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VOICES FROM DOWN UNDER:Trump’s Jerusalem Aberration—Ghana panders to divisive global power politics again

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It is almost impossible to see the logic in Donald Trump’s decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, argues Shibley Telhami, a Senior Fellow at the Centre for Middle East Policy.

But if Trump’s undoing of decades of U.S foreign policy stance on Jerusalem is an illogical aberration, then a statement by the Speaker of Parliament of a small West African country accepting Trump’s illogical move—contravening his own country’s so-called neutral position on the issue—is disgraceful at best.

As the speaker of Ghana’s parliament, the fact that Prof. Mike Oquaye’s comments were supposed to be his personal views does not make those comments any less naïve, unguarded and dangerous.

In any serious country where national security was paramount, Prof. Oquaye would be writing his resignation letter by now, or risked being removed by his own government or parliamentary colleagues.

But as impressionable as Ghana’s Speaker of Parliament might have been on this issue, what informed his comments may be sitting deep within the social and political fabric of Ghanaian society.

Sadly, this is not the first time Ghana has appeared to pander to the divisive politics of the 21st century, doing very little to appreciate the national security red flags involved in doing so. Here are two recent examples.

The first is Ghana’s decision in 2015/2016 to allow two former Guantanamo Bay detainees, Khalid al-Dhuby and Mahmoud Omar Bin Atef, to stay in Ghana under unusual circumstances. That move risked having—and did have? —serious consequences on Ghana’s successful but fragile Christian-Muslim relations.

It divided Ghana’s two major political parties. It also divided the country’s two major religious groups, with Christians mostly siding with the then opposition party which is now in government, and Muslims largely siding with the then government, now in opposition.

Besides the politics involved, there were series of public outrage and commentaries which had the potential to be detrimental to security. Then spokesperson of Ghana’s National Chief Imam is on record to have commented that the Christian Council of Ghana was “xenophobic”, and that the latter’s position on the issue was biased because of the faith of the former detainees.

I am not against the acceptance of the former detainees per se. However, any person with the right dose of national security foresight must wonder why Ghana would allow herself to be drawn into the policy mistakes of global powers, and indulge in such a dangerous collaboration with the U.S. the way it did, without realising the potential long-term consequences on security and governance.

Secondly, in what may be similar to Mike Oquaye’s comments, the current Ghana government honoured a campaign promise to institute a pilgrimage to Israel for Ghanaian Christians. Indeed, the Ghana government-supported Hajj Board oversees the annual Muslim religious requirement of pilgrimage to Makkah and Madinah in Saudi Arabia.

However, it is unclear whether a government-supported Christian pilgrimage was to recognise a mandatory religious duty in Christianity or it was just a reactive act of political pettifogging to treat Christians “fairly”—to equalise government’s support for Muslim religious duties. It appears the latter was the case since—unlike Muslims—there isn’t a mandatory religious duty for Christians to visit biblical sites as a pillar of their faith.

I have no issue with government organising pilgrimage for any religious grouping in Ghana. Indeed, I look forward to the Ghana government organising a pilgrimage for Buddhists, Hindus and traditional religionists to their sacred locations soon!

It bears noting, however, that the whole logic of governments’ appropriation of religious faiths into their political machinery—Muslim or Christian—is highly problematic, given the avowed secular democratic principle of separating “Church” (or Mosque) from State.

But my concern with the Christian pilgrimage is in the way it was carried out, and the potential diplomatic and security implications of same.

In the said Christian pilgrimage, the pilgrims were to visit Israel. Yet most, if not all, of the religious sites pilgrims were supposed to visit (in that so-called “Israel”) are found in the occupied territories, regarded by Palestinians as legally theirs under international law—a position supported by most countries within the UN. Going to Palestine and calling it “Israel” contravenes Ghana’s neutral stance on the Israeli-Palestinian issue.

It represents a declaration of Ghana’s support for Israel over Palestine. This amounts to a diplomatic insult to the latter. This makes the Ghana government’s statement distancing itself from Prof. Mike Oquaye’s comments merely defensive, given the government’s de facto recognition of parts of Palestine as Israel.

The decision to refer to territories legally recognised as Palestine as “Israel” also offends the many Muslims who believe that the Israeli state is a synonym for oppression. An oppressive state initiated by the Balfour Declaration in 1917 in pursuit of a “national home for the Jewish people”.

