Home Blog Page 4832

Gov’t tasks shippers to drive industrialisation agenda

0

Trade and Industry Minister, Alan Kyeremanten, has charged stakeholders in the maritime sector to act their part to support government’s aggressive industrialisation initiatives by creating the right market linkages and facilitating trade.

Addressing the 8th African Shippers’ Day in Accra, he indicated that trade facilitation and industrialisation are at the centre of the African development dialogue, to help tackle unemployment and poverty.

But the success of such interventions depends on a competitive shipping environment, he said.

“We can see sustained economic growth only when we industrialise and diversify the regional economy through value addition to increase forex earnings and import substitution.

This will help generate revenue to finance development agenda and stabilise our currency; but now that these have been identified, we must begin to realise the critical role of the shipper in connecting industry and trade facilitation.”

A competitive shipper, he said, would translate into a competitive industrial sector if other measures are put in place.

“With government’s industrialisation agenda as well as other regional trade arrangements such as the Continental Free Trade Area (CFTA), this is the time for shippers to lend the much needed support.”

To better serve this economic course, Mr. Kyeremanten urged governments across the region to enhance their port infrastructure and also empower corridor management institutions to enable them create the right trade linkages to boost intra-regional trade.

The 8th African Shippers’ Day, organised by the Ghana Shippers’ Authority (GSA), under the auspices of the Union of African Shipper Councils (UASC), pooled together shipping stakeholders across the continent to share ideas on how to improve the lot of shippers in the region as well as stimulate the growth of the industry.

The event was on the theme: “Trade facilitation and its impact on Africa’s industrialisation.” It was meant to propose the right mix of a thriving international trade within a well-tuned economic policy framework to speed up industrialisation and the resultant enhancement of economies of the continent.

Chief Executive Officer of the GSA, Benonita Bismarck, said: “Without the shipper, there will be no merchant ships and therefore the shipper must have the pride of place in the trade facilitation and industrialisation discourse.”

She congratulated shippers across the continent whose sweat and toil have contributed immensely to the development of Africa.

To the UASC, she assured that her outfit remained committed to the union’s ideals as a rallying point for shippers’ interests within the sub-region.

Delay in seed, fertilizer procurement mars ‘Planting for Food and Jobs’

0

The Peasant Farmers Association of Ghana (PFAG) has expressed concern over delays associated with procurement and distribution of seeds and fertilizers, saying, the situation, if not checked, would negatively affect the Planting for Food and Jobs programme (PFJ).

The concern was raised at a press conference in Accra to present the Association’s analysis of the agricultural sector budget, as captured in the 2018 budget which was presented to Parliament last week.

Addressing the media at the event, Charles Nyaaba, Programme Officer for the association, noted that considering the target set by government last year, the 2017 performance of the PFJ programme is commendable, however, there are some challenges that need to be addressed for the initiative to succeed.

“We expect that the challenges associated with its implementation like late procurement, late payment of input suppliers, will be dealt with. If we are not able to address these constraints in 2018, it is likely to still affect the programme.

We expect early negotiations with suppliers of subsidised fertilizers and seeds to forestall delays and make it possible for inputs to be in stock in the regions and districts prior to the 2018 major planting season.”

The Planting for Food and Job initiative was introduced by government to help address the declining growth of Ghana’s agricultural sector.

The five-year long policy is geared towards increasing food productivity and ensure food security for the country as well as reduce food import bills, and also serve as an avenue to modernise agriculture and make it a source of employment for the teeming youth.

Among other things, the packages involved in the programme include the supply of improved seeds and fertilizers to farmers at subsidised prices (50% subsidy), and the provision of free extension services to farmers.

According to Mr. Nyaaba, over the years, the previous government which initiated the subsidised fertilizer initiative, failed to get fertilizer to farmers on time, hence affecting crop yield during harvesting.

