegates are confirmed.

Quoting Article 7 section 13 of the party’s constitution which stipulates the membership of the party’s delegates, the young lawyer said the mention of constituency executives is paramount and therefore should not be overlooked.

Mr. Sekyere argued that once the membership of the constituency executives was not complete due to the absence of the Asokwa Constituency, which is yet to elect its executives, the holding of the congress would be a breach of the party’s constitution.

After listening to the pros and cons of the arguments put forward by both learned counsels, Justice Boon decided that he needs time to study the arguments so as to make an informed judgment on the matter. He therefore adjourned sitting to Friday, January 29, 2010.

Though Peter Mac Manu, the National Chairman of the party, humbly appealed to Justice Boon to lift the injunction to enable the congress to be held because a postponement would derail the party’s plan, the judge did not budge.

Unable to do anything about the judgment, Mr. Mac Manu, who was accompanied by party gurus like Hon. Dr Anthony Osei Akoto, Hon. Elizabeth Agyeman, Hon. Kofi Jumah, Mr. Yaw Amankwaah and others, left the court room dejected.

Meanwhile, the same court earlier on struck out an interlocutory injunction order which restrained the Asokwa Constituency from holding its elections.

With this development the Asokwa Constituency may quickly hold its constituency elections before Friday to ensure that the court will strike out the injunction to enable the congress to take place.

At the close of nominations twenty-four candidates had filed their applications papers to contest 9 executives positions in the region, including chairman, 1st and 2nd vice, secretary, vice secretary, organizer, youth organizer, women’s’ organizer and treasurer.
 
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Friday, 29 January 2010

WEEK 04 - 2010

* Friday, 29 January 2010

Konadu Bombs Mills, Kwabena Agyei!

*  Source: Daily Searchlight

On The Reshuffle…

The oft-propagated claims by adherents of the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) that President Atta Mills is transparent has come under attack, from no less a source than the wife of the founder of the party, Nana Konadu Agyemang Rawlings! Nana Konadu, who is the 1st Vice Chair of the NDC, has waded into the mounting intra party anger over the appointment of three key leaders on the Majority Bench in Parliament for Ministerial jobs.

 

 


 

Mrs. Rawlings told Citi Fm in an interview yesterday that President Mills’ nomination of Majority Leader, Alban Bagbin, Deputy Majority Leader, Hon John Tia, and Majority Chief Whip, Hon ET Mensah for executive jobs, was undemocratic because it was done without adequate consultations with key party figures.

She has therefore faulted party Chairman, Dr Kwabena Agyei, for failing to consult the newly elected national leadership of the party ahead of the nomination of the three majority front benchers for executive positions.

The NDC Chairman had claimed in an earlier interview with the same station that President Mills duly consulted the NDC leadership ahead of his reshuffle on Monday and the decision to raid the Majority front bench was taken along with the NDC Executive!

But this assertions has been challenged by Nana Konadu Agyemang-Rawlings who claims that none of the newly elected executives were consulted stressing that ‘these are the things that have made some of us go into the party so that we will have at least a democratic way of doing things in our party’.

“We have to first find out if Dr. Kwabena Adjei was consulted as an individual or he was consulted as the chairman of our party. If he was consulted as Chairman, he was elected as a member of the party to chair the party’s activities; we also as national executives were equally elected to the party.

“So I think that if he was consulted, then he should also have come to consult the rest of us so that collectively we can give our ideas or feelings towards this decision”, she said.

“The chairman cannot take a decision for the rest of us without informing us, and he is not a rubber stamp’, she fumed. The former First Lady’s comments come at a time the Majority MPs are preparing to face President John Mills to reject outright what they see as the President’s attempt to impose a new majority leadership on them.

Hon. Cletus Avoka and Rashid Pelpuo have confirmed to the media that they are going to be the replacements for Hon Bagbin and Hon John Tia on the Majority front bench.

This assertions has also been challenged by James Agyenim Boateng, a Deputy Minister of Information who said on Radio Gold on Wednesday that the ‘two men did not have sufficient understanding’ of what the President told them.

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Sacked Minister Causes Uproar

* Source: GNA

ALBERT ABONGO, the sacked Minister for Water Resources, Works and Housing whose removal from office nearly caused trouble in his constituency after a ministerial reshuffle by President Atta Mills, yesterday stirred controversy when he appeared in Parliament to answer questions as a minister of state. It would be recalled that residents of Bongo in the Upper East Region nearly took to the streets on Tuesday to protest the removal of their Member of Parliament (MP) from office. Police and chiefs in the area virtually went on their knees, begging for restraint.