Sir Arthur Balfour’s logic and the subsequent declaration of Israel in 1948 sought and succeeded in establishing the new state of Israel at a location which had been habited by Palestinians for many centuries. A bloody religious-cultural feud had ensued, and a battle has been fought ever since.

It is not in doubt that the Palestine-Israel issue is the world’s longest and most sensitive conflict. But for a small African country to dance on the fringes of that conflict, even if inadvertently so, amounts to political stupidity.

Worse, political short-sightedness on the Palestine-Israel conflict opens up local spaces to dangerous global ideologies to seep through.  Re-taking pre-1967, if not pre-1948, Palestine is one of the ambitions of several violent Islamist organisations across the world.

Any favourable engagement with Israel—an imposter and oppressor state, according to these Islamists and according to many, if not all, Muslims—by countries as vulnerable as Ghana is a potentially perilous venture. A clear national security issue to which many African governments, by their actions, have been dangerously oblivious.

Prof. Mike Oquaye is believed to have stated in regards to Trump’s decision: “whatever Israel wants, we in Ghana will go by that, because that is essentially an internal decision.”

This statement amounted to a betrayal of Ghana’s sovereignty, in which Prof. Oquaye subverted Ghana’s own internal socio-political independence to Israel—a country which, according to many, is of questionable sovereignty. T

his becomes even more serious if one thinks of the fact that Ghana’s Speaker of Parliament is the third in line to serve as president in the absence of the sitting president and vice president.

Even key US allies such as Britain and Australia have clearly stated that they do not support this irresponsible trumping of peace and justice in the Middle East. So, for Prof. Mike Oquaye, an elite Ghanaian intellectual, politician and senior citizen, to shudder before president Trump’s aberration shows how many an African elite are willing to sell the peaceful African humanity for a hegemonic pittance.

Some Christians in Ghana are jubilant over Trump’s recognition—and, perhaps, over Mike Oquaye’s immediate endorsement—of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, much to the chagrin of many ideologically-aware Muslims. From a human security perspective, this portends doom. Indeed, there are many Christians who—in the spirit of commendable wisdom—have condemned Prof. Oquaye’s comments or stayed on the fence on the issue.

Yet, still, pandering to divisive global politics the way Ghana seems to be doing recently has direct implications for Christian-Muslim relations. I have argued elsewhere that Ghana is not as insulated from large scale conflicts as we romantically are made to believe.

In a West African sub-region engulfed by violent extremist groups, a security expert is right to have made the argument that Ghana is not insulated from terrorist attacks either. Many hitherto peaceful countries have become ungovernable due to a lack of foresight by those in charge. Yes, Christians and Muslims in Ghana have lived side by side with impressive maturity.

Yet there is much to be done to consummate these peaceful gains. The price of hasty complacency is always a long and tedious regret.

That is why political leaders in the developing world should be tactful and wiser than Prof. Mike Oquaye. Countries with significant and politically active religious-cultural populations must strive to deploy a national security policy of caution. A deliberate but measured approach in response to the intransigencies of the twenty first century. A pragmatic policy of cultural assertiveness, founded on a robust realisation that African countries have their own unique demography and socio-political priorities. A break away from being servants of global powers and their divisive politics, to being leaders with a strong commitment to local needs and to humanity.

Muhammad Dan Suleiman is a human security expert, international relations scholar and decolonial thinker. He is also a political risk analyst at Foreign Brief (Australia), research fellow at West African Centre for Counter Extremism (Ghana), co-founder at RFOL Foundation (Ghana), researcher at the University of Western Australia, and  security analyst at The Zambakari Advisory (USA).  You can contact him at [email protected]

Imports to be disinfected at ports effective Jan. 2018

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Government, acting through the Ghana Health Service (GHS), has signed a service contract with LCB Worldwide – a crisis management and prevention firm – to disinfect all imports at the country’s entry points, effective January 2018.

Tunnel-like scanners will be installed at the ports, where trucks carting imported cargo will have to drive through for organic chemicals to be sprayed on the goods so as to eliminate any hazardous or infectious disease before the goods get onto the market or to the consignee.

