FP- ICGLR Speaker arrives in Angola

The Speaker of the Forum of Parliaments of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (FP-ICGLR) Jemma Nunu Kumba arrived in Luanda Sunday for a five-day working visit.

Jemma Nunu Kumba, who is accompanied by a delegation of the organ, was welcomed by the first vice speaker of National Assembly, Américo Cuononoca.

Jemma Kumba said that the visit to Angola is part of the effort for the parliamentarians to interact.

She said that she will take advantage of her stay in Angola to present to the President of the Republic, João Lourenço, the declaration from the last forum held in South Sudan.

The agenda also includes a meeting with the Speaker of the National Assembly, Carolina Cerqueira, to exchange experiences.

FP-ICGLR is an inter-parliamentary organisation that brings together national parliaments from the 12 Member States.

They are Angola, Burundi, Central African Republic (CAR), Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Republic of Sudan, Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia.

The Forum was established on 4 December, 2008 in Kigali, Rwanda, following the signing of the Inter-Parliamentary Agreement.

The body comprises the Plenary Assembly, the Plenary Assembly Bureau, the Conference of the Speakers, the Executive Committee, Commissions and the General Secretariat.

Angola was officially invited to be a member of the Parliamentary Forum of the Conference on the Great Lakes Region in January 2013.

It joined the organisation in November 2014.

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)

Diplomat José Agostinho Neto dies

Diplomat José Agostinho Neto, brother of Angola’s first president, died Saturday in Lisbon, Portugal, aged 85, due to illness.

In a note sent to ANGOP Sunday, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MIREX), which announced the misfortune, expressed “deep sadness and high compassion” and expresses its heartfelt condolences to the family.

In the document, signed by the Angolan top diplomat Teté António, recalls that “Tio Loló”, as he was affectionately known, was Angola’s extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador to the Republics of Congo, Tanzania and Botswana.

A diligent member of the ruling MPLA party, the ambassador was also a BPC – Banco de Poupança e Crédito (Savings and Credit Bank) member and non-executive director of the António Agostinho Neto Foundation (FAAA), where he looked after the legacy of his older brother.

“On behalf of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Department, the entire diplomatic class and other officials, I express my condolence to bereaved family”, Teté António’s message reads out.

Source: Angola Press News Agency (APNA)

NDA develops Medium Term Development Strategy to fast track development in Northern Ghana

The Northern Development Authority (NDA) has organised a stakeholder engagement on its 2023 -2027 Medium Term Development Strategy (MTDS), which serves as an agenda for the rapid transformation and job creation in the Northern Savannah Ecological Zone (NSEZ).

The five-year development Strategy hinged on five thematic areas, including Healthcare delivery, Education, Agricultural transformation and food security, Environment and sustainability, and Poverty and inequalities.

The strategy would prioritise jobs and livelihoods, tackle issues on gender and social inclusion and embrace actions to enhance climate justice and build resilience, and integrate and address the systemic challenges confronting the Northern Savannah Ecological Zone.

It also fed into many ongoing national policies and programmes including reducing poverty, improving health and educational outcomes, biodiversity conservation, industrialisation, and digitalisation among others.

Its actions also conform with the globally agreed Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Mr. Sulley Sambian, the Chief Executive Officer of the NDA, in a statement, said the MTDS were designed to achieve the greatest possible impact for the people and communities in the NSEZ with a special focus on poverty reduction, job creation, and sustainable production systems.

‘The Strategy will lead to actions that will extend the economic agency of women, men and young people, and groups across the frontiers. It is a zone that trails the rest of the country in major development and socio-economic metrics and actions targeting impactful changes should be rapid, robust, and interconnected’, he said.

He said actions that would be pursued in the next five years would be integrated and emanated from the series of consultations with development partners, policymakers, development experts, communities, farmers, and various interest groups.

Mr. Sambian emphasised that the Strategy would adopt a holistic approach, as a more effective response to the systemic challenges confronting Northern Ghana.

‘For instance, a child is unlikely to successfully enroll and complete school in a context of extreme poverty; a farmer’s output, no matter the level of efforts will be challenged by a deteriorating environment and climate; and all gains made in any endeavour including infrastructural development will not be sustained in an atmosphere characterised by conflicts, threats of hostilities and mutual mistrust’, he pointed out.

Mr. Sambian said under the Strategy, the NDA would work around six main objectives, including increasing household incomes, accelerating human development through access to quality social services, and promoting private sector actions capable of delivering board-based and inclusive growth.

