Midwife advises women against self-medication

Mrs Mavis Adu-Manu, a midwife at the Sunyani Anglican Health Center at the weekend advised women to desist from self-medication.

She said self-medication remained not only harmful but worsened the conditions of sick people and asked them to also visit accredited health facilities anytime they fall sick.

Mrs Adu-Manu gave the advice when she interacted with some widows, single mothers, aged women, and some Persons with Disabilities at Odomase in the Sunyani West Municipality on the side-lines of a get-together party to mark the Mothers’ Day celebration.

G2 Foundation, a non-government organisation working to improve the socio-economic rights, freedom, health, and general well-being of vulnerable people in society organised the party to socialize and to sensitize the participants in health and safety.

Including children, the participants were provided with a variety of non-alcoholic beverages, food, and some pastries.

Mrs Adu-Menu reiterated the importance for women to check their blood pressure, diabetes,
and sugar levels regularly and to protect themselves against non-communicable diseases and cautioned them against unhealthy lifestyles such as alcoholism and drug abuse that could lead to needless deaths.

Madam Serah Kahuri, a partner of the G2 Foundation from Kenya advised women, particularly single mothers to maintain a positive mindset and develop problem-solving skills and build strong social support systems.

They must also learn to be flexible, and open-minded and share their problems with others.

Ms. Gifty Nyarko, the Chief Executive Officer of the G2 Foundation, later told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) that the foundation also focused on instilling hope in widows and single mothers.

‘These are times where they need our support and we must try our best to bring smiles on their faces so that they would feel part of society,’ she stated.

Ms. Nyarko said she was worried that due to their predicaments, some widows had turned into alcoholics and called on everybody to support and help provide them with th
eir basic needs.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Midwife advises women against self-medication

Mrs Mavis Adu-Manu, a midwife at the Sunyani Anglican Health Center at the weekend advised women to desist from self-medication.

She said self-medication remained not only harmful but worsened the conditions of sick people and asked them to also visit accredited health facilities anytime they fall sick.

Mrs Adu-Manu gave the advice when she interacted with some widows, single mothers, aged women, and some Persons with Disabilities at Odomase in the Sunyani West Municipality on the side-lines of a get-together party to mark the Mothers’ Day celebration.

G2 Foundation, a non-government organisation working to improve the socio-economic rights, freedom, health, and general well-being of vulnerable people in society organised the party to socialize and to sensitize the participants in health and safety.

Including children, the participants were provided with a variety of non-alcoholic beverages, food, and some pastries.

Mrs Adu-Menu reiterated the importance for women to check their blood pressure, diabetes,
and sugar levels regularly and to protect themselves against non-communicable diseases and cautioned them against unhealthy lifestyles such as alcoholism and drug abuse that could lead to needless deaths.

Madam Serah Kahuri, a partner of the G2 Foundation from Kenya advised women, particularly single mothers to maintain a positive mindset and develop problem-solving skills and build strong social support systems.

They must also learn to be flexible, and open-minded and share their problems with others.

Ms. Gifty Nyarko, the Chief Executive Officer of the G2 Foundation, later told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) that the foundation also focused on instilling hope in widows and single mothers.

‘These are times where they need our support and we must try our best to bring smiles on their faces so that they would feel part of society,’ she stated.

Ms. Nyarko said she was worried that due to their predicaments, some widows had turned into alcoholics and called on everybody to support and help provide them with th
eir basic needs.

Source: Ghana News Agency

North Macedonia’s president uses old country name in oath of office

The new president of North Macedonia, Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova, took the oath of office in parliament in Skopje on Sunday, but replaced the official name of the country, ‘Republic of North Macedonia,’ with the old name, ‘Republic of Macedonia.’

The Greek ambassador left the parliamentary chamber in protest, according to media reports.

Siljanovska-Davkova clearly won the run-off election on Wednesday as the candidate of the nationalist Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization-Democratic Party for Macedonian National Unity (VMRO-DPMNE) against the Social Democratic incumbent Stevo Pendarovski.

The VMRO became the strongest force in the parliamentary elections on the same day. Its chairman Hristijan Mickoski is expected to form the next government.

Both Siljanovska-Davkova and Mickoski and other VMRO politicians had announced during the election campaign, that they no longer wanted to use the new official country name North Macedonia, but rather the historical name.

The Social Democrats, who had be
en in power since 2017 and have now been voted out of office, had reached an agreement with Greece on the name change, which was finalized in February 2019. Athens had insisted on this because a region in northern Greece is also called Macedonia.