The exercise is in line with laid-down bio-security measures of the International Health Regulations (IHR), and comes at a time when the country needs to be proactive in dealing with the issue of public health.

The International Health Regulations recommend routine and emergency measures at designated points of entry, and these include decontamination procedures at international container terminals, ports, airports and ground crossings.

Ghana, in 2007 – alongside other member-states of the World Health Organisation (WHO) – enforced the IHR, and in 2012 incorporated them into its national laws by virtue of the Public Sector Act (Act 851).

As per the contract, LCB Worldwide will deploy about eight disinfection delivery tunnels in the ports of Tema and Takoradi, and various other entry points in the country.

The company indicated that it has already put in place all the facilities it will need to carry out its functions.

Director-General of the Ghana Health Service, Dr. Anthony Nsiah Asare – at a stakeholder meeting to discuss implementation of the programme, emphasised that the decontamination exercise augurs well for the country ‘s socio-economic development.

He said: “The move is to ensure early recognition of emerging pest and disease threats, allow integrated responses to threats, rationalisation of controls and improved emergency preparedness and response.”

According to him, the country must not be left behind in an era when the world is enhancing measures and adopting preventive mechanisms to crisis.

According to the United Nations Development Group, West Africa alone may have lost as much as 3.6 billion dollars per year between 2014 and 2017 – due to a decrease in trade, closing of borders, flight cancellations; and reduced foreign direct investment and tourism activity fuelled by stigma.

LCB Worldwide will be working in accordance with recommendations of the World Health Organisation and under direct supervision of the Ghana Health Service.

The company will carry out the disinfection exercise at ports and points of entry without any additional delays at the designated places.

The project will offer gains to all stakeholders and serve as a marketing tool and strategy for importers and exporters, who can now assure clients of safe and secure handling of their goods coming into the country.

“Ghana’s ports will be positioned as the preferred destination for trade, due to the fact that the disinfection will provide extra security and the country will stand out as first in the West African sub region to implement the IHR,” Dr. Asare noted.

Major stakeholders including the Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority, the Importers and Exporters Association of Ghana, the Ghana Shippers’ Authority, the Ghana Union of Traders Association-GUTA, the Ghana Institute of Freight Forwarders, the Association of Customs House Agents Ghana-ACHAG, the Food and Drugs Authority, and the Customs Brokers Association of Ghana CUBAG among others were present at the stakeholder session.

Unleash private sector to achieve SDGs — Prez Akufo-Addo

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President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has called on African leaders to ‘dismantle’ any cumbersome business processes and unfavourable policies to unleash private capital and expertise in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

“Africa needs a strong and vibrant private sector to boost its economy. A strong and vibrant private sector has the space to grow. We must dismantle anything that impedes progress of the private sector,” he said.

The President made this statement at the High-Level Roundtable on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) held in Accra.

The event was organised by the government of Ghana in partnership with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, and government of Norway.

According to the President Akufo-Addo, Africa has the knowledge, resources and talent needed to transition from poverty to prosperity, adding that it however takes a different kind of leadership – one that is selfless and empowered, including smart and progressive policies, innovative approaches, smart and strategic partnerships, and fully unleashes the private sector’s potential.

He said that the continent, now more than ever, needs governments that are accountable and transparent institutions.

“The story of Africa’s hitherto inability to develop is primarily the story of bad governance and our damaging colonial heritage. We must make government and our governance systems work for the eradication of poverty to the creation of prosperity and wealth,” he said.

Africa is the poorest-performing continent in achieving the SDGs, even though Ghana has made some major progressive strides. In view of this, a 15-member Inter-Ministerial Committee is to be set up next September to implement the SDGs.

As co-Chair of the SDGs Advocates Group, the President noted that: “The deficit in human development is highest on our continent. This can be stopped if Africa pursues implementation of the SDGs with a strong sense of urgency and commitment to act now, because we do not have the luxury of time considering the pressing issues of unemployment, climate change and poverty”.

According to the president, Africa must have bold ambitions, be creative and innovative in order to fully achieve the SDGs. He noted that if Africa invests in its people and takes a different approach to doing business – devoid of over-reliance on foreign aid, the aim of achieving the SDGs will be accomplished.