He said: “For instance, farming season in the south starts between March and April but government starts the procurement around March. So, before the fertilizer will be ready for farmers to access, the farmer would have already planted his plants. And for some of the crops, you have to do the first fertilizer application, two weeks after planting seeds. But in most cases, the fertilizer comes when the plants are over a month, and when this happens, we do not get the full potentials of the fertilizer.”

He added that the case was not different this year, saying: “In 2017, farmers were ready to plant but they were waiting to get seeds and fertilizer from government, and so some farmers delayed planting and by the time the seeds came in, the planting season was almost over and it affected them badly.”

Aside delays in the procurement and supply of inputs, the association also noted its displeasure at the absence from the budget, any government policy geared towards enhancing local seed production in the country.

Mr. Nyaaba stated that more than 80 percent of seeds grown by farmers last year, were imported, urging government to pay particular attention to the area.

“When government initiated the PFJ programme we said that they needed to obtain seeds form our local seed growers, but because there has not been enough investment there, there were no seeds to be grown. So, they imported more than 80 percent of the seeds and some of these seeds are not conducive to the weather here.

When this government said they were focused on transforming agricultural sector, we were expecting to see huge investment in the local seed production, but we haven’t seen anything like that in the budget.

So, we think that instead of over relying on the importation of seeds, we should rather see how we can put these logistics together to empower our local seed growers,” he urged.

Conference on Out of Home Advertising opens in Accra

0

A  conference  on Out of Home Advertising has opened in Accra with a focus to validate a draft policy document to regulate  activities of advertising agencies in Accra.

The conference which is the first of its kind in Ghana is being facilitated by the Accra Metropolitan Assembly ( AMA) and the Advertising Association of Ghana, “seeks to provide a platform for stakeholders to make valuable inputs into the draft policy guidelines and standards to ensure sanity in the metropolis.”

Addressing participants, the Chief Executive Officer of AMA, Mohammed Adjei Sowah, said views and inputs were solicited from the Advertising Association of Ghana, Ghana Standards Authority, Ghana Institution of Engineers, National Petroleum Authority, Ghana Highways Authority, Ghana Road Safety Authority and Department of Urban Roads and other key stakeholders to ensure that all interests and concerns were properly addressed before the draft of the policy document.

He said the document christened “Smart Procedures and  Standards for Out of Home (Outdoor ) Advertisement ” seeks to focus on how the Assembly can effectively and efficiently manage Out of Home Advertising activities.  

He intimated that despite  gains made from outdoor advertising, its related activities have had some negative impact on the city’s beautification, security and safety thereby creating challenges, adding that the “Assembly is committed to ensure sanity in the industry.”

He said the document was in three parts , the first part focusing on the Legal and Institutional Framework  governing out of home advertising whiles  the second and third spells out the procedures and requirements  leading to obtaining a Permit , and the Standards  (Specifications of Advertising Infrastructure ) for Out of Home Advertising respectively. 

He announced that the Assembly had placed a temporary ban on out of home advertising and its related activities and was hopeful that  the document would be finalized and ready by the end of December 31, 2017, for the ban to be lifted.

” Although we have imposed a ban on mounting billboards,we still see people mounting them….we will remove them when we sight any,” he said.

He urged participants to embrace  the new systems and standards that would contribute towards making the city and nation Smart. 

Mr Joel Edmund Nettey, President of the Advertising Association of Ghana (AAG) and Chief Executive of Innova DDB Ghana, in an opening remark identified the lack of clear demarcations of boundaries for assemblies as one of the major challenges facing the industry adding that “advertising agencies have had to deal with contemptuous issues between the AMA, Ga South Municipal Assembly , LEKMA and LADMA, Tema and LEKMA and Tema and Kpone Katamanso.”

He commended the AMA for developing a document to regulate outdoor advertising within the metropolis and  appealed to the ministry of Local Government and Rural Development to invite other assemblies across the country to collaborate with the AAG to sanitize the system. 

Mr. Nattey  was hopeful that  decisions and agreements  made at the end of the conference would create a conducive environment for out of home advertising agencies.

Some participants who spoke to the media pledged to work with the policy document when ready.

