Saturday, 18 April 2015

Mahama messed up my policies Akufo-Addo says




Mahama messed up my policies  Akufo-Addo says

Image result for akufo addo Presidential Candidate of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Nana Akufo- Addo, has taken a hit at President John Mahama over the poor implementation of ideas he (Mahama) stole from him.

According to him, anytime Mahama makes a mockery of an idea he (Nana) moots as a policy, he (Mahama) turns around to steal it.

That does not seem a problem for Nana Akufo- Addo but rather the fact that Mahama ends up poorly implementing the programmes.

In an interview on Starr FM’s drive time show - ‘Starr Chat’ – with Kwabena Anokye Adisi famously known as Bola Ray, the NPP flag bearer was particularly worried about the poor implementation of the controversial and corrupt-ridden Savannah Accelerated Development Authority (SADA) programme which has almost become moribund, describing it as ‘the biggest tragedy.’

What baffled him was that “It is under the leadership of a man from the north” (referring to President Mahama) “but the SADA thing has become such a tragic development; that pretty hurts.”

Nana recalled, “We were told that free secondary school education was also a pie in the sky idea; today it’s his (Mahama’s) big thing.”

When asked if he was still going to make free secondary education key on his campaign agenda ahead of the 2016 elections, this was what he said, “It is certainly an important policy for this country; what is important is that we find a way of financing it.”

Teacher Training Allowance

Nana Akufo-Addo could not fathom why the Mahama administration had cancelled the age-long allowance for teacher trainees, with a promise to restore it when voted into power saying, “Because we think that it is extremely important the supply of high quality skills (teachers) is something that this society has to be assured about and whatever we need to do to make that happen, we are going to continue to do it.” “We will do the same again,” he promised.

The Mahama administration has withdrawn the allowance paid to the trainee teachers, leading to a massive protest by students on Wednesday against Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, a deputy minister of education and other government appointees.

The angry students claimed that government had used their allowance to buy luxury cars for its appointees.

The protesting students were heard loudly hooting at Ablakwa ‘allawa car’, ‘allawa car,’ as the minister and his colleagues jumped into their cars and ran away from their (appointees’) wrath.

Afari Gyan &EC

When asked about The debate over who succeeds outgoing Dr Kwadwo Afari-Gyan as chairman of the Electoral Commission (EC), the NPP flagbearer stressed the need to choose somebody who would restore public confidence in the commission.

According to him, there was the need for the institutions responsible (the President and the Council of State) to undertake what he called “a wide consultation to make sure that they come up with a name that would be broadly acceptable to the different shades of opinion in our country - somebody who is seen as an independent person in mind and in spirit, who will be impartial and be credible referee because basically, he’s going to be a referee of our political contests in Ghana.

“You want a referee that is upright; that is coming to do a good job for the game and not for a particular player or players in the game and that is why it’s important that we satisfy ourselves that we have a referee that will be a good and honest one,” he proposed.

Given the opportunity to access Dr Afari-Gyan who happens to be his roommate during their days at the University of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo underscored, “He’s had a chequered history; he begun as a Deputy to Justice Ofori Boateng, and in an election which we contested strongly if you remember at the time; the very first election of then President Jerry John Rawlings - the November 1992 elections.”

Issues

“In fact, I was the editor of the NPP book that was written on that election that we called the ‘Stolen Verdict.’ He was involved in that exercise.

Then came the ‘96 elections, the 2000, 2004, 2008; I think those are recognitions that whatever the challenges were, our system was improving incrementally.

He has made his own contributions – no two-ways about it – to the process of democratic consolidation in our country. I think that in the last elections, there were challenges that he could have handled better,” Akufo- Addo stated.

He recalled calling Afari-Gyan after the 2012 elections to express his concerns over certain developments since he had problems with the process saying, “My own view was that if perhaps there had been a little more give-and take on his part, in terms of wanting to listen to us, perhaps we could have avoided that…but he has done his bit.”

Asked whether that made him bitter, his response was straight No! “Bitterness is not one of the things I encourage in myself; I think it’s a wasted emotion.

It doesn’t really get you very far. It happened, I accepted the result of the election, even though I didn’t think it was the correct outcome and have moved on.”

Nana Akufo-Addo was hopeful of winning the 2016 general elections saying, “I’m encouraged by the Nigerian elections to the extent that many of the issues on which the Nigerian elections were fought (corruption, mismanagement of the economy, widespread youth unemployment, security and many) are the issues we’re gonna fight in the Ghanaian elections.”

Host of the programme had a surprise package for his guest when he called former President JA Kufuor – who was far away in France where he is on a working visit – to give a brief testimony about his knowledge of Akufo- Addo.

President Kufuor touted him as a beaver when it comes to political activity and a great organizer, promising to back him to the hilt.