The name change was a prerequisite for the small Balkan country to become a member of NATO in 2020. It also paved the way for accession talks with the European Union.

The Greek Foreign Ministry declared on Sunday that the swearing-in ceremony was in ‘blatant violation of the neighbouring country’s constitution.’ Further progress in North Macedonia’s path to EU membership depends on the full use of the country’s constitutional name, Athens said.

Source: Ghana News Agency

The call to scrap COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy Act: Any justification?

The year, 2019 started just like any other year. However, before the end of its fourth quarter, a strange disease emerged killing many people in China, and started spreading to the United States and Europe in early 2020.

Background

It was later named COVID-19. The emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic compelled many governments to implement various measures to mitigate its impact on public health and the economy. In Ghana, one of such measures was the introduction of the COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy Act.

However, in recent times, there have been growing calls from especially members of the Ghana Union of Traders Association (GUTA) for the levy to be scrapped.

Dr Joseph Obeng, President of GUTA, in a few media engagements last year, reaffirmed this position saying the levy had increased the cost of doing business in the country.

He said the levy had become a nuisance tax given that COVID-19 was no longer a health emergency aand impressed on the government to use its 2024 Budget Statement and Economic Policy
, which was presented to Parliament in November, last year, to announce the cancellation of the levy.

Also, Mr Anthony Oppong, Ashanti Regional Chairman of GUTA, in March, this year, reiterated the position of GUTA saying the levy was contributing to a decline in business in the country adding most importers had lost their capital.

Amidst the growing calls to scrap the levy, there is a compelling argument emerging that this is the time for the government to rename the levy for a Public Health Emergency Fund (PHEF).

It is argued that renaming the levy PHEF will shift its focus from recovery to preparedness and response. This will ensure dedicated support for its continued collection.

The COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy Act, 2021 (ACT 1068), and its potential Ghana recorded her first two cases of the COVID-19 pandemic on March 12, 2020. Besides its negative impact on the country’s socio-economic development, statistics by the Ghana Health Service shows that more than 1,400 deaths were also recorded.

A year i
nto Ghana’s fight to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, Ghana passed the COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy Act to impose a special levy on the supply of goods and services and imports to raise revenue to support COVID-19 expenditures and to provide for related matters.

At the time, the government had already committed a lot of funds derived from loans, and grants from donor partners including the World Bank to fighting the disease.

The passage of this law in 2021, was, therefore, seen as a move towards establishing a reliable source of funds to fight the pandemic.

However, the nature of this law implies that when the pandemic is over, the country will cease to collect this levy.

The implementation of the levy began in May 2021. The fiscal data released by the Ministry of Finance on April 22, 2022, showed that an amount of GHS773.93 million was realised from the levy within the first eight months (May 2021 to December 2021) of its implementation.

This amount, which was spent to contain the spread of the virus and
its effects on lives and the economy, represented a substantial portion of the budgetary allocation to the country’s health sector. This shows that the levy has the potential to rake in the resources needed for the intended purpose.

Why rename the levy as PHEF

On May 05, 2023, the World Health Organization declared an end to COVID-19 as a global public health emergency. Following this declaration, calls have been made for the government to scrap the levy.

The proponents of these calls argued that the government lacked the moral right and justification to continue to collect the levy since the reason for its introduction no longer existed.

These calls are legitimate to the extent that the levy was purposely to support the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, what if there is another outbreak given that diseases will continue to come? For instance, records by the Ministry of Health, and the Ghana Health Service (GHS) show that within the space of three years (2020 to 2023), Ghana recorded outbreak
s of eight major diseases namely Yellow Fever, CSM, the COVID-19 pandemic, Polio, Monkeypox (Mpox), Marburg virus disease, Measles, and Lassa fever.

While the past three years (2020-2023) put a lot of strain on the country’s health system in terms of her ability to respond to public health emergencies, the subsequent years could even be worse because other major disease outbreaks could be recorded.

In all this, how is the country prepared to face such a situation? Given the potential of this levy, the country cannot afford to stop collecting it even as the COVID-19 pandemic is over or no longer a public health emergency.

This is why this levy needs to be renamed as PHEF to change its focus from recovery from COVID-19 to public health emergency preparedness and response especially when the country currently does not have a PHEF to ensure a reliable source of funds to attend to public health concerns.

By renaming it as PHEF, the calls to scrap it will cease and the PHEF will garner greater support from the
public since it is for a worthy cause. Given its potential, this levy, now PHEF, could offer the country a reliable source of funds to undertake routine activities as part of her Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response (IDSR) Plan and for that matter Epidemic Preparedness and Response (EPR).

