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SEX, LIES and VIRAL VIDEO

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Esther A. Armah

Sex on tape: the position, the principal and the pupil. The viral video of an 18 year old SHS student on her knees on a stool having ‘sex’ with her principal has been the focus of much discussion. There has been ridicule, back and forth about consent and multiple versions about what happened.  Ghanaians took to social media and posted images of stools. It became a trending topic on social media.

Now we have laughed, ridiculed, posted, judged and shamed – can we have a thorough, critical exploration of this issue?

So; Sex, Lies and Viral Video.

Sex: this 18 year old did not have sex. The Principal violated Ghana Education Service policy.  This was flagrant abuse of his power.

Lies: she did not consent. Ghana Education Service policy makes that impossible.

Video gone viral: social media means we are getting access to the tip of an iceberg when it comes to sexual violence and violations in school by principals and teachers of students.

We in the media reported it as ‘sex’. In such circumstances, given policy and accuracy, it is incorrect. Language matters.

In this case, the pupil is 18. She has apparently said there was consent. For many,  that meant it was no longer an issue – so many across media and society dismissed it, but continued to judge, shame and laugh at this young woman.

With such issues, we routinely focus on the actions of the girl. Let’s turn our lens where it should be – on the conduct of the Principal.

The Ghana Educational Service Code of Conduct says:-

Sexual violence:-

“Sexual offences: No teacher shall indulge in immoral relations with a pupil or student in his own school or in any educational institution. This may result in disciplinary proceedings being taken against the offender.’

No teacher shall directly or indirectly do anything that may constitute sexual harassment of a pupil/student.

Any teacher, who has carnal knowledge of any female/male pupil or student of any age with or without his consent, shall be guilty of professional misconduct.”

The policy condemns the actions of this principal.

The principal is not alone. He is part of a deeper cancer.

In July-December 2016, a survey by the Central Regional Directorate of Health and Education and the Department of Gender did a survey that found 301 girls were made pregnant by their teachers. In June 2014, Tumu Senior Tech High School was the focus of investigative journalism that revealed an environment where girls appeared to be under sexual siege from their teachers and principal. Naming the School principal, senior teachers, the journalist identified a culture of sexual harassment, where perpetrators threatened and punished girls that refused to be raped. The article lists names of the teachers and the students in the piece.  In November 2017, I attended the launch of the UNESCO Global Education Monitoring Project report that highlighted successes in education; but noted sexual harassment and sexual violence continues to be an area of major concern.

Statistics paint a partial picture of the horror story that can be education for students across Ghana. Sexual harassment, violation or rape can impact a girl or woman’s progress, position and possibility. We consistently underestimate or ignore its power.

Let’s deal with education policy.

It exists. The action of every teacher included in the survey is a violation of GES policy.

In the Principal sex-tape case, correspondence highlighting the incident, confronting the principle and taking action, exists. The principle admits he is the person in the video. He said sorry. The correspondence then details a meeting between the community and the girl’s father seeking resolution to what they call an ‘issue’. The community and the father say they have no problem with the principle. They say they have a problem with whoever leaked the video.

The principal’s actions go against the GES code of conduct. The Principal’s apology should prompt an investigation into his history regarding sexual violation of other girls’. Is the GES conducting such an investigation?

GES is not effectively implementing its own policy. It is weak, ineffective and unhelpful. The GES’s failure to fully implement its own policy and sanction accordingly is a huge part of the problem.  It is a disgrace. Their inaction is a weapon that shields the guilty and further exposes the vulnerable to more abuse. In fact, the Ghana Education Service is failing its own policy duty to protect girls or boys.

Free SHS means education is at the top of a political agenda. Free SHS has been lauded as a powerful tool to create a more literate nation. It is indeed. The President and this government are rightly applauded for introducing it to this nation. It offers revelations about the state of our schools. It should also be seen as an opportunity to focus on and take action about the state of ‘sex’ in our classrooms.