Sustaining livelihoods by developing capacity on land governance, biodiversity conservation, and climate change and enhancing social cohesion, peace, and security, which could make enormous contributions to progressive and inclusive change at scale are some of the objectives of the Strategy.

Mr Sambian said the strategy would also recognise coordinating efforts of internal organisations in ensuring that together, they would build a professional, resilient, and accountable organisation with a focus on the socio-economic transformation of Northern Ghana.

Mr. Sam Danse, the Director for Corporate Affairs and International Relations at the NDA responsible for Gender, Social Protection, and Corporate Affairs, in a presentation of the MTDS, noted that under the five years period, the NDA anticipated to increase household incomes in Northern Ghana by 20 percent through sustainable agricultural production systems by 2027.

He explained that agriculture-related activities were the biggest employer and main driver of the NSEZ’s economy and many households in the area were engaged in crop farming, producing cereals, roots, tubers, and legumes, and in terms of rice production, ‘the zone is a major contributor to national Outputs’.

The agriculture sector employs about 74 percent of the zone’s labour force and accounts for about 34 percent of national crop production while 15.6 percent of the NSEZs land size is dedicated to agriculture.

Mr Danse noted that only about 15.4 percent of arable land in the zone was put under cultivation implying over 8 million hectares of agricultural land suitable for the cultivation of different food crops either lay fallow or underutilised, creating enormous opportunities for investors to undertake productive investments in the agriculture sector with the potential to create jobs and promote livelihoods.

He said despite the zone’s agricultural potentials, it was affected by a number of challenges largely driven by over-reliance on primary production methods and a weak market orientation.

Traditional rulers, municipal and district chief executives, civil society and nongovernmental organisations, heads of decentralised departments, farmers, women groups, security agencies, and a cross-section of the public attended the forum.

Source: Ghana News Agency

UNDP, Japan hand over emergency reference lab to Ghana

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Japanese Government on Friday handed over a laboratory facility to Ghana at the Kotoka International Airport, Accra.

At a short ceremony, Dr Patrick Kuma Aboagye, Director-General Ghana Health Service (GHS), on behalf of the authorities of KIA symbolically received the facility, which is to support the effective management of public health emergencies.

The lab is one of four – three of which are to be commissioned at points of entry into the country, specifically, Paga, Aflao and Elubo.

It forms part of a $2 million project, including the construction of Community Health Planning and Services (CHPS) facilities in some underserved areas to strengthen community health systems and support the continuity of providing essential services to citizens.

The facility has polymerase chain reaction (PCR), sluice and phlebotomy rooms, a main lab for various case testing and management as well as a lab Manager’s office, kitchenette, changing rooms and washrooms to support daily operations.

Speaking at the handing-over ceremony, Dr Aboagye said the facility was timely in helping control public health emergencies at Ghana’s points of entry as it would support existing infrastructure and build people’s capacity to manage cases.

‘In the last few years, we’ve had to respond to COVID, Marburg, laser fever and monkey pox, and Ghana has built capacity to test them. This facility will, therefore, help in our efforts to test for people who need to be tested for any other condition that may pop up,’ he said.

‘When the COVID started, we could only rely on Noguchi and KCCR and that’s not a statusquo that we want to keep. So, these are part of a series of health system strengthening mechanisms going forward,’ the Director General noted.

Sukhrob Khoshmukhamedov, UNDP Deputy Representative, indicated that point of entries played vital roles not only in transport, travel, trade and economic development, but equally important in health emergency response and recovery, as witnessed during the COVID-19 pandemic.

He explained that during health emergencies, points of entries served as critical centres of disease surveillance, risk communication, infection prevention and control, cross border coordination and information sharing.

As such, providing infrastructure, together with building the capacities of health practitioners and care providers would necessary to adequately address public health emergencies.

He noted that delivering on the promise to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2023 would be impossible without commensurate investment in pandemic preparedness.

‘UNDP as the UN’s foremost development agency firmly believes that being better prepared for future pandemic is a crucial component of human security,’ hence the support to the project, Mr Khoshmukhamedov said.

He said investing in emergency preparedness was smart, responsible and necessary for a collective security and wellbeing of all people, and was hopeful that the lab would be a ‘vital resource and arsenal’ in addressing emergencies in the future.

‘The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted not only the urgent health risks, but the importance of strengthening health systems to identify and respond to emergencies at all times,’ said, Mochizuki Hisanobu, Japanese Ambassador to Ghana.

He noted that the availability of the labs at various entry points was a huge step forward in disease identification and surveillance management in the country, and contribute to achieving the Universal Health Coverage (UHC).