 

 

 Pro NDC supporters in Bongo district

 welcome Albert Abongo

 -Election Tour December 2008-  (c) ghana-net.com


The status of the discharged minister and his colleagues took the centre stage on the floor of Parliament as MPs engaged in a legal tussle for more than an hour, debating on whether they could still be in office and hold themselves as such.

According to Papa Owusu-Ankomah, MP for Sekondi, once the President nominates people to take over from ministers, the appointment of those ministers is deemed to have been revoked.

The former Attorney-General and Minister of Justice submitted that the President is obligated to indicate to Parliament if he wants the dismissed Ministers to stay in office until the new ones take over.

“It is important for the House to be certain about nominations of ministers”, Papa Owusu-Ankomah pointed out, further stressing that the President should indicate whether he is revoking with immediate effect appointments of the replaced ministers with the nominations of new ones, or he is intending to revoke the appointment at a later date.

Buttressing his point, he quoted Article 81of the constitution which states that “The office of a Minister of State or a Deputy Minister shall become vacant if (a) his appointment is revoked by the President”.

The one-time Minister for the Interior; and Education, Science and Sports noted that the President has the power to appoint ministers of state to assist him in running government business, but he must exercise such powers in a manner that leaves no ambiguity.

However, Majority Leader Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, who is replacing Albert Abongo as the Minister for Water Resources, Works and Housing, argued that his predecessor and others are to continue to be in office until the new ministerial nominees take the “instrument of appointment” from the President and are duly sworn into office.

It was later agreed by consensus that discharged ministers should continue to be in charge until their successors are duly appointed to take over, thus giving way for Albert Abongo to answer two urgent questions on the floor which stood in the name of John Bennam Jabaah, MP for Zabzugu/Tatale in the Northern Region.

Meanwhile, the nomination of three leaders in Parliament and others have been communicated to the House by President Mills, and the Speaker, Justice Joyce Bamford-Addo, has accordingly referred the issue to the Appointments Committee of Parliament for consideration and report.

They are Alban Bagbin, Minister for Water Resources, Works and Housing; John Akologu Tia, the Deputy Majority leader and a trained journalist will be occupying the ‘hot seat’ as Minister of Information and Enoch Teye (E.T.) Mensah, Majority Chief Whip, replaces Stephen Amoanor Kwao as Minister for Employment and Social Welfare.

The rest are Mahama Ayariga, Deputy Minister Designate for Trade and Industry; Inusah Abdulai Fuseini, Deputy Energy Minister and Moses Bukari Mabengba, Northern Regional Minister

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Open Letter to President Atta Mills

* Source:

Dear Mr President,

I wish you a happy new year and I wish this letter finds you in good health. I know the task of managing the affairs of a country the size of Ghana though not too large a country, but with the attendant aspirations of about 22 million independent thinking human beings is never an easy task at all. It becomes very daunting when their expectations have been hyped by no other person than your very humble self and your party, the NDC.

 

 

When you have promised to put money in the pockets of the working men and women within 100 days of coming to power, you can imagine how difficult and hard it becomes when their pockets are no longer the levels they were before 7th January, 2009. As a professor, no matter what discipline it is, it is only natural that they would like to get answers why the 100 days are long gone and now into years.

As you are aware, when you were in the campus as a professor, anytime you promised the students you were going to give them lecture notes, course-trips and tours, breaks and extension of time for submitting their assignments and thesis and you changed your mind for obvious reasons, they resented it and made it known to you that they were not pleased at all? It is also true that within that same student community there were those who would complain even about your style of lecturing and there were others out of fear, who would not complain.

 

What do you expect from a whole nation where you decide: What they would feed on; where they would sleep; how they would look after their families in terms of hospitals, educational facilities, transportation, employment etc? It is only natural that they would complain. Were you looking for dummies as your subjects when got to votes?

Your first outburst since you became Ghana's President was when your closest opponent for the 2008 Presidential Elections returned to Ghana from his European and the Unites States visits. You called a hurried Press Conference to warn Ghanaians that there is only one President and it was you, even though the supporters who thronged to the airport to welcome Nana Addo Dankwah Akuffo Addo never said he was Ghana's President.

As if that was not enough you said recently during your tours of Ashanti and Brong Ahafo that Ghanaians complain too much. I am a bit taken aback by this because you have been a public figure for most of your adult life.