Tersus’ take on National Sanitation Campaign

0

We at Tersus Ghana, like most well-meaning Ghanaians, are embarrassed. We are embarrassed that Accra, the capital city of Ghana is tagged as one of the most trash riddled cities in Africa, with some communities like Agbogbloshie ranked by the Blacksmith Institute among the world’s top ten most toxic environments (along with Chernobyl, Ukraine – the site of the 1986 nuclear radioactive disaster).

We are particularly worried because research has made it abundantly clear that clean cities promote physical and mental health of the citizens. In terms of tourism, we also factually concede that though tourists increased from 325,000 in 1996 to over 1.73 million in 2011, a clean city can attract even more tourists. It comes as no surprise therefore that these days, cleanliness has become a prime matter of concern in many cities in the sub-region. And it is in this same spirit that we welcome the government’s comprehensive initiative with the launch of the national sanitation campaign – on Monday, November 13. We share in this ambition and think things must change for the better, and significantly, the change must be now; it must be sustainable and indeed, it must be a way of life.

Getting the fundamentals right…

But to get the change that we want, Tersus believe we must first get the fundamentals right. We must be honest to ask the right questions and seek the right answers. For example, why are we where we are today? What did we do wrong and what are we doing to right the wrong? What would it take cities to improve waste collection coverage and quality? What role can all stakeholders play in planning, implementation and monitoring to avoid situation where our solutions have become dissolution or avoid a process of circular and cumulative causation? Today, while some studies have reported gradual improvement in collection coverage in some middle-income countries, in sub-Saharan Africa, the average coverage remains worrisomely below 80%, particularly in lower middle-income cities.

Recent studies indicate that Accra faces a fourfold risk overlap. These include: local public health hazards; poor city-region air quality, water and industrial pollution; vulnerabilities to natural disasters such as floods, earthquakes and storms; and amplification of some of these factors by the local impact of climate change especially as regards to floods and storm surges. Overall, small everyday hazards related to the brown or environmental health agenda still continue to account for the greatest burden of disease and premature death and serious injury in 21st century Accra, with their economic and social costs fall on poor families with little political fallout for city and national governments. For example, the year 2014 will forever be remembered as one of the years that another cholera pandemic struck the city and attacked about 16,500 defenseless people. This pandemic, which started in early June 2014, disappointingly affected 123 of the then 216 districts in all the 10 administrative regions of Ghana, with a cumulative figure of 26,286 cases with 211 deaths giving a case fatality rate of 0.8%. Paradoxically the wealthiest city was also the most hit accounting for 72% of all cases. Similarly, the June 3rd 2015 twin disaster in Accra resulted in the loss of about 200 lives and loss of property and livelihoods. “The Red Cross assessment figures indicated that up to 46,370 people were affected in some way in five localities – Nima, Aworshie, Aladjo, Adabraka, Low McCarthy Hill.

History’s painful lessons

The embarrassing situation in Accra provides a food for thought. Unfortunately, the repetitiveness nature of the sanitation challenge suggests we have not learnt from our past experiences and therefore these horrid conditions are unlikely to be reversed anytime soon. In 2011, the city began with a fee- and performance-based strategy to improve waste collection coverage. Conceptually, the strategy had two key aspects: first, to offer the private sector an opportunity to bid competitively to participate in a 5-year franchise agreement, and secondly, to shift the responsibility for payment collection for services to these same franchise-holders. The Metropolis then retained for itself certain control functions, including responsibility to set the user charges, enforce the requisite legislations and monitor the service providers to ensure efficient service delivery.