Professor Yidana Adadow, Dean, School of Public Health, University for Development Studies, in an interview with the Ghana News Agency in Tamale, expressed support for calls to rename the levy PHEF.

He said as a nation, ‘We find ourselves in a situation where all our development hinges on donor funds. So, if you are a beggar, you are just begging from hand to mouth. How can you take care of eventualities when they befall you? So, the government should rename the levy PHEF. Once you have a dedicated fund, with managers managing the fund, the state will be able to take care of any eventuality that is likely to hit it.’

He advised members of GUTA to add their voices to calls to rename the levy PHEF, which would be in
the best interest of the nation and businesses as well.

Dr Hilarious Abiwu, Deputy Northern Regional Director of Health in-charge of Public Health, also supported calls for the setting up of PHEF saying this would strengthen the public health sector to effectively respond to disease outbreaks.

Challenges in Implementing EPR in Ghana

Over the past couple of years, funding for routine disease surveillance activities or ISDR has dwindled. Budgetary allocations to the health sector go into emoluments for health staff, and the construction of health facilities leaves significantly fewer resources available to undertake routine disease surveillance activities.

This implies that diseases that could be detected and managed on time will be left to degenerate into an epidemic level with their devastating consequences on the population.

In the year 2021, the total national health budget was $1.30 billion. This budget included payment of salaries and health research amongst others. Out of the figure, $803m was expec
ted to be spent on health delivery, and $9 million on goods and services.

EPR fell under the goods and services budget. This was inadequate considering the volume of work expected under the EPR.

In subsequent years too, budgetary allocations to the health sector have been inadequate. As has been witnessed over the years, diseases will continue to come.

Therefore, the country needs to be prepared by strengthening her ISDR through ensuring funds to undertake public health emergency activities.

Just as efforts were made to create the Health Insurance Fund to ensure availability of funds to handle the clinical aspect of the country’s health care system, the country must also establish the PHEF by renaming and or converting the COVID-19 Health Recovery Levy to PHEF to ensure availability of resources to effectively support the public health aspect of the health care sector as well.

Other sources of funds such as some percentage of tax revenues from mining and telecoms sectors could be added to funds from the
levy and leverage on the PHEF to access external support from the World Health Organization and the likes should it be necessary.

The way forward

The continued collection of this levy despite COVID-19 being no longer a public health emergency shows that it is important to the country’s economy.

However, there are moral and transparency concerns in terms of how the levy is expended since the purpose for its introduction does not exist anymore.

This is why it is time to rename the levy PHEF and repurpose it as a fund to generate resources to support the country’s public health sector to be ready to adequately respond to any public health emergencies to protect the population and the country’s economy.

By renaming it and repurposing it in this direction, the growing calls to scrap it will cease since the people now know the reason for charging or collecting it.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Spain Prime Minister Sánchez hails Socialists’ win in Catalonia

Spain Prime Minister, Pedro Sánchez, has hailed the victory of the regional offshoot of his national Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE), in the parliamentary elections in the region of Catalonia.

According to projections from votes counted, the big winner of Sunday’s election was the Socialist Party of Catalonia (PSC), while the separatist parties were projected to have lost their parliamentary majority in the regional parliament.

Sánchez congratulated PSC top candidate Salvador Illa ‘for this historic result achieved in Catalonia,’ in a message posted on social media platform X. ‘We socialists are once again the top force.’

‘Starting today, a new stage begins in Catalonia to improve the lives of citizens, expand rights and strengthen coexistence,’ Sánchez continued.

Source: Ghana News Agency

University of Energy and Natural Resources defends EC IT Director

The authorities of the University of Energy and Natural Resources (UENR) on Monday refuted the allegation against Dr Peter Appiahene, Head of the Department of Computer Sciences and Informatics, was at the third Transformation Dialogue, in a capacity as a member of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP).

This year’s annual Third Transformation Dialogue was held at the UENR, at Fiapre, to engage stakeholders on small-scale mining.

In attendance was Dr Appiahene, who was invited to the programme as the head of the department and not as a party member but has been labelled in some circles as being at the event on political grounds.

However, a statement issued and signed by Dr Ohene Nana Appiah, the Head of the University Relations Office, indicated that ‘Dr Appiahene participated in the event solely in his capacities as a university staff member, Head of Department, and Council member, and not as a member of any political campaign team, contrary to circulating rumours.