Source: Ghana News Agency

CoprsAfrica/Ghana joins social partners to accelerate community development

CorpsAfrica/Ghana is teaming up with some social partners to accelerate community development and help end poverty in the country.

CorpsAfrica/Ghana over the weekend held a meeting with some like-minded social and development partners to deepen relations and see ways of working together to enhance community development through a collaborative effort.

It was attended by more than 20 organisations including Mastercard Foundation – funding sponsor of CorpsAfrica, and some Non-Governmental and Civil Society Organisations, including Peace Corps,Future of Africa, and Compassion International.

Speaking at the soiree, Mr Moses Cofie, Director, CorpsAfrica/Ghana, said the meeting was to team up with the social and development partners knowing that: ‘No one person or organisation can work for development.’

‘We’re, therefore, connecting with other like-minded development partners to increase social and economic impact in communities and make in-roads to restore dignity to the Ghanaian people,’ he said.

He explained that CorpsAfrica served as a catalyst for community development through its volunteers ‘to present a perfect ecosystem to channel funds for true sustainable social and economic advancement.’

He noted that 30 per cent of cash and materials for identified projects were provided by community members, while the remaining 70 per cent is provided by CorpsAfrica.

‘This makes community members mobilise and utilise resources at their disposal and with funds and skill from CorpsAfrica, together with the skills acquired, engender societal development,’ Mr Cofie said.

Beyond the development projects, the Director said CorpsAfrica train community members in soft skills, including soap production, reusable sanitary wears, and environmental protection measures, such as waste segregation.

On impact of the organisation, he indicated that Mastercard Foundation had announced a five-year $59.4 million partnership to fight poverty due to the progress made by its volunteers in some six African countries.

The funding support is to develop the leadership skills of 1,600 young Africans to engage in community-led projects that impact public health, food security, education, gender issues, the digital economy, and environment.

It is expected that the work of the volunteers would benefit over 800,000 community members through economic development, while creating work opportunities for young people across the continent.

Ghana, Morocco, Senegal, Malawi, Rwanda, and Kenya are already benefiting from CorpsAfrica projects, with Nigeria, Uganda, and Ethiopia expected to be beneficiary this year, while, two other countries would benefit in 2024.

Participants at the meeting lauded CorpsAfrica’s community-based approach in solving societal problems, and called for its integration into the National Service Scheme to help reduce the social and economic challenges faced in rural communities.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Ayensuano NDC Executive Member calls for unity after party’s primaries

Mr Benjamin Kwaku Kumi, the Ayensuano Constituency Executive Member of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the Eastern Region, has called for unity among all the aspirants after the May 13 presidential and parliamentary primaries.

The primaries saw former President John Dramani Mahama securing 98.9 per cent of the total votes cast to win the flagbearership race, defeating his only contender, Mr Kojo Bonsu, a former Kumasi Metropolitan Chief Executive, who had 11 per cent.

The other contestant, Dr Kwabena Duffuor, withdrew from the race.

Mr Kumi made the call in an interview with the Ghana News Agency in Accra on Friday and called for unity among the rank and file to adequately prepare for the 2024 general election.

‘Former President Mahama is a humble and peace-loving person who will ensure unity and peace among the contestants to keep an eye on the bigger picture, which is working together to win the election 2024,’ he said.

‘Now that the primaries are over, there is the need for the aspirants to come together and work as a team to wrest power from the ruling New Patriotic Party.’

Mr Kumi said even though elections came with disappointments, and in most cases bitter rivalry, putting the pain behind them and accepting defeat was the beginning of the healing process.

He congratulated former President Mahama and all winners in the parliamentary and presidential primaries for their hard work and called for unity and peace to win power next year.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Community mobilisation key to enhancing communal projects – Sissala East MP

Mr Amidu Issahaku Chinnia, the Deputy Minister of Sanitation and Water Resources, has identified community mobilisation, and not always contracts, as key to the realisation of community projects.

He said in the event where funds were not readily available, community leaders and politicians could mobilise the people and other resources for such projects, to reduce cost, and avoid undue delays in their execution.

‘Let’s not always award contracts; community mobilisation is key to communal projects,’ Mr Chinnia said, and cited some projects he had accomplished in the Sissala East Constituency through community engagements rather than contracts.

Mr Chinnia, also the Member of Parliament for Sissala East, said it was time communities and leaders acted swiftly on development projects, especially those in relation to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH).

In an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in Accra, he called on the metropolitan, municipal and district assemblies (MMDAs) to play their supervisory roles effectively in the implementation of WASH projects.