This initiative, though promising, has so far failed woefully in achieving its set goals. That notwithstanding, it offers lots of history’s painful lessons which perhaps we have not yet learnt. For example, research has shown that the tendency of local authorities to choose for private sector participation has more to do with the political difficulties involved in improving public sector operations, than in a genuine interest in what the private sector has to offer. Moreover, the authorities’ focus on formal sector privatisation appears to be misplaced, when informal micro-enterprise service providers have demonstrably shown that they can do a better job at a lower cost. Other empirical studies further reveal that the informal micro-enterprise collection sector, is accounting for about 30% of all solid waste collected in Accra, and their activity is responsible for the 25% increase in coverage recorded within the past five years since 2011. Till date, research shows that over 95% of all scraps used locally in the furnaces in steel industries in Tema are from the informal sector. Additionally, the country in 2011 officially exported metal scrap to 31 countries, representing a US$2.4 million business, and yet again, the unrecognized, often stigmatized informal sector championed this trade.

Looking for a clean city….

Turning a blind eye on all these developments have the potential to harm our quest of a clean city significantly. Although we know with business as usual, the future may hold significant dangers, yet our policy directions appear ill-defined, creating a challenging analytical problem. Thus, despite mounting research-based evidence of operational efficiency and effectiveness in adopting all inclusive private sector participation, waste managers and local government officials appear reluctant to believe that this will improve the system. Nor do the traditional approaches to planning produce a blueprint for co-operation with micro-enterprises. Their appetite for foreign-based flavoured solutions is rising to crescendo of misery. If the situation is to improve in our cities, something has to change in this regard. Studies indicate that the current situation will persist and perhaps worsen until and unless the imported solutions are integrated with indigenously derived knowledge and strategies, something it appears we are not doing today—or not doing correctly.

We at Tersus believe in the power of scientific research and we will always support such a call. We hold the view that policies and regulatory initiatives which develop out of empirical vacuum, are at best, to defeat themselves and sometimes inflict collateral damage or more likely suffer illusionary compliance. In our quest to support Accra improve the sanitation situation, our policy choices must be underpinned by the fact that the city is embroiled in multifaceted crises – liquid and solid waste management, rising housing deficit, ambient air pollution, etc. Consequently, the urban poor who form the majority of Accra’s residents, have little chance of improving their lives. They will therefore necessarily be even more reliant on the provision of state (social) services.

In ensuring a clean environment to achieve the President’s vision of making Accra the cleanest city in Africa, and indeed to make Ghana the cleanest country on the continent, Tersus recommends, among other considerations, that qualified and technical staff be employed to man sanitation offices. Appointment of staff to such offices must not be drawn into the arena of politics whilst windows and avenues to corruption be got rid of to ensure that resources to the sector are judiciously effectively managed to achieve the set goals.

Fixing the systemic failures

Tersus believes and as several studies have made them abundantly clear. the sanitation crisis is a systemic failure extending across national and local government, and therefore reversing the trend will take both short-run and long-run interventions. A short-run measure, such as the National Sanitation Campaign exercise will in the very least increase the awareness creation among both the citizenry and public officials.  In the main, the short-term should also aim at holding public officials to account, reforming state owned responsibilities and reversing the numerous institutional weaknesses at all levels of government.

In the long-run, both the public and private stakeholders will also need to formulate long-term policies. In this direction, we believe that to improve the quality of the overall environmental management strategy such a policy must be empirical research driven. This will also mean employing qualified personnel and providing requisite skills training to those who handle waste. The situation where waste business is derogatorily reserved for a section of the society or used as a reward for poorly educated political foot soldiers must not be re-visited for it has not worked in the past and will not today nor tomorrow. Above all, if Ghana is to overcome the sanitation challenge, then the country’s badly frayed socio-economic fabric will need to be ultimately re-stitched, not just patched.

The writer is the Ag. Vice President, Tersus Ghana and with the Department of Geography and Resource Development.University of Ghana, Legon, Accra

About Tersus Ghana:

Tersus is an environmental sanitation academic think tank, open to all Scientists and Researchers of the academia, members of the Civil Society Organizations and Industry-based experts who share in our vision of ensuring a sanitized environment in Africa through pragmatic world-class research.