Post access comes the quality of education conversation. The quality of education must include the safety of students from teachers who sexually harass, violate, rape and impregnate. Free SHS should not also mean greater freedom to violate the vulnerable due to larger numbers of students.

We are at a moment of crisis when it comes to violation of girls bodies by principals and teachers. Some men seem unable to discern violation from volunteering. They impose personal fantasies on breach of policy; they justify the unjustifiable in order to avoid the necessary confrontation with their own unacceptable behaviour which our ‘culture’ has normalized. Their behaviour is condemned by their profession’s code but condoned by our culture and girls’ families who believe such ‘relationships’ are beneficial due to a teacher’s status. Such mixed messages serve the ongoing abuse.

I am a teacher. I teach at university level in Ghana. At every university I have taught – with the exception of Webster University – girls have raised issues of sexual harassment that occurred from JHS to SHS to university level. I am a public speaker. I have spoken at the annual YAWC – the Young African Women’s Congress; I spoke at the 2017 conference for The Women’s Commission of Grasag, University of Ghana. There was story after story after story regarding sexual harassment and sexual violation of students by their teachers and in some cases, their lecturers.

The Coalition Against Sexual Abuse (CASA) has called for a Ghana Sex Offenders Register. Should teachers who violate their own Code and endanger the futures of girls or boys, also be on such a Register? Removal from this post is insufficient action – if he can get a job in another school, he becomes a danger to another school girl.

Right now the sexual harassment, violation and rape of girls and women is the focus of a global movement. The #MeToo movement is raising multiple issues about the pandora’s box of sex, consent, sexual harassment, rape. In Zambia, teachers are being sacked for having ‘sex’ with pupils. In Tanzania, pregnant school-girls were arrested, igniting outrage from children’s rights activists demanding that those who got them pregnant be arrested.

Let’s connect the dots. At our Presidential Media Encounter, not a single journalist asked a question about sexual violence in schools.  We in the Media need training to more accurately language these cases. When we don’t we reinforce a culture where girls are blamed for the sexual appetites, deviance and actions of men.

This issue is also about gender – in other words the ways in which we are taught to be boys and girls; men and women. That teaching condones the men’s behaviour and blames the girls’ behaviour.

Ghana has gender initiatives, accolades and launches coming out of its ears. In addition to the actual Ministry for Gender, Children and Social Protection, the President launched (Gender and Development Initiative for Africa) GADIA. President Nana Akufo-Addo has a Special Advisor on Gender; he was named the African Union Gender Champion; and he launched the #HeForShe initiative that aims to make 2 million Ghanaian men pledge support for issues of equality and an end to sexual harassment against women.

Accolades must turn into action. Launches must transform into living, working practical policy. Policy must be implemented and followed with sanction and serious consequence.

Educating a nation is a crucial tool for progress. When that education is interrupted, violated or marred by sexual violence, it threatens the very progress we seek to make.

We have policy: enforce it. We have political will: engage it. We have access to information: employ it. We have our culture; address it.

This is much more than one case.  It is the evidence of too many things unseen.

The hardest thing to open is a closed mind. We can change. We can do this. We must.

Cash for seat saga: MoTI was wrong to have used public accounts to collect private funds – Controller

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The Controller & Accountant-General, Mr. Eugene Ofosuhene, Thursday, told the five-member Adhoc committee probing the alleged cash for seat saga that it was wrong for the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MoTI) to have used their accounts to collect funds generated from the Ghana Expatriates Business Awards.

The funds realised from the Ghana Expatriate Business Awards organised by the Millennium Excellence Foundation (MEF), he noted, were private funds and shouldn’t have been deposited into the MoTI accounts, which is public.

To us that accounts should not be a receptacle for receipt of private revenues. It is solely an accounts opened to receive IGF of Ministry of Trade and Industry. But I think that probably because of the convenience of the relationship between the MEF and the Trade Ministry, they may have probably decided to have keep this money into the account and then take it out when they are ready for their expenses”, he noted.