‘It is imperative to clarify that the
Third Transformational Dialogue on Small-Scale Mining, organized by the School of Mines and Built Environment of our University, is an apolitical event focused solely on addressing issues related to illegal mining and exploring solutions’ a copy of the statement made available to the Ghana News Agency (GNA) stated.

It stated that Dr Appiahene had been in the employment of the University since 2014 and has been a Non-Professorial Member of the University’s Governing Council since 2021. The university recognizes and acknowledges Dr Appiahene’s position as the Director of Information Technology of the Electoral Commission; however, it is important to highlight that his role at the EC is distinct from his position at the University.

These roles, the statement indicated ought to be distinguished and acknowledged separately, saying ‘Moreover, it is important to note that the Third Transformational Dialogue programme will host eminent figures from diverse political affiliations’

Vice-President Alhaji Dr Mahamudu
Bawumia was invited on May 8, 2024, and we anticipate the presence of the Former President and NDC Presidential Candidate John Mahama on Tuesday, May 15, and the Speaker of Parliament Kingsford Alban Bagbin on Wednesday, May 16, 2024.

That the statement underscored the non-partisan nature of the dialogue aimed at facilitating meaningful discussions on pertinent issues in the mining sector.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Israeli military says border crossing to northern Gaza Strip opened

Israel opened the border crossing called Western Erez to the northern Gaza Strip for humanitarian aid transports on Sunday, a military spokesman said.

This is intended to increase the number of aid transports to the Gaza Strip, and in particular to the northern area, he said.

Dozens of lorries carrying flour from the port of Ashdod had already passed through the crossing on Sunday.

The World Food Programme (WFP) has been warning of a famine in the north of the Gaza Strip. According to a report on the situation in the area, child malnutrition was progressing rapidly there.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Awate Traditional Council inaugurated

The Awate Traditional Area in the North Dayi District of the Volta Region has been granted Traditional Council status to among others, take up judicial administrative functions.

In addition, five gazetted rulers from the area have also been inducted into the Council at its inauguration.

Mr Francis Obuajo, the Kpando Circuit Court Judge, administered the Oaths of Office as well as the Judiciary and secrecy, while Togbe Azahvuvu IV, the Paramount of the area was sworn as President of the Council.

Mr Evans Habada, the Human Resource Manager at the Ministry of Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs, on behalf of the Minister, inaugurated the Council and commissioned a fully furnished building for its secretariat.

Mr Stephen Asamoah Boateng, the Minister of Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs in a speech said the Council’s formation, sanctioned by the Constitutional Act establishing the chieftaincy institution, required dynamic leadership to be able to deliver peace and development for the area.

He appealed for peac
e and support for the Council and assured that the needed logistics and assistance would be made available by the Ministry.

The President of the Traditional Council in his inaugural address, said the council’s status capped the establishment of the 400-year-old community which claimed was the first to settle in the river enclave.

He applauded the Government for elevating the Traditional Area and encouraged all the communities under it to support the work of the Council.

‘The formation of Council can only be achieved if we are strongly united. Let us pull together and make it work. Let it be something we can fall on. We should first build unity among ourselves,’ he said.

Togbe Azahvuvu promised an open-door policy and pledged to build a legacy of creating jobs and development through collaboration with various stakeholders including the District Assembly, with plans to also develop the local white clay industry, as well as potentials of the riverine economy in the area.

Present at the inauguration were so
me heads of the Chieftaincy Ministry, local political leaders, and traditional rulers from far and near.

Mr Harry Attipoe, the Registrar of the Volta Region House of Chiefs said the Council should become a model in the area and a pillar of peace, unity, and development.

He said the formation of the Council should not be opposed, since its establishment was to serve the needs of the people and not any chief or tribe.

However, before the event, some traditional rulers contesting the legitimacy of the Paramount Chief, issued a statement at a press conference calling for the Council inauguration to be suspended.

Mr Attipoe said any opposition to the council’s formation affected the growth and progress of the community.

Four others made up of the Dzodze, Amugo-Vego, Ave Xevi and Weta Traditional Councils, were also inaugurated during a three-day exercise by the Ministry in the Volta Region.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Stevie Wonder now Ghanaian

President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has conferred Ghanaian citizenship on the legendary American Musician and Songwriter, Steveland Morris, popularly known as Stevie Wonder at a ceremony at the Jubilee House in Accra.

This marks a significant milestone in the country’s efforts to attract Diasporan Africans and recognise outstanding contributions to the African diaspora.

President Akufo-Addo praised Stevie Wonder for his extraordinary contributions to music and his unrelenting dedication to the African diaspora.