The SDG advocates are to promote the universal character of the SDGs, including their commitment to leaving no one behind; promote the engagement of new stakeholders in implementing and financing the SDGs; encourage partnerships with government, civil society and the private sector to share knowledge and resources; and raise awareness of the SDGs’ integrated nature.

The overarching objective of the Roundtable is to mobilise regional support for implementation of the SDGs, and to propose the practical, smart and innovative actions needed to underpin accelerated implementation of the SDGs at both the regional and country levels.

The two-day event, held under the theme ‘Financing the SDGs: The Resources Challenge, Domestic Financing and Innovative Approaches’, brought together distinguished African leaders, a core group of SDGs advocates, senior leadership of the United Nations, the African Development Bank, multilateral institutions, the private sector, policymakers, and thought-leaders from Africa.

Also present at the event was the Vice President of Ghana, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia; President of Rwanda, Paul Kagame; newly-elected chairperson of the African Union Commission, Mustapha Aki Mohammed; and world-acclaimed economist, Professor Jeffery Sachs.

GIFF Academy graduates 184 freighters and clearing agents

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A total of 184 graduates of the Ghana Institute of Freight Forwarders (GIFF) have been awarded diplomas and certificates after successfully completing their various areas of study at the seventh graduation ceremony of the institute, held over the weekend in Tema.

About 106 students received diplomas while the remaining 78 received certificates after years of training in general freight forwarding principles, applicable in all modes of carriage including maritime transport, Customs procedure as well as logistics and warehousing etc.

Speaking at the graduation ceremony, president of the institute Kwabena Ofosu-Appiah tasked graduates to apply the knowledge they have acquired to help cause the needed change and professionalism in the industry.

He indicated: “Society and industry will be looking up to you with lots of expectations to generate new ideas that will help deal with contemporary challenges of the profession using modern approaches.

“We are looking for transformative leaders among you; leaders who will shape the country’s development trajectory through continuous innovation and serve as role-models for the future generation.”

According to Mr. Ofosu-Appiah, the GIFF Academy continues to maintain its leadership position in the delivery of quality and high performance capacity building and professional training, a feat that has sustained its position as the FIATA centre of excellence within the African sub-region.

He said the institute is repositioning itself to better handle the rapidly changing dynamics of the freight logistics sub-sector, citing the surge in globalisation with its attendant ICT infusion of “app-start” interventions.

“As an institute, we shall continue to look out for strategic partners and build networks that enable us to diversify our capacities in order to secure our future,” he said.

Mr. Ofosu-Appiah commended leadership at the institute’s Education Department, whose efforts have resulted in partnerships with the University of Cape Coast as well as the ‘online platform master’, Strabsnet, toward building a diversified portfolio that equips its members to respond to changing needs of the Customs brokerage industry.

He noted: “As the current leadership, we shall continue to support and build on the strong foundation of excellence that has been laid by our predecessors”.

Parliament wants full lists of oil funded projects disclosed

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…as it prepares to summon Finance Minister

Members of Parliament are demanding a for full list of projects funded with oil revenue and are considering inviting the Finance Minister to come and provide the legislature with a detailed  lists of oil funded projects.

During the debate of the 2016 Public Interest and Accountability Committee (PIAC) report on the floor of the House in Accra, Chairman of the Mines and Energy Committee of Parliament, Emmanuel Akwasi Gyamfi said none availability of such details is making its work very difficult to monitor projects financed with the oil money.

He added that such details will also enable the nation reduce issues “ghost projects”.

By the Annual Budget Funding Amount (ABFA) law, the country is supposed to have 70percent of the revenues to support the budget and also has to be accounted for by the Minister of Finance, when he is submitting the Petroleum Funds report.

This according to Mr Akwasi Gyamfi, has not happened over the years and they are looking forward to changing that.

“What I have requested that is the current minister and other subsequent ministers, they have to report to the House, the full lists of all projects being financed with the oil revenue” he told B&FT in an interview.

The PIAC report is a subset of the Petroleum Revenue Management Act (PRMA) which the   Finance Ministry has been accused of flouting aspects of it.

A member of the Public Interest and Accountability Committee, Dr Steve Manteaw, had raised serious concerns about value for money on the said projects.