Asked further whether the funds from the event which is a public-private partnership are private funds which does not qualify to be lodged into the accounts, Mr. Ofosuhene said “…errr because the sources of those funds and how these funds got in there … I think the MoU is clear. It says that through soliciting for funds. It is not a tax by way of levy. Monies collected under IGFs are sometimes are levy. You take your car to DVLA for inspection and whatever. You pay your levy that is an IGF or a non tax revenue. So you are given a service and you pay for the service. It is a source of revenue for the government. But soliciting funds for this event, these are not traditional sources of funds for government”. 

Mr. Ofosuhene made this observation when he took his turn at the five-member Adhoc Committee to respond to questions relating to the alleged cash for seat saga.

His response was triggered by a question posed by a member of the committee, Dr. Mark Assibey-Yeboah as to whether the MoTI accounts opened with authorization from the Controller & Accountant-General should be used in receiving Public-Private Partnership funds.

The said MoTI accounts being operated with the National Investment Bank (NIB), according to the Controller & Accountant-General, is an existing accounts where all Internally Generated Funds (IGF) are deposited into.

Commenting further on the issue, Mr. Ofosuhene said per his last checks with MoTI’s Accountant, “whatever went into this accounts were taken out by way of payment for expenses. It was disbursed. By the time I spoke to the Accountant yesterday, there was only about GH₵299,000 balance left in that account.

Hitherto to the Controller and Accountant General’s appearance, the Trade Minister Alan Kyerematen had appeared before the Committee to indicate that the account created was to monitor the amount of money that was realized from the event.

2nd edition of Ghana Beverage Awards launched with new categories

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Ernest Boateng CEO, Global Media Alliance

Global Media Alliance (GMA) has launched the 2017 edition of its Ghana Beverage Awards, which saw the introduction of two additional categories to honour more players in the beverage industry.

The new categories include Socially Responsible Beverage Company of the Year and New Beverage of the Year, aimed at challenging industry players to excel beyond the shores of Ghana.

Speaking at the launch, the CEO of Global Media Alliance, Ernest Boateng said: “the new year brings with it greater opportunities for beverage companies to thrive beyond their previous successes. As a company, we are confident that the industry players who have kept us refreshed for many years will continue to challenge themselves to churn out the best beverage brands not just to meet international standards but to beat them as well”.

The Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Tourism Authority, Akwasi Agyeman, who was the Guest of Honor at the event, pledged his organisation’s support for activities that seek to promote the name of Ghana on the international market.

“The Ghana Tourism Authority will support this initiative as part of promoting Ghanaian goods and services. In fact, these efforts are part of the bigger vision of His Excellency Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to see a more self-reliant Ghana, moving beyond aid. We are hopeful that the startup companies in this space will also be encouraged to excel with the introduction of GBA”, he said.

“Beverages are the biggest in production when we consider made-in Ghana goods. You have refreshed us, entertained us, kept the Ghanaian heritage, given us jobs and a sense of hope that Ghana can drive her economy. Should your efforts be replicated in every endeavor, Ghana too can make it. I am hopeful that our beverages will be enjoyed not only in Ghana but across the world and respected for their quality,” he added.

The Ghana Beverage Awards was first launched in 2016 with the objective of honouring the diligent beverage producers of this country, as well as to create a platform for stakeholders in the industry to interact with each other for their collective good.

Beverage giants, including Kasapreko Company Limited, Guinness Ghana Brewery Limited, Blow Chem Industries (producers of Bel Aqua Mineral Water), Special Ice Company Limited, Blues Skies Ghana, TT Brothers Company Limited (producers of Uncle T wine), GIHOC Distilleries (producer of Castle Bridge) and Twellium Industrial Company Limited (producers of Rush Energy Drink) participated in the Maiden Edition last year.

The Food and Beverage Association of Ghana (FABAG), Food Research Institute under the Centre for Scientific and industrial Research (CSIR) and the Ghana Tourism Authority (GTA), are the organising partners of the event.

The awards ceremony is expected to come off in May.

Unilever calls for accelerated industry action on packaging waste

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Unilever has called for the consumer goods industry to step up its efforts to tackle the mounting challenge of ocean plastic waste and create a circular economy for plastics.