 

You have known the Ghanaian when you were at the Kwame Nkrumah Ideological institute; At the various university campuses, you came in contact with these same Ghanaians; As the Vice President, the situation was the same; when you were moving from door to door enticing Ghanaians with your so called asomdweehene mantra for their votes, they were these same Ghanaians you encountered and finally, when your propaganda machinery swung into action publicising falsehood and lies about the NPP, you never for once realized that you were COMPLAINING about the then government in power ?

Why now? "Who the cap fits, let them wear it" We shall continue to complain because when you said you would be a FATHER TO ALL GHANAIANS, you have failed to live up to those expectations. You have demonstrated to the 49.77% that never voted for you that they could not take you on your word that they are your children. You said recently that all your party top brass should OPEN THEIR DOORS TO THE NDC cadres. This is truly the father to all Ghanaians indeed. By this singular statement, you have told them they can remain in Ghana as secondary citizens who have no stake in the estate of our country, very sad.

Last week ,you said in your New Year message to Ghanaians that we should be patriotic and die a little for mother Ghana. They say words are cheap. Were you talking to your children who have access to you 24 hours a day? What type of Ghana do you want to build and which of the Ghanaians are you going to use? I don't know the meaning of patriotism, but I believe you mean that, we should put in our weight in pushing mother Ghana forward. "When you have a divisive father, who has demonstrated to their mother that you're not their father, can the same father ask them, the illegitimate children to take part in the chores of the family"?

 

As much as we have talented and professional able bodied men and women in Ghana, they are looking for a leader who is not ashamed to call them part of Ghana so that they can make a positive contribution towards the development of Ghana. By this singular statment, you are calling on these Ghanaians to put their talents at your disposal to use to develop Ghana. Which talents are you going to use? Would you care to use the Rooster,the Elephant etc. I am not sure, Mr President.

Ghanaians by our nature have always been patriotic but the problem has always been leaders who take us for granted. Those who would think their words should be the order of the day. When they speak, because they are in the position given to them by the benevolence of the Ghanaians and as such think they are superior to all, nobody should question it. No, Mr President, we shall continue to complain so far as we are not satisfied with some of your actions.

 

We shall complain so far as you have failed to mobilise all the human resources in the country for our national development. We shall continue to complain when our supporters are mowed down in the full of glare of the Police in Accra. We shall complain because our shops have been forcibly taken away from us in parts of Accra. We shall continue to complain because, when you complained about the previous government that they were corrupt those who voted for you bought into it a gave you power to rule.

Once again you are quiet when your Ashanti Regional Minister said your party the NDC and its supporters in the region should slap anyone who criticises you. Is that the level you want to take Ghana to? Are you telling us that as citizens we don't deserve better than the "Jungle Justice" practiced by animals in the bush? The Regional Minister said it is the only way your opponents would stop criticising you. What are are you hiding that Ghanaians should not know? Have you forgotten that you are the number one citizen of Ghana and as such we shall demand answers to whatever you do? Oh, you like the title of President but would not compromise on the downside of the position, being criticised?

I was not amused at all by your 1st Anniversary Meet the Press. You once again failed to give any policy directions. You failed to tell us why you have not put any monies in our pockets; you failed to tell us why the FUEL PRICE, your number one item on your campaign agenda was not attained. I quote what you said on the campaign trail ".the present government has failed to reduce the price of fuel even though the international price per barrel of oil has reduced (it was from $145 per barrel to about $94.45 and was sold at the pumps in Ghana at 5.20 Cedi per gallon) when I Atta Mills come to power, I will transfer every reduction without consulting anybody". What have you done so far?

You want us to shut up like zombies but I can assure you if you resented criticism, Mr President, today, you have shown us that even a working government that had ever provided our country with the best form of infrastructure and all the social amenities unprecedented in our country's history could be made to lose elections on lies, falsehood, unproven allegations of corruption through the very pill you dread: COMPLAIN AND CRITICISM, we shall therefore continue to complain until you have lived up to your PROMISES, the details which are all clearly printed in your pre-election manifesto. As a Professor, you taught us your students that it was good to CRITICIZE AND COMPLAIN when Kufuor was in power but when it came to you, we should be Zombies and shut up.

 
 
 
 

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 _____________________________________________________ -----

 Archived News for 2010

 

Friday, 29 January 2010

- Konadu Bombs Mills, Kwabena

  Agyei!