 

MSc. International Business degree coordinator visits Tanzania to explore international linkage options

0
Prof. Robert Hinson, with Dr. Sarah Phoya, Coordinator of Links and International Affairs, Ardhi University

The Coordinator of the MSc. International Business Degree Programme at the University of Ghana Business School (UGBS) Professor Robert E. Hinson has conducted a two-day working visit to Tanzania to build networks and alliances to support the introduction of the MSc. International Business Degree Programme at the University of Ghana Business School.

The Tanzanian visit entailed interactions with Mr. Akofa Ata, Managing Director, Unilever Tanzania; Dr. Sarah Phoya, Coordinator of Links and International Affairs, Ardhi University; Dr. Ulingeta Mbamba, Dean, University of Dar es Salaam Business School, and some alumni of the University of Ghana Business School.

With Akofa Ata, Managing Director, Unilever Tanzania; and wife, Parissa

Unilever Tanzania and UGBS Alumni

In interacting with the Managing Director of Unilever Tanzania, Professor Hinson expressed the desire of the UGBS to engage practitioners in the delivery of programmes through special talks and other innovative interventions. He also enquired if Unilever Tanzania would be willing to host students who enroll on the MSc. International Business Degree Programme when it is introduced, since an option of the programme requires students to undertake a study tour.

On his part, the MD, Akofa Ata expressed his willingness to host students who would choose Tanzania as one of the countries in East Africa for their study tour. He expressed his willingness to share his vast international marketing and brand development experiences either through the development of short videos to aid teaching or through guest lectures in Tanzania or Ghana depending on the venue of the lecture.

Professor Hinson presented a token of a book to the Unilever MD. He also interacted and shared the vision of the MSc. International Business Degree programme with some alumni of the University of Ghana Business School, encouraging them to spread the word in East Africa to shore up the international enrollment for the programme.

Ardhi University

Ardhi University which is located in the Capital city Dar-es-Salaam, is one of the few Universities in Africa that offers integrated training in the entire spectrum of land based disciplines, but combines this with the teaching of Accounting, Finance and other business based courses. In a meeting with Dr. Sarah Phoya, Coordinator of Links and International Affairs, Ardhi University, Professor Robert E. Hinson discussed the possibility of the University of Ghana and Ardhi University collaborating on International Business issues and other issues of common interest. Professor Hinson presented a copy of a University of Ghana MOU (Memorandum of Understanding) and some gifts from the UGBS International Business Degree Programme Office to Dr. Sarah Phoya.

University of Dar-es-Salaam Business School

The University of Dar-es-Salaam Business School is the oldest and biggest public university in Tanzania. It offers several Undergraduate, Masters and PhD programmes, and it has an existing Master of International Business Programme (MIB). The University of Dar-es-Salaam Business School Master of International Business (MIB) programme is designed to provide students with the knowledge and analytical capability that will enable them to take up leadership roles in International businesses. Apart from trading ideas on the respective IB Programmes in the two Business Schools (the existing one at the Dar-es-Salaam Business School and the upcoming one at the UGBS), possible areas of collaboration were discussed between Professor Hinson and the Dean of the University of Dar-es-salaam Business School, Dr. Mbamba. Professor Hinson presented a University of Ghana MOU to the Dean of the University of Dar-es-Salaam Business School as a basis of mutual collaboration in the future. He also presented some gifts from the UGBS International Business Degree Programme Office to the Dean of the University of Dar-es-Salaam Business School.

Other institutions that will be visited as part of the International Business Degree Programme alliance building will include the Strathmore Business School, Lagos Business School, Kenya Institute of Management and the University States International University in Chandria, Kenya.  Other institutions domiciled in the Association of African Business Schools and the Global Network of Advanced Management will be visited.

In respect of the UGBS MSc. International Business Degree programme itself, several students have pre-registered to study for the MSc. International Business Degree Programme; and on 22nd November, 2017, the Graduate School of the University of Ghana opened the application portal for all prospective students to officially apply.

 

 

Politics about ideas not fight – MP

0

Minister for Employment and Labour Relations, Ignatius Baffour Awuah has urged Ghanaians to eschew partisanship in their everyday endeavours to make the country a better place.