One year after Unilever made its industry-leading commitment to ensure 100% of its plastic packaging was fully reusable, recyclable or compostable by 2025, CEO Paul Polman welcomed news that 10 companies have made similar pledges.

He urged more to step forward to accelerate the industry’s progress toward the circular economy, and address plastic leakage into the world’s natural systems including waterways and oceans.

Research by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation (EMF) has found that the equivalent of one dumper truck’s worth of plastic enters the oceans every minute, and by 2050 it forecasts there could be more plastic (by weight) in the ocean than fish. Today, only 14% of plastic packaging gets collected for recycling.

Polman said: “It is welcome news that many other major companies are making their own commitments to address ocean plastic waste. Yet as a consumer goods industry we need to go much further, much faster, in addressing the challenge of single-use plastics by leading a transition away from the linear take-make-dispose model of consumption, to one which is truly circular by design”.

Unilever believes there are four key actions the consumer goods industry should take to create the systemic change required and accelerate the transition to a circular economy:

  • For companies to invest in innovation toward new delivery models that promote re-use.
  • For more companies to commit to 100% reusable, recyclable or compostable packaging by 2025, and set stretching targets for using post-consumer recycled content.
  • For a Global Plastics Protocol setting common agreed definitions and industry standards on what materials are put into the marketplace, to ensure our packaging is compatible with existing and cost-effective recycling infrastructures.
  • For companies to engage positively in policy discussions with governments on the need for improvements to waste management infrastructure, including the implementation of Extended Producer Responsibility schemes.

Polman added: “Addressing the issue of ocean plastic is a shared responsibility – all stakeholders in the value chain must work together in partnership to find effective solutions. However, there is no doubt that the response from the consumer goods industry will be among the most critical in determining the speed at which positive change takes place. We are at a critical juncture”.

Unilever has made good progress on reducing its waste footprint. Since 2010, the waste associated with disposal of its products has decreased by 28%, and the weight of its packaging has reduced by 15%. The company also stopped sending non-hazardous waste to landfills from its manufacturing sites in 2015.

Alongside its commitment to 100% reusable, recyclable or compostable plastic packaging by 2025, Unilever pledged to source 25% of its resin from post-consumer recycled content by 2025, and to publish its full plastics palette before 2020.

In 2017, the company announced it was making good progress on identifying a technical solution to recycling multi-layered sachets through its Creasolv technology – for which a pilot plant in Indonesia is currently being built to assess its commercial viability.

“We intend to make this technology open-source, and hope to scale it with industry partners so others – including our competitors – can use it.”

JPMorgan plans expansion into Ghana and Kenya

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JP Morgan Chase

JPMorgan Chase & Co plans to expand its African presence into countries including Ghana and Kenya, Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said in an interview on Wednesday.

“You’ll see us open in some countries we are not in; in Africa you’ll be hearing about some of that stuff,” Dimon told Bloomberg Television on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland.

Dimon said the bank will target Ghana and Kenya – two countries in which local regulators have previously blocked the U.S. banking giant’s expansion plans, according to media reports at the time.

The announcement follows JPMorgan’s unveiling of a US$20billion investment plan on Tuesday, which will see it hike wages, hire more, and open new branches as it takes advantage of sweeping changes to U.S. tax law and a more favourable regulatory environment.

The five-year plan will see the U.S. bank ramp up overseas investment in addition to its domestic growth plans, after it finished cleaning up troubled mortgages following the 2007-09 financial crisis.

AirtelTigo to go big on mobile money…agents to have more cash in hand

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Newly-merged AirtelTigo has said it is in serious discussions with some banks and business people to inject liquidity into its mobile money operations, so as to drive expansion and promote transformation in the financial inclusion agenda.

The plan includes making sure its mobile money agents have enough cash at hand always, to deal with the situation where agents often tell customers they do not have enough money to give.