He said Stevie Wonder’s music had been a source of inspiration to generations of Ghanaians and Africans worldwide and that his new citizenship would help to strengthen the ties between Africa and its diaspora.

The Minister for the Interior, Mr Henry Quartey, in his remarks, commended the President for championing the Year of Return initiative, which had culminated in the registration of 252 individuals from Africa- American and Caribbean Diasporan Communities as Ghanaians.

Stevie Wonder, a long-
time admirer of Ghana and its rich cultural heritage, expressed deep gratitude for the joy and honour bestowed upon him.

According to him, he had been drawn to Ghana’s vibrant culture and warm hospitality and was thrilled to now call himself a Ghanaian citizen.

The event marks a significant moment in Ghana’s efforts to engage with its diaspora counterparts and recognise their outstanding contributions to the African diaspora.

It is expected to inspire deeper collaboration and exchange between Ghana and the African diaspora, and cement Ghana’s position as a hub for African cultural and intellectual excellence.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Salomey-Read-a-thon sets to break world longest reading marathon ?

Ms Salomey Kwabea Agyei, a a-37-year-old female teacher of the Kofiko M/A Junior High School in the Jaman North Municipality has spotlighted the Bono Region in the international scene in an attempt to break World Longest Reading Marathon Record.

Checks reveal Rysbai Isakov, a Turkish, currently, has the Longest Reading Marathon Record of 124 hours in the Guinness Book of Records, an achievement he made in September 2022. However, Ms Agyei, an English Teacher, says she had successfully passed through the requirements and was approved to undergo a seven-day reading of 168 hours to break the record, which would be held at the premises of the Bono Regional Library in Sunyani.

The ‘Salomey-Read-a-thon Project,’ she said, was not inspired by fantastic inclination, but rather globally stimulated to position Ghana towards the attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Thus, the project focuses on SDG goals; 1, 2, 4, 5, 8 and 17 of No Poverty, Zero Hunger, Quality Education, Gender Equality, Decent Wor
k and Economic Growth and Partnership for the Goals, respectively.

In an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in Sunyani on the sidelines of the launch of the reading programme, Ms Agyei said she was optimistic to break the record and make the country proud.

‘In fact, this project is born out of a great desire I have developed in the past years to advance teaching and learning, with emphasis on reading as a tool for courage to enhance children’s interest in learning,’ Ms Agyei stated.

‘It’s also centred on women empowerment, and I will be reading books authored by predominantly women as motivation to my fellow women and girls to rise to any height they can possibly reach’.

‘As a trained teacher, who has taught in villages, I have seen that reading has always been the main catalyst that boosts pupils’ interest in learning. However, due to the financial distress faced by most parents, it is very difficult for them to buy reading books for their children,’ she said.

Ms Agyei indicated as the world adv
anced through Information Technology, there was the need to ensure children regardless of their backgrounds access computers and other smart gadgets to position them properly for the technological age.

The reading programme, she added, was also in line with a project she was implementing to help build Community Libraries and ICT centres, not only in the Bono Region but deprived communities nationwide.

Dubbed: ‘Readspell Literacy Foundation,’ the implementation of the project, Ms Agyei explained, would collaborate with the Ghana Library Authority (GLA) to inculcate reading habits into children through numerous reading-related activities and advocacies.

She called for support from multi-national and mining firms, philanthropists, NGOs, United Nations-based agencies, and organizations as well as religious and corporate bodies to support the project.

Mr John Kwame Gasu, the Jaman North Municipal Director of Education noted proficiency in reading correlated with academic success across all subjects and laid a
strong foundation for future learning achievements.

Reading enhances vocabulary, and comprehension skills, aids effective communication in both English and local languages, as well as stimulates creativity and imagination thereby transporting children to new worlds and inspiring them to think creatively and innovatively.

Mr Gasu therefore called for support from everybody to help Ms Agyei achieve her vision for the Kofiko community, Jaman North Municipality, the Bono Region, and the nation by extension.

Checks by the GNA revealed the idea of the Book of Records began in the early 1950s when Sir Hugh Breaver (1890-1967), the then Managing Director of Guinness Brewery attended a shooting party in county Wexford.

Breaver and his hosts argued about the fastest game bird in Europe but failed to find an answer in any reference material, and that led to the establishment of the Guinness Book of Records to keep records and achievements of individuals and groups of people.

Since then, various individuals have att
empted, and some succeeded in breaking and setting new records.

Source: Ghana News Agency