Mahama has mortgaged Ghana’s future – Akufo-Addo

 

The NPP presidential candidate Nana Akufo-Addo has accused the Mahama-led government of mortgaging Ghana’s future.

He said the NDC  government has over-borrowed in an attempt to hide  their economic ineptitude since they assumed the Presidency in 2008.

In an article published in the Newsweek international magazine, the former attorney general said ” Mahama’s government has mortgaged our future. The NDC government has borrowed heavily against our future to increase spending, but none of it has strengthened our economy, our well-being, or our regional or global standing. As attention to African markets expands, we find ourselves competing with other nations we used to outrank. But the good news is that, after eight years, the people of Ghana are looking for change.

“How Ghana manages its oil wealth will determine how we are viewed by the world. But more importantly, it will determine what our people think of our nation. On December 7, Ghana has the opportunity to restore hope and set the country on the path of prosperity”.

 

Below are details of the statement

In 2017, Ghana will celebrate 60 years of independence. We were the first sub-Saharan African people to achieve independence and, at many stages during the past six decades, Ghana has been praised as a trailblazer for success in Africa. Unfortunately, Ghana has often flattered only to deceive.

After many years of political upheaval, we have enjoyed stability under a multi-party constitutional government since 1992. In 2000, Ghana made history again with its first peaceful change of government through the ballot box. I served as foreign minister in that government, led by President John A. Kufuor, between 2001 and 2008. At that time, Ghana was proof that it was possible for a peaceful transition of power from one party to another through the ballot box in Africa.

Our government inherited a desperate economic situation and President Kufuor took the politically difficult but brave decision to opt for the Highly Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) Initiative—a status indicating high levels of poverty and making the country a candidate for special assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. By 2006, we had not only emerged from HIPC status, but Ghana was making waves on the international scene—our economy recovered and we had weaned ourselves from IMF and World Bank supervision. We had proved we could manage our affairs and were economically independent.

When oil was discovered in commercial quantities offshore in 2007, it was hoped that Ghana was ready to leave the ranks of the perennially poor countries. In 2007, for the first time ever in our history, an independent Ghana went to the capital money market and raised money for critically-needed infrastructure developments.

By 2008, Ghana had enjoyed years of steady growth and democratic consolidation. President Kufuor had invested in education, healthcare, infrastructure and services for our people. Ghana was a bastion of stability in West Africa.

As President Kufuor prepared to retire, the then opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) rolled out a clever catchphrase during the 2008 elections: “Where’s the money in your pockets?” Their campaign, fronted by then vice-presidential candidate John Mahama, was based on the premise that macroeconomic stability did not matter; infrastructure development did not matter; the establishment of a National Health Insurance Scheme did not matter; Ghana halving poverty did not matter; Ghana becoming one of the first countries to meet the stringent conditions of the United States Millennium Challenge Account and signing for a $500 million grant for infrastructure development in 2006 did not matter.

The dramatic financial crisis in 2008, coupled with the drastic rise in oil prices, hurt economies across the globe, and the appeal of “We shall put money in your pockets” saw the NDC’s presidential candidate John Atta Mills win the election by