The company’s CEO, Ms. Roshi Motman, told the Network of Communication Reporters (NCR) that: “Another key piece of our strategy is going to be mobile money. Tigo Cash has a bunch of customers; Airtel Money has its customers, and now we want to expand that footprint quite dramatically.

“There are two things that are important from the customer perspective when it comes to mobile money, which is the accessibility and agents having enough liquidity to give out the money. We are going to be on top of our game so the business can thrive.”

The merged entity, she said, has an extensive distribution network, and it will focus on making things simpler, easier and better for customers.

Industry operators have raised concerns that solving the liquidity management challenge is one of the next big issues facing mobile money providers around the world.

Chief Finance Officer of AirtelTigo, Bright Owusu-Bempah, said discussions with investors are being finalised, and “There is going to be huge transformation in our mobile money operations, whereby we hope that, within reasonable ranges, you will be able to access agents who always get your transaction processed”.

Data from the Bank of Ghana show that from January to December 2017, AirtelTigo recorded an amount of GH¢79million – accounting for a 3.56 percent share of the mobile money deposits in the country.

Mr. Owusu-Bempah explained that the company’s strategy is to leverage on the opportunity to effect fresh changes, which is what it will be working on in the next couple of weeks.

“What we are trying to do is increase volumes and also support the agents with liquidity. With our target, it should be able to get us to where we want to be,” he said.

Mobile money and accounts

According to data from the Bank of Ghana, the amount of money mobilised outside the banking system through mobile money recorded GH¢2.3billion ending December 2017, representing a growth of 84.6 percent over the December 2016 figure of GH¢1.3billion.

These funds mobilised through mobile money transactions are currently held by banks.

The data also show that mobile money accounts reached 23.95 million compared with 11.43 million bank accounts as at end-December 2017. The value of mobile money transactions was GH¢155.8billion at end-December 2017, showing a growth of 98.5 percent over the GH¢78.5billion realised in December 2016.

MTN sits on top as having the largest share of deposits, accounting for more than 90 percent of mobile money accounts held at commercial banks – and as at October 2017, had GH¢2.1billion, representing 93.5 percent of deposits held at commercial banks.

Airtel/Tigo followed with GH¢79million, accounting for a 3.56 percent share of the deposits. Vodafone had a 2.52 percent of the market share, with GH¢57million deposits.

For some, the amount held by MTN makes a strong case for its quest to establish a ‘Digital Bank’ in Ghana soon, subject to securing the required regulatory approval.

Banks holding the accounts

Fidelity Bank led the pack in terms of banks holding the largest share of mobile money deposits, with GH¢583million. Ecobank had GH¢470million, while CAL Bank held GH¢229m.

These were the top-three banks out of the 19 captured in the Bank of Ghana data as holding mobile money deposits as at October 2017.

Direct jobs created by mobile money through engagement of mobile money agents was 194,688 in December 2017, compared with 136,769 in December 2016.

The Payment Systems and Services bill, when passed this year, is expected to provide additional support for deepening the payment landscape by creating job opportunities for the youth, facilitating international inward transfers, and providing convenience and choice for consumers.

GUTA warns GIPC not to touch law that protects local retailers  

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Yofi Grant CEO of GIPC

The Ghana Union of Traders Association (GUTA) has sent a strong message to the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) not to touch certain portions of the GIPC Act that offers protection to indigenous traders.

The warning comes after news broke that the GIPC is considering making amendments to Act 865 (2013), which is aimed at promoting investment—both local and foreign—in the economy.

According to Benjamin Yeboah, an Executive Member of GUTA, the GIPC has not had any formal consultation with the association for it to provide inputs to the said amendments; hence the likelihood that very sensitive parts of the Act may be touched.

“As of now, GIPC hasn’t told us exactly where it thinks the problem is in the Act. We are very much concerned with certain portions — like those which require specific amounts foreign investors must invest in the country. The review raised it to US$1million.

And again, those investors shouldn’t be in any market designated for Ghanaians. And, also, any serious investor that comes into the country should be able to create jobs. In the Act, they are supposed to employ twenty or more Ghanaians. These are the very areas we will not want to see any review,” Mr. Yeboah told the B&FT in an interview.