- Sacked Minister Causes Uproar

- Open Letter to President

  Atta Mills

- Volta Region Development

  Agency expresses concern

  about Volta Textiles

- 20% Ghanaians ‘Mad’

- NPP Congress In Limbo

 

Archived News for 2010 

 

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* 29.01.2010

Volta Region Development Agency expresses concern about Volta Textiles

 Source: GNA

Accra, Jan. 29, GNA - The Volta Region Development Agency (VORDA) on Friday expressed concern about the uncertainty surrounding the Volta Textiles Limited (VTL) at Juapong and said what the Company needs is a strategic partner or institution.

"We are not in the business of blame-culture. At this stage, what Volta Textiles needs is a strategic partner/institution to work with in partnership with the management of Volta Textiles Ltd and other key stakeholders to help revive the fortunes of the company," Mr Appiah-Danquah Kufuor, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of VORDA, said in a statement in Accra.

VORDA noted that VTL remained one of the few industries left in the Volta Region and at one stage used to be described as "The Pride of Volta". The statement said it was difficult to understand the economic reasons for the downturn in the fortune of the Company but what concerns VORDA were the social and economic implications of its closure and its multiplier effects on Juapong and the whole of the Volta Region if it was allowed to fold up.

VORDA noted that not long ago VLT, which was known as Juapong Textiles Ltd, was the only thriving grey baft producing company of its kind in the country. It employed some 3,000 workers and sponsored a first division football club, Juantex.

After its closure, it was reopened in 2007 through a public/private partnership (PPP) with U-Rich Ltd, a Chinese textile and garment conglomerate under the new name Volta Textiles Ltd. Now it employs less than 200 workers and is in danger of collapsing due to the lack of demand for its products.

"Despite its huge loss of manpower, Volta Textiles Ltd is of strategic importance to the economy of the Volta Region in terms of utilisation of locally grown cotton and its contribution to the local economy in Juapong and the outlying areas," VORDA said.

The textile industry has been facing serious challenges with the importation of cheap fabric from China. The textile companies have been calling for protection else they will fold up.

The government recently awarded the contract for the printing of fabric for free school uniforms to the local textile companies.

VORDA aims to improve the quality of life and economic prosperity of all those who live, work, invest and visit the Volta Region.

It aims to achieve its vision by driving the infrastructure, improving education and agriculture.

20% Ghanaians ‘Mad’?

* Source: The Enquirer/Ghana

The Chief Psychiatrist of the Ghana Health Service, Dr. Akwasi Osei has stated that about 20% of Ghanaians suffer from mental illness. He noted that this per cent of the population suffers from psychosocial disabilities such as depression, stress and other related mental illnesses that are not necessarily madness but can lead to madness if not managed carefully.

Speaking at the launch of an advocacy project organized by the Ghana Federation of the Disabled towards the ratification of the United Nation (UN) Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability and the Passage of the Ghana Mental Health bill, he said mental health issues go far beyond madness.

He therefore charged the government to speed up efforts in the passage of the Mental Health Bill since it will enable the country tackle issues affecting persons with disability and also advance their course.

According to him, the passage of the bill will also strengthen advocacy groups to fight for the correction of social imbalance existing in the country.

The 1st Vice President of the Ghana Federation of the Disabled,
Mr. Joseph Adu Boampong for his part made a passionate appeal to the president and cabinet to initiate actions towards the ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability.

He expressed hope that the present government will ratify the convention with urgency, noting that signing on the convention alone is not enough.

“Persons with Disabilities in Ghana face a lot of challenges in their daily lives in the areas of societal attitudes on them, discrimination, education, employment, health and others”, he said.

Mr. Adu-Boampong observed that the coming into force of the convention marks and important development in disabled people’s pursuit of equality. He noted that the UN convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities closes a major gap in human rights protection for hundreds of millions of people around the world.

“It requires us to move away from charity-oriented or medical-based approaches to a human rights based approach to disabilities, these traditional approaches and attitudes, no matter how well-intentioned they might have been, regarded persons with disabilities either as passive recipients of good will or deeds or as problems to be fixed, or both”, he stated.

Mr. Adu-Boampong was of the view that the convention has the potential to be highly useful tool in the struggle to improve disabled peoples’ lives.

Madam Janet Amegather of MindFreedom Ghana, statistics released by the WHO indicates that by year 2010, psychosocial disabilities will become the second largest non-communicable disease in the world with as many as 154 million people around the world suffering from depression and 121 million also suffering from anxiety and stress related problems.
 
                
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