According to him, politics is about ideas not about fighting each other in the name of partisanship.

He made the call in an interaction with the Amangoase Parliament Youth Club from Nsoatre in the Brong Ahafo region when the latter paid a courtesy call on him in Parliament House to present a citation to him.

The citation was in recognition of the Minister’s numerous development initiatives especially a water project that has brought relief to Nsoatre and surrounding communities.

The group used the opportunity to appeal to Minister to support them in the establishment of a modern gari processing factory in the area for jobs.

The Sunyani West MP thanked the group for the gesture and asked for their prayer support.

He urged the youth to brighten the corner in which they found themselves as they prepare themselves for greater responsibilities whiles urging them also to pray for a better Ghana.

‘’Pray for Ghana to succeed in all spheres for jobs to prevail so that we would all become comfortable’’ he said.

The Minister observed that the Brong Ahafo region holds a lot for the nation in terms of food, timber,  cocoa among others.

He challenged the Amangoase Parliament Youth Club to influence decision at the local level to help promote education delivery in the region.

Dr Kwabena Donkor, MP for Pru who witnessed the event praised the humility and unifying attributes of Ignatius Baffour Awuah especially during the period he served as the Brong Ahafo regional Minister under former President Kufour.

According to him, it is God who ordains Kings hence it is time to put aside partisanship for development to thrive after elections.

Public Relations Officer of the group, Alexander Adomah said the Club is aimed at initiating development activities for self growth of members and community development.

Membership of the group which is one year old is open to young persons who are 18 years and above.

Achimota Mall Shoppers ‘Can’t Wait For Christmas!’

0

Achimota Retail Centre has launched its ‘Can’t Wait for Christmas’ campaign – a month-long mixed suite of incredible shopping deals, shopper giveaways, series of entertainment activities and family fun games to usher in the 2017 Christmas season.

A countdown has already began for the mall’s highly anticipated Black Friday sales which takes place on November 24, while regular patrons of Achimota mall are looking to annex as much as they can of the goodies and freebies slated to be offloaded on shoppers as and when they shop up to the tune of Ghc300 from now till December 20.

Throughout the month-long period, shoppers will be greeted with a high key festive ambience featuring spells of live acoustic performances, DJ music, mascot parades, family games and entertainment and daily spree of giveaways for shoppers, including free meals and shopping vouchers.

“The ‘Can’t Wait for Christmas’ campaign is what we call the ‘shoppertainment’ galore. We have put it together for the pleasure of the average visiting family and over the next one month ahead of Christmas, we will make sure that there is something to excite every shopper and every visitor here at Achimota mall,” said Mr. Anthony Asamoah, Marketing Manager.

Mr. Asamoah said in order to spice up the shopping experience of all visitors during the period, a series of thrilling sponsored events have also been lined up, naming the ‘Ghana Stands in Worship’ Gospel event, a special blood donation exercise and a gospel rock show, as some of the many collaborative events that will take enliven the mall ahead of Christmas.

Achimota Retail Centre, located at Dome, off the Accra- Nsawam Highway, is the capital’s latest and most convivial address for modern one-stop shopping and recreation and serves a huge cluster of communities including Dome, Achimota, Tantra Hills, Kwabenya and Ashongman Estates, all in the Ga East Municipality.

pladis celebrates McVitie’s Digestive 125th anniversary with nationwide promo …over 12,000 customers to win exciting prizes

0
Mrs. Nnodi

pladis, the global biscuit, chocolate and confectionery company, which owns the iconic brands, Godiva, McVitie’s and Ulker, has launched a national consumer promotion in Ghana to celebrate the 125th year anniversary of its much-loved McVitie’s Digestive biscuits which are enjoyed all over the world.

pladis announced the consumer promotion at a media launch in Accra. The McVitie’s Digestive 125th anniversary promotion, which commenced on 20th November 2017, will run for six weeks until 31st December 2017.

At the end of the promotion, a total of three consumers will be selected to win cash prizes of GH¢ 10,000, GH¢ 5,000, and GH¢ 2,000 each.