He further lamented the inability of successive governments to enforce the already existing law that has been violated by foreign traders, urging government to enforce the law rather than make any amendments to it.

“We have had foreign traders taking over retail trade in the country for a long time. And we called for a review of the Act in 2013 after a lot of consultation between us and GIPC, but it is left with enforcement. Government upon government seem not to enforce it, and it’s been our worry for a long time.

“But then, we heard in the news that GIPC is proposing some amendments to some parts or portions of the Act; and to us it was a bit of a worry, since we as major stakeholders have not been told anything by GIPC as to where they find any problems in the Act which require some sort of amendment. The Act has been in existence for just about five years, and even with that it has not been enforced. So, why review it?” he questioned.

Meanwhile, the Greater Accra branch of GUTA has said it will petition parliament not to approve any review of the GIPC Act that should it be put before it.

“We are petitioning parliament, as our representatives, to think of Ghana first and ensure trading business stays in the hands of indigenous Ghanaians.

“We look around the country today and foreigners are flouting our good laws and causing the nation a lot more harm than good, as compared to indigenous Ghanaians who hold birthrights in the country.

“We, the Greater Accra Regional Branch of GUTA, cannot tolerate any individual interest that leaves the greater number of traders unemployed and their businesses collapsed…” said a statement signed by Emmanuel Nana Opoku Acheampong, Greater Accra Regional Secretary of GUTA.

But Chief Executive Officer of GIPC, Yofi Grant, dismissed the claims of the association saying that they have been in touch with them and that the process to review the GIPC Act is still at an infant stage with stakeholder consultation still on going.

He insists that centre has not concluded on what amendments should be made to the Act and as such GUTA’s claims are premature.

Leonessa outdoors new construction materials

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Leonessa Company which is noted for the sale of construction and building materials has taken stock of new products to support the country’s fast rising construction and real estate sector.

The Managing Director of the company, Mariam Addai, urged contractors to do some research especially on the latest building and construction materials whenever they are starting a construction project.

“Pick out specific products or building materials by brand name, model, and style to include in the construction,” she said.

She therefore urged contractors to use sophisticated building materials in their various construction works to ensure quality of work.

She said a building or a construction work that is done to stand the test of time does not only require the contractor using quality cement and blocks but the materials such as metal props, scaffold, columns stir up should also be one with high quality standard.

She said most contractors for instance use bamboo instead of metal props during construction period, this she said undermines the quality of the building or the construction work as well as the safety of the workers on the construction site.

Mrs. Addai who deals in the sale and rentals of imported building materials from Italy and Australia said it is high time professionals in the construction sector operate with high international standards.

“Why will a building contractor use a bamboo to support the flowing of a building when he can use metal props which has been provided for such purpose.

“Again, there is a multi-directional scaffold which makes the work of a constructor very simple and easy at a construction site so it better one knows at every point in time the right materials to use at what point, she said.

She said one of the causes of building collapse can be attributed to quality of materials and workmanship.

According to her, the use of outdated engineering materials and lack of certification standards on engineering materials lead to the construction of substandard buildings.

“Quality of engineering materials is a key driver to construction of quality buildings. Contractors must regularly inspect the quality of materials being supplied and used for construction purposes.

Products

Leonessa Ghana has a range of building materials for sale and hiring which include yellow board for making of concrete wall, h-beam, metal props and garage gates. The building materials which are imported from Italy and Australia and are made with high quality standards.

The company, which is also into advisory services, gives construction related advises to contractors as to which building materials are appropriate for a particular project.

President Akufo-Addo should have used ExxonMobil GNPC deal to let Trump know Africa is not a “shithole”

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The Minority Spokesperson on Foreign Affairs Hon Okudzeto Ablakwa has lamented government’s inability to use a recent petroleum signing agreement between multinational oil company ExxonMobil and the government of Ghana to highlight the fact that Africa is not a “shithole”.