“The breach is in respect of a provision requiring the Minister of Finance every year to submit to Parliament, a reconciliation report on the management of petroleum revenues and in that report the minister is expected to indicate the stage of execution of all oil funded projects.

Over the period, since we started producing oil in this country, the previous Ministers and the current Minister have not complied with that provision in terms of giving us updates on the stage of completion of oil projects, “

The PRMA provides a framework for the collection, management of petroleum revenues in a responsible, accountable and sustainable manner for the benefit of Ghana in accordance with Article 36 of the Constitution.

It is also expected to regulate the collection, allocation and management by government of petroleum revenue derived from upstream midstream petroleum operations.

HFC Bank to simplify mortgage loan

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…introduces mortgage loans for land acquisition

HFC Bank Ghana Limited has promised to make Mortgage loan processes simpler and faster to provide a better experience for existing and new applicants.

This according to the bank, will cut short the long and cumbersome process new and prospective applicants for mortgage go through to access the available facilities on the market.

Speaking to the B&FT at the sidelines of an HFC Bank Mortgage Seminar in Accra, the Managing Director of HFC Bank, Anthony Jordan explains the bank in 2018 will be targeting competitive mortgage offers including simpler processes which will make home ownership comforting.

“Our Vision for 2018 and beyond is to make the mortgage process simpler for all our customers. We want to provide a better experience for applicants in the mortgage process. That is why this stakeholder’s engagement is very important, that is why we have engaged key facilitators to present and discuss with us areas that stymied the process and cause difficulties and challenges in the timeliness of disbursement. We are also seeking to provide mortgage options for our customers,” he stated

Mr. Jordan therefore disclosed that HFC Bank had introduced mortgage loans for Land Acquisition, “we need to appreciate that Property Investment is not just about building investments. It is also about land investments. This would also offer customers the needed collateral should they wish to avail of mortgage equity financing in the future.”

The bank also in addition, has introduced financing options such as construction loans, bridge financing and others.

The Managing Director indicated his confidence about the outcomes of this seminar as it was expected to gear the focus on improving the bank’s business relationships and making the mortgage process simpler for its customers.

Ghana is currently facing a housing deficit estimated at 1.7 million minimum which has been blamed on the high cost of mortgages and the cumbersome nature of applying for a facility.

Meanwhile the Bank ruled out any fears of losing competition in the mortgage industry to new entrants GHL Bank, formally Ghana Home Loans Limited.

Managing Director of HFC Bank, who rather welcomed the GHL Bank to the market stated that considering the huge housing needs of the Ghanaian, allows for the new providers who will help stem the housing deficit.

He stated that HFC Bank the pioneer in mortgage, was well positioned to attract more Ghanaians to do businesses with them

GHL Bank, formerly Ghana Home Loans was launched recently with the aim of providing competitive mortgage offers to Ghanaians targeting the middle class and the ordinary Ghanaian who even wants to save towards having a decent home in the future.

Geo Services to establish Railway University

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…as 1D1F receives boost with 20 rail projects

Russian railway company, Geo Services, has disclosed to the B&FT that it has begun the process towards the establishment of a Railway University in the country.

To this end, the company has facilitated the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the Engineering Department of the University of Ghana and a leading Russian Railway University—with the latter to serve as an affiliate of the one to be set up in Ghana.

Chief Executive Officer of Geo Services, Sergey Kamnev, says the proposed rail university will be the first of its kind in Africa.

“Let me say that, we have been mandated to open the first Railway University in Africa at the shores of Ghana. Fortunately, Ghana Railway Authority has the physical structures in Takoradi already, so we are going to renovate and upgrade it to a university.

In view of this, we have had series of meetings with the Engineering Department of the University of Ghana, Legon and one of the best Railway Universities in Russia and have signed the Memorandum of Understanding,” Mr. Kamnev stated.

The university, B&FT understands, will train the workforce for the country’s rail sector and could serve as a knowledge transfer institution should Geo Services win the bid to redevelop the country’s defunct railway network, a project the Akufo-Addo government is very particular about.

Mr. Kamnev further stated: “What we do not want to do is to bring people from Russia to work here in Ghana. This university is going to help us transfer the technology as fast as possible for Ghanaians to build and operate their own railways efficiently.”

Government is seeking to enter into a public-private partnership arrangement for the two specific projects; the development of the Eastern Railway Line and the Boankra Inland Port projects estimated to cost some US$2.4billion.