Use me while I’m in office; Segbefia tells Voltarians

Use me while I’m in office; Segbefia tells Voltarians


Alex SegbefiaHealth Minister-designate Alex Segbefia has asked indigence of the Volta region to take advantage of his appointment in government to develop their region.

According to him, although he will be minister for all Ghanaians, he is mindful of the fact that he hails from the Volta region and therefore has a responsibility towards people from that region.

“When ministers are being appointed, it is done on the basis of regional balance.

“And so there were many people who could have been chosen for this position but the lot fell on my head and so I do not look at it as a personal achievement but a regional achievement,” the former deputy defense stated when he addressed a gathering at the Dunenyo festival of the people of Tadzewu in the Ketu North district of the Volta region.

He continued: “ And so the region must understand that although I am minister of health for the whole country, I am also a minister of health who hails from the Volta region.

“Ministerial position are like football coaches and so you do not know when you will be changed so if you do not use me while I am there, don’t blame anybody tomorrow”.

Kweku Baako predicts court action over Electoral Commissioner appointment

Kweku Baako predicts court action over Electoral Commissioner appointment


Image result for kweku baako
Managing editor of the New Crusading Guide newspaper Abdul Malik Kweku Baako Jnr is predicting a Supreme Court interpretation of the constitution to settle controversy over the procedure for appointing the next EC boss.

“I suspect that if we are unable to use consultation and consensus building to deal with this issue, we might as well proceed to the highest court of the land and take an interpretative judgment on the matter”, Kweku Baako said on Joy FM's news analysis show, Newsfile Saturday.

His comments follow the controversy generated after opposition parties called for the President to initiate dialogue and broad discussions before he makes the historic appointment.

President John Mahama will be appointing the next Electoral Commissioner when Dr. Kwadwo Afari Gyan retires in June after holding the position for 22 years.

The appointment which is a rarely chartered political territory has informed views expressed by political parties calling for wide and thorough consultations before the appointment.

But a lawyer Kwame Akuffo has earlier this week dismissed that call by the opposition for dialogue and consultations as “unconstitutional”

Article 70, clause 2 of the 1992 Constitution gives the President the prerogative to appoint the EC Chairman and Deputies as well as other members of the Commission on the advice of the Council of State.

Kwame Akuffo said the constitution speaks only of the president acting on the advice of the Council of State as precondition for the appointment of the EC Chair.

A dialogue with party chairmen is alien to the appointment process, he signaled. His view has found some support in the commentary of government communicators and sympathizers.

But Kweku Baako believes it is in the “enlightened self-interest” of the country for the President to be open to consultations on the appointment.

He believes the proper interpretation on the word ‘advice’ will be key in understanding the procedure.

“I am convinced that the use of the word ‘advice’, relative to the role the Council of State plays, gives that whole provision a certain distinctive character and for that matter dilutes the presidential authority in the appointment process”

He explained that in view of the controversial circumstances surrounding the last elections in December 2012, calls for consultations before appointing an Electoral Commissioner should not be dismissed.

“The broader consultation is not an animal that should scare us”, he said maintaining that the spirit of the constitution supports calls for dialogue.

He acknowledged that not much attention has been paid to constitutional provisions that tie decisions of the President to the ‘advice’ of other persons and bodies.

“We have been lazy about it. We haven’t taken it seriously. Now it is coming to the fore”, Baako said.

Xenophobia : 4 Ghanaians allegedly killed in South Africa

Xenophobia: 4 Ghanaians allegedly killed in South Africa


Xenophobia SA Stoned
Four Ghanaians are reportedly killed in Kroonstad a small community in South Africa's Bloemfontein area in Xenophobia attacks, a leader of a Ghanaian association has told Joy News.

There’s been no independent confirmation of the incident.

But Secretary of the Ghanaian Community in Bloemfontein Kofi Siaw has told JOY-NEWS reports received in the last hour suggest the Ghanaians were allegedly killed by armed youth protesting takeover of local jobs by immigrants.

“What we heard is that for about three days they have not been seen so when they checked on them they have been murdered”, he explained to Joy News Saturday.

Their search, he said, led to the discovery of the four persons in the salon. A two-month-old baby is among the dead.

They had been dumped in a hair dressing salon.

He said hair-dressing is a popular business run by many Ghanaians in South Africa.

The incident happened in Kroonstad, about 200kilometers from Bloemfontein Kofi Siaw was emphatic that the deaths could not be by natural causes, as alleged in the case of Emmanuel Quarcoo.

He unfortunately could not provide names of the deceased but assured that the community was frantically making calls in the hopes of identifying the victims.

Efforts to get official confirmation have not been successful yet.

But Joy FM's partners the BBC is also reporting fresh outbreak of xenophobic attacks the country’s largest city, Johannesburg.

According to the BBC Police used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse looters in Alexandria as small groups attacked foreign-owned shops. More than 30 people have been picked up.

In Ghana Security has been beefed up at the South African High Commission to avert any possible reprisal attacks.

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