The Government of Ghana, led by the Minister for Energy, Mr Boakye Agyarko recently signed a petroleum agreement with ExxonMobil granting the company license to explore and produce hydro carbons in the country to improve energy production.

In an interview with Dr Etse Sikanku, host of “World Affairs” on Class 91.3 fm, Okudzeto Ablakwa, the Ranking member on Foreign Affairs and MP for North Tongu constituency, says instead of simply hailing the agreement, President Akufo-Addo could have capitalized on the opportunity to send a strong signal to President Trump that Africa has a lot to offer.

“The US oil giant ExxonMobil are here signing an agreement. This is a time that ExxonMobil are after our oil. We should engage in some economic diplomacy. We should use this to show that Africa is not the shithole that President Trump is talking about. We have so much that they need. And that really we all need each other in this world.”

Hon. Ablakwa added that we live in a globalized and interconnected world which requires respect and cooperation by all countries.

“Nobody can live in isolation. No matter how powerful you are, no matter how strong or indispensable that you think you are, you still will need others. The ExxonMobil case really highlight that. And here we are today, everybody is hailing the ExxonMobil-GNPC deal but failed to use this opportunity to really let President Trump know.”

President Trump had earlier in a meeting with a bi-partisan group of Senators discussing an immigration deal described Haiti, El Salvador and African nations as “shithole countries” suggesting the US wasn’t interested in immigrants from those countries. The comments have generated widespread backlash and commentary worldwide with sharp reactions worldwide including the African Union and the UN human rights office.

“Other African presidents would have really taken advantage of this to let the world there is so much in Africa that these Americans are coming for and continue to come for.” Hon. Ablakwa said.

2018 GTBank Principals’ Cup: Teshie Presec to battle Tema Sec Tec in finals tomorrow

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The 4th edition of the annual GTBank Soccer championship 2018 for Senior High Schools, kicked off at the El-Wak Stadium in Accra yesterday.

The two-day tournament christened ‘Principals’ Cup’ seeks to unearth the best football talents from schools in the Greater Accra Region and is in collaboration with the Ghana Educations Service.

The competition begun with eight Senior High Schools, including: Ngleshie Amanfro; Accra Academy; Ada SHS Technical; Teshie Presec; Kwabenya Community SHS; Accra Technical Training Centre; Tema Technical Institute; and Chemu SHS.

In the preliminaries, Teshie-Presec defeated Ada Tech by 4-3 on penalties after a very close encounter, while Accra Academy failed to secure a semi-final place after been knocked out of the competition by Ngleshie Amanfro 3-4 on penalties.

In the other first round encounters, Tema Sec Tech recorded the only victory in open play after outclassing first timers Kwabenya SHS 2-0. On the other hand, Chemu Sec Tech had to fight hard to beat Accra Technical Training Centre on penalties by 4-3 to progress to the semi-finals.

In the semi-finals, Presec Teshie defeated Ngleshie Amanfro 1-0 defeat to book date in the finals against Tema Technical Institute, which also recorded a 1-0 victory over Chemu in the semis.

Lekan Sanusi, General Manager of Guaranty Trust Bank Ghana Limited, speaking at the opening ceremony, noted that the development of sports in the country is of major importance to GTBank.

“This country has seen the rise of some soccer talents into our national teams who also started from a platform such as this. It is one thing to possess a skill or talent and another to be discovered and given the opportunity to showcase it to the world.

Through the GTBank sponsored soccer championship, three of our young ladies – Miss Nina Norshie and Miss Eunice Kpentey both from St. John’s Grammer SHS, and Miss Millot Pokua from Don Bosco Technical Training Institute have been called up to the National Female U-17 team, the Black Maidens. Success stories like these make us proud as sponsors,” Mr. Sanusi added.

Unlike previous years where the cup was competed for by Zonal teams, this year’s is competed by individual school teams.

Just like previous competitions, GTBank, will award exceptional talents like Top Goal Scorer, Best Goalkeeper, Best Defender and Best Player with an amount of GHC1,000 each.

The final will be played at the El-Wak Stadium tomorrow.

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