The Russian company has indicated its readiness to invest over US$12.5billion in the redevelopment of the country’s rail transport infrastructure.

“With our own unofficial pre-feasibility conducted, we are assuring you that we will give Ghana the best. Considering our record, even in the area of fatalities within the industry, I can say that, with over 100 years experience in railway in the world, we have recorded, I am sure, the least of fatalities,” Sergey Kamnev told the B&FT.

The company has further emphasised that if they win the bid to redevelop the rail sector, they will establish 20 factories to employ over 40,000 Ghanaians to support the government’s vision to create employment for the teeming unemployed youth under the government’s flagship “One District, One Factory” programme.

“If we are given the right to build the rail lines in Ghana, we are going to use Ghanaians to manufacture everything in Ghana; from executive wagons to bolt and knots. This is going to help us open, at least, 20 factories in the country,” the Geo Services boss added.

HeForShe: The Silence Breakers

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He For She. Two million Ghanaian boys and men mobilized to pledge support in the fight for gender equality. That’s this campaign’s aim. It was launched on the 2nd day of a High Level Africa Roundtable on Mobilizing Support and Accelerating Implementation of the SDGs.

It comes in the week that Joy FM radio did a segment on teachers sexually harassing girl students from JHS and above, which ignited outrage. And it comes in the week that Tanzania’s president pardoned two child rapists – men who had been convicted and sentenced for raping ten girls, aged six to eight.

This set of circumstances is crucial.

This launch offers an important opportunity that must be seized by a nation.

Ghana needs to teach men and boys to become silence breakers when it comes to violence against girls and women.

Time magazine’s PERSON of THE YEAR was given to ‘The Silence Breakers’, a group of American women who had broken their silence regarding sexual harassment, sexual violence and rape by powerful men. It was called the #MeToo movement, started by African American organizer and activist, Tarana Burke, seeking solidarity and community as she worked with women of colour survivors of sexual violence in the US.

Ghana, it is time for men and boys to stop being bystanders and become silence breakers. Our bystander culture teaches boys and men to watch, listen or be present when violence is being perpetuated against girls and women – and do nothing.

The HeForShe campaign is an opportunity to transform bystander culture.

I am deeply passionate about this. When I lived in New York, I led a campaign together with a Chicago organizer, Mariame Kaba, to engage men in breaking their silence and speaking out in support of a woman who had been incarcerated after she defended herself from a violent husband. The campaign was called #31forMARISSA. We used social media and traditional media and worked with men inviting them to write public letters of support and to break their own silence about the men who inflicted violence on their mothers, sisters and friends.

This campaign, started by two women, attracted major media partnerships. Its success gained national headlines and media coverage across the country including CNN, MSNBC and HuffPostLive to name just a few. It was a campaign led by women, involving and engaging men. That is part of my work that I call ‘Emotional Justice’. Equally, importantly, it encouraged men to shift their lens regarding violence against women, focus on what action they could take, and become a silence breaker.

Global cultures of patriarchy teach men to support other men when it comes to violence against women. What if we asked men: why don’t you stop? What if we asked men: why don’t you help stop other men?

Boys and men are taught to point fingers at women asking the same questions, over and over.  If he’s violent, why don’t you leave? If a teacher is harassing you, why don’t you report it? If your uncle is sexually abusing you or has defiled you – why don’t you go to the police?

What if the people you should report to are perpetrators of that violence?

In February this year, 13 students from Jukwaa Krobo Junior High School (JHS) in the Central Region left school due to what they called the incessant sexual harassment by their teachers. They claimed this harassment made it impossible for them to study. The story, published online, named a man the girls identified as a particular culprit. The story ended with school authorities saying they would investigate and sanction the guilty teachers.

That was February. What happened post that investigation? Where are those 13 girls? Are they back at school? What happened to the man? Is he in prison? What about other teachers? What about the school’s culture?

In June 2014, Tumu Senior High Technical School girl students reported a culture of sexual harassment and sexual violence led by male teachers that included the principal. The headmaster, failed to sanction teachers using grades and girls’ commitment to education to coerce them into sex. In that story, 100 former and current students reported the Headmaster as culpable of sexual violence and sanctioning a culture that perpetuated such violence. A teacher named in the story was awarded District Best Teacher. Let’s sit with that. What do students and other teachers learn when an award is given to teachers allegedly contributing to sexual harassment?