The interview followed the second multi-stakeholder dialogue on WASH, dubbed: ‘Executive Breakfast Conversation.’

The conversation was on the theme: ‘Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies and Sustainable WASH Service Delivery,’ with the sub theme ‘Every Child Deserves Clean Water and Improved Sanitation.’

It was organised by the Ghana Chapter of World Vision International, a Christian humanitarian organisation, the Ministry of Sanitation and Water Resources, and the United States Agency for International Development among other partners.

Three billion people worldwide, including hundreds of millions of school-going children, do not have access to handwashing facilities with soap.

People living in rural areas, urban slums, disaster-prone areas, and low-income countries are the most vulnerable and the most affected.

Worldwide, 2.2 billion people still lack access to safe drinking water, and more than half of the global population does not have access to safe sanitation.

The Deputy Minister expressed regret that many schools and healthcare facilities lacked access to basic WASH services.

He stressed a holistic approach to health and well-being by ensuring the availability of safe and sustainable WASH services in critical institutions and among vulnerable groups.

He called for strong leadership and effective collaboration among stakeholders in providing water, hygiene and sanitation facilities in local communities.

‘ Nice houses, no WASH facilities. They collect rent but provide no toilet. Why can’t you punish that one landlord or landlady?’

‘If you talk, they say they’ll vote against you. We must look at the byelaws and how we implement them,’ he said.

‘From now on, any school facility we are developing must have WASH facilities to ensure access to safe and sustainable WASH services in schools.’

He announced that the Ministry of Sanitation and Water Resources had already consulted with the Ministry of Education, the Ghana Education Service, and the Ghana Education Trust Fund to ensure that all contracts for new school facilities considered the need for safe WASH facilities.

The Government was also holding discussions with the World Bank, the Ministry of Education, and the Ghana Education Service, to develop sustainable management guidelines for the WASH facilities in schools.

‘It’s not just about constructing them because if we construct these WASH facilities and we do not find sustainable ways of managing them, they will collapse within a short period,’ Mr Chinnia said.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Morocco: Mohammed VI Football Academy, nursery of football talents in the Kingdom

The performance of the Atlas lion cubs in the African Cup of Nations U17, arriving at the final of this competition, illustrates the central role of the Mohammed VI Football Academy, as a nursery of football talents in the Kingdom.

The Moroccan U17 national team, during its participation in the U17 African Cup of Nations in Algeria, managed to snatch a historic qualification for the World Cup of this category, while marking an excellent competitive course by reaching the final with a great performance, similar to that of the national team, during the world cup in Qatar.

Moroccan football is once again illustrious after the Said Chiba’s U17 team reached the final of the CAN for the first time with only two goals conceded. A performance that can be explained, in part, by the good Moroccan school, of which the Mohammed VI Academy remains the most illustrious example.

Results that remain the fruit of a policy carried out for several years, thanks to the implementation of strategies and development objectives for the benefit of national football, in line with the far-sighted vision of His Majesty King Mohammed VI.

After this performance, King Mohammed VI sent a message of congratulations to the members of the national football team, finalists of the African Cup of Nations (CAN-2023) under-17s, for their exceptional achievement and their qualification for the 2023 World Cup.

‘It is with great joy that We send you Our warmest congratulations for the exceptional feat that you have achieved by reaching the final of the African Cup of Nations under 17, in its fourteenth edition held in sister Algeria, and by ensuring your well-deserved qualification for the 2023 World Cup,’ writes the sovereign in this message.

During the press conference, the national coach, Said Chiba expressed his gratitude to King Mohammed VI who spares no effort for the development of Moroccan football.

‘Our young players made an honorable performance. We thank King Mohamed VI for his unfailing support, he is the first supporter of Moroccan youth. I also thank the academies and the infrastructures, it is thanks to them that we have achieved this performance.’

The Mohamed VI Academy in Rabat has now become the flagship of training in Morocco, alongside state-of-the-art structures in other cities, with local educators who supervise children from 9 to 12 years old. The objective is to make competent young people available to the national selections, from a young age.

Moreover, no less than 9 young people come from this prestigious school founded by King Mohammed VI, including the author of the opening goal for the national team, Abdelhamid Ait Boudlal, the young goalkeeper Taha Benghozal as well as the talented player Adam Chakir.

These youngster will soon arrive at the end of their training at the Academy and will have to leave with a certain baggage to become a professional with the wish to integrate European clubs and evolve there afterwards.

Source: Ghana News Agency