In addition, tens of thousands of consumers will win airtime, ranging from GH¢ 1, GH¢ 2, and GH¢ 5.

Commenting on the launch of the campaign, Ali Jaber, Managing Director, Sub Saharan Africa said: “From the moment McVitie’s entered Ghana in 1980, almost 40 years ago, the McVitie’s range of biscuits and the original McVitie’s Digestive in particular, has enjoyed a lot of love and support from Ghanaian  consumers. We therefore decided to celebrate our significant 125th year anniversary milestone by running a promotion to reward our consumers who have made McVitie’s Digestive and the McVitie’s brand a great success story in the region.”

To participate in the 125th anniversary promotion and stand a chance to win the exciting cash and airtime prizes, consumers need to:

  • Buy the McVitie’s Digestive 125th Anniversary special promotional 40g pack
  • Look for the white label pasted on any of the special promotional packs
  • Scratch the foil on the white label to reveal the unique promotion code
  • Text the code on the white label to the SMS short code 1393 to enter the draws for a chance to win any of the promo prizes

Mr. Ali Jaber further noted that the McVitie’s Digestive 125th anniversary promotion is the first ever from the McVitie’s brand, saying: “This campaign is driven by pladis’s commitment to promise happiness to the world with every bite through our range of high quality and delicious tasting biscuit and confectionery products.”

Explaining the selection process, Toyin Nnodi, Marketing Director, pladis West Africa said: “To ensure the McVitie’s Digestive 125th anniversary promotion is transparent and fair, every mobile number that enters into the promotion will have an equal chance of winning any of the airtime or cash prizes at any time throughout the duration of the promo, irrespective of when the number is entered into the promo.”

In November 2017, the company launched two new products – McVitie’s Digestive Choc Chip and McVitie’s Hobnobs Choc Chip (the original Digestive and Hobnobs biscuits with chocolate chips embedded in the biscuits) into the Ghanaian market, expanding its portfolio of delicious tasting McVitie’s biscuits, currently being produced in Nigeria.

Products produced by pladis, including the original McVitie’s Digestive, reach approximately 4 billion people worldwide.

AfDB calls for bold actions to improve air connectivity in Africa

0

The African Development Bank (AfDB) has called for bold actions to improve connectivity, market access, and cost reduction in Africa’s aviation sector.

Pierre Guislain, AfDB Vice-President for Private Sector, Infrastructure and Industrialization, made this call at the third ICAO World Aviation Forum in Abuja.

The AfDB is partnering with the Nigerian government, the African Union Commission (AUC), and the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) Agency to co-host the third ICAO World Aviation Forum from 20-22 November in the Nigerian capital..

The Bank has also reiterated its commitment to partner with stakeholders to boost the continent’s aviation sector.

Guislain emphasized the critical role aviation can play to boost economic growth by integrating the continent’s fragmented markets.

“In the past ten years, AfDB has provide about $1 billion to the African aviation sector. We have invested in airport construction or expansion in Morocco, Tunisia, Cape Verde, Ghana or Kenya, and in the improvement of air safety and navigation in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and West and Central Africa,” he stressed.

“We have also provided financing for aircraft acquisition by Ethiopian Airlines and Air Cote d’Ivoire.”

Despite Africa’s fragmentation with major economic centres geographically far from each other, the low level of connectivity and absence of significant airline hubs remains a real challenge for business people and ordinary Africans, he observed.

“We all know that travelling in Africa remains inconvenient and costly. Today, a two and half hour flight from Lilongwe and Johannesburg costs 3 times more than a similar flight from Rome to London, for example,” he noted.

Opening intra-African aviation and lifting remaining traffic restrictions is still a priority nearly 20 years after the Yamoussoukro Decision signed by 44 countries.

The AfDB VP considers private sector financing and investment as critical and canvased a level playing field where there is an open and reliable access, as well as private airlines competing with state-owned operators.