In HeForShe, the call must be to open the closed minds of boys and men complicit in a culture that normalizes sexual violence against girls – especially in schools. Such a culture punishes the girls who speak out, threatening their education and future while protecting guilty men with silence.

This is no longer about individual culprits, this is about an institutionalized culture.

Culture teaches men that women are responsible for the sexual and physical violence inflicted on them by boys and men. Men shield rather than shame, they are silent when they must speak up and they are complicit when they must take action.

And this, for me, is what HeForShe must become.  In Ghana, boys and men must break their silence on sexual violence and violence against women. This campaign provides that opportunity.

There are examples of success.

The ‘No Means No Worldwide’ campaign goes into schools to teach boys and girls intervention skills when it comes to violence. They teach girls assertiveness, how to say no effectively and how to defend themselves. They teach boys intervention, speaking up and not staying silent. In Nairobi, they are teaching consent classes. Such classes have reduced rape by 50%.

I too launched a consent project via my multi-media production company. #theCONSENTconvo used media as a tool to encourage men to speak about how they learned about consent and to enable them to see that they are taught entitlement of women’s bodies.

The HeForShe mobilization must enable a culture of reimagining consent for boys and men when it comes to the bodies of girls and women.

Boys and men can unlearn what has been taught that harms rather than helps.

I am a citizen of a nation where my President has, I think, mentioned the importance of gender equality or empowering women, at almost every speech he makes.

So, when we say there is no political will, in this moment that is not true.

The next question is what strategy, support and resource lies behind the message? The challenge is to not be seduced by the rhetoric of gender equality, nor think that action and transformation occurs solely because a President includes women in his major speeches. That is an important beginning. It matters. It signifies – at least the appearance of – political will. It offers society an opportunity to strategize and implement bold, specific, targeted, focused and resourced action in support of transforming a society that is unsafe for girls and women.

Story after story. We can be more than story-tellers; this is a moment of campaign journalism, impactful investigative journalism and languaging violence accurately. These are – too often unused – tools of this media trade. That requires training and investment.

I ask myself: what is my contribution? It is always easier to be critic rather than contributor. Critical analysis matters. Contribution does too. I am in the media – what is my profession’s contribution here?

This is about connecting dots and campaigning journalism that tells fuller stories.

Media – like all of us – are complicit in the practice of cultures that make men bystanders. Media’s role in HeForShe must be about follow up and follow through. Sadly, shame and exposure are effective tools of change. Media’s eyes must stay on such stories.

We are a society unwilling to grapple with the difficult work of addressing and transforming a culture that teaches men they are entitled to the bodies of girls and women.  If we are going to mobilize men to support women – that is crucial work.

The hardest thing to open is a closed mind. We must do just that.

Let this HeForShe campaign not be a band-aid, or a symbolic pledging that does not manifest in action. HeForShe should not be a slogan, but a call to action. It should be a substantive reckoning with this culture of entitlement. It should comply with a President whose call inspires – and whose call must be matched with a changing culture that serves a nation’s progress.

We are in a moment where we can choose to do this important, challenging work of addressing a culture of complicity that keeps boys and men silent when they should speak up.

To the He For She pledge-taking men and boys of Ghana: become a silence breaker.

                         

UG, German gov’t set up Centre for Advanced Studies

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Prof. Francis Dodoo (front right) and Prof. Andreas Mehler (front left), accompanied by H.E Dr. Frank-Walter Steinmeier, German President and Prof. Ebenezer Oduro Owusu, UG Vice-Chancellor at the signing

The University of Ghana has signed an agreement with the German Ministry of Education to establish the Merian International Centre for Advanced Studies (MICAS) in Africa, headquartered in Ghana.

Sited at the University of Ghana, Legon campus, the Centre which will develop an intellectual programme and research agenda, that seeks to bridge the knowledge divides between Africa and the rest of the world.

It will serve as a centre for high-quality evidence-based research in the areas of democratic governance, conflict management, and sustainable development, which outfit is expected to boost the relevance of African thinking within the global academic world and shape policy-making.