Liberalization of the aviation industry can spur regional integration and trade by bridging the 54 fragmented African markets, he noted.

Guislain identified more open visa policies as another way to stimulate integration and foster regional passenger traffic.

According to the AfDB, the African aviation industry is hampered by high costs. Therefore, sustained growth of the sector would require a tough look at ways to cut costs related to high taxes, fees and charges and airport levies.

They also include high costs especially for airlines, due in part to higher country and company risk as well as the small size of many African airlines.

Nigeria’s Minister of State for Aviation, Hadi Sirika, described aviation as the way to go to foster economic development.

 

Refurbished Kintampo Waterfalls reopened to tourists

0
Dr. Bawumia being assisted to unveil a plaque for the re-opening

The Kintampo Waterfalls at Kintampo in the Brong Ahafo Region has been re-opened to tourists after it was shut down in March 2017 for rehabilitation work.

The tourism site was closed to the general public visit in March 2017 for a safety audit and rehabilitation. This became necessary after a windstorm killed 17 people and injured several others at the facility. Majority of the victims were students of the Wenchi Methodist Senior High School.

The Kintampo Waterfalls has now received massive facelift and value addition. Existing structures have been renovated while new facilities have been constructed; they include a friendlier staircase, infirmary, a place of convenience, pavilions, and changing rooms among other. All other elements like trees and rocks that were posing threats have also been taken off.

At the official re-opening ceremony, the Vice President, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia underscored the importance tourism to the development of the economy and pledged government’s commitment to transforming the industry. He described the Kintampo Waterfalls as a precious gift, warranting proper management to bequeath Kintampo and Ghana as whole the befitting benefits.

“Management of tourism destinations is shared responsibility; we should dedicate ourselves to looking after the day-to-day running of the Waterfalls. This underpins the need for a Memorandum of Understanding signed by the Municipal Assembly, Tourism Ministry and Chiefs,” he stated.

On behalf of the government, the Vice President paid a glowing tribute to all and sundry during the period of the disaster and subsequently supported the course of rehabilitation at the Kintampo Waterfalls, adding: “Cooperation is a key catalyst to advance development as in the case of refurbishing this tourists’ site.”

The Minister for Tourism, Culture and Creative Arts, Mrs. Catharine Abelema Afeku, said developments at the Kintampo Waterfalls will be the benchmark for all other natural tourism destinations in the country, indicating that the Ministry will prioritise safety and standards at all sittes to help reposition Ghana of the global tourism map.

He said though the closure of the Kintampo Waterfalls really cost revenue lost, the long-term benefit after rehabilitation will be enormous. It is estimated that over 30,000 people visit the Kintampo Waterfall every year, making it one of the preferred tourism destination in the Brong Ahafo region and the country at large.

The renovation works at the Kintampo Waterfalls was done by the 48 Engineers Regiment of the Ghana Armed Forces. The Tourism Minister commended the solders for their professionalism and dedication in making the project as success. Dignitaries at the reopening ceremony included Ministers, MPs, and Traditional Leaders.

Recent Posts

Most Popular

Chris Koney’s column: Attracting investment, the Malaysian story

I am currently in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, participating in the Third Country Training Programme (TCTP): Investment Promotion for African Countries, which is...

Employers’ Association holds corporate governance and transparency seminar

The Ghana Employers’ Association (GEA) has held a two-day seminar on good corporate governance and transparency, aimed at contributing to the development of private...

Her Space with Bridget Mensah: The Fraud in the Mirror

There's probably a voice in your head right now as you read this, whispering that you're not good enough; that you don't belong here;...

Ghana shines at Ms. Geek Africa 2025 bootcamp in Kigali

The Ms. Geek Africa 2025 competition brought together brilliant young women aged 13 to 21 from across the continent to tackle Africa's most pressing...

Leadership mistake #1 – lack of a clear-cut vision

By Nelson Semanu BOANDOH-KORKOR & Elizabeth BOANDOH-KORKOR Leading without a clear-cut vision can be a frustrating venture! You need a vision for your family,...