Speaking at the signing ceremony, Prof. Francis Dodoo, Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Research, Innovation and Development at the University of Ghana, who signed the MoU on behalf of Ghana, noted that, being selected as the home of the initiative signals that the University has indeed attained global recognition.

“The consortium that won the bid to establish the Merian Centre held a strong conviction that the College of Humanities, our University, our country Ghana and West Africa, offered the best location to bring together both leading and emerging scholars from Africa and the world to produce and disseminate pathbreaking, rigorous and relevant scholarship in the social sciences and the humanities in Africa.

We pledge to do our utmost to ensure that the Institute thrives and catalyses African centred knowledge production for addressing some of the burning global issues of the 21st Century,” he added.

Prof. Andreas Mehler, Director of the Arnold- Bergstraesser Institute, Freiburg University, who also signed the agreement on behalf of Germany, stated that the Centre will put top research in the Humanities and Social Sciences on a new, internationally recognised level, giving it a new direction, with “Sustainable Governance” being key topic around which the research at the Institute will organise.

He further added: “All of us are deeply convinced, that this theme offers great potential for policy advice and outreach to Africa’s academic communities.

We want to activate high potentials within people, and we want to foster a climate of true collaboration among the fellows of the Institute—between senior and junior researchers, African and non-African researchers, and across disciplinary boundaries.”

The newly established Centre is expected to start full operations next year.

Kuapa Kokoo to set up coffee processing plant in A/R

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Kuapa Kokoo, a cocoa farmers’ co-operative organization, is to set up a coffee processing plant and coffee plaza at Ampabame and Daatano respectively in the Ejisu Juaben district of the Ashanti Region under its sustainable development programme, Managing Director  for the organization, Samuel Adimado, has revealed.

Mr. Adimado indicated that even though they are yet to determine the full financials for the coffee program, it is expected to be a “multi-billion dollar” project.

“It is quite a lot of money. If you look at the model, it is a multi-billion enterprise and therefore we will work with our financial stakeholders, government, partners and the rest to put an iconic processing plant in place,” he said.

The decision to set up a coffee processing plant was spearheaded by Millennium Promise Alliance, which is led by country director, Chief Nat Ebo Nsarko, who expressed hope about the project.

At a meeting with renowned economist, Prof. Jeffrey Sachs, in Accra to dialogue and outline strategies the organisation is undertaking to get the programme off the ground, Mr Adimado maintained that they have secured a 6-acre land in the Free Zone area of Kumasi to construct a coffee processing, packaging, and warehousing factory.

Additionally, the organisation have also secured one and half acre plot to be used for the construction of a coffee plaza along the Accra-Kumasi highway.

He explained the rationale behind the coffee programme: “What it means is that as a cooperative business there is huge potential to inculcate the business of farming–making farmers more efficient, more professionalised–so this is an effort to diversify into other income streams that is compatible with cocoa production.

The coffee programme is a top-up of professionalizing into doing cocoa very well and having other resources to invest in other agricultural enterprise.”

Furthermore, he stated that the organization will target areas that used to do well in cocoa but have been affected by climate to turn to coffee production.

He indicated that they will use the coffee programme to interface in climate challenged areas of Kuapa Kokoo and also focus on marginal fields in cocoa growing areas that are not conducive for cocoa production.

According to Mr Adimado, an environment scanning reveals that about 30,000 farmers in the Northern part of Ashanti region, Brong Ahafo, Central and Eastern part as well as part of Volta have expressed interest about the programme.

Prof. Jeffrey Sachs, who is also an adviser on the sustainable development goals (SGDs) and a consultant to the project, shared his thoughts with B&FT after the meeting with officials of Kuapa Kokoo.

“I am to meet with Kuapa and see what it got to do, very forward looking ideas, how to scale up the production of coffee and diversify; how to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) within the Kuapa Kokoo family of farm households and how to reach new partners.

This for me is very exciting and I am going to continue to do my best to help bring the partners and help Kuapa Kokoo fulfill its vision,” the renowned professor said.

The coffee programme falls in line with government’s vision of adding value to cash crop like coffee, as well as help in the fight to achieve sustainable development goals.

Kuapa Kokoo is made up of about 100,000 cocoa cooperatives and a household of over 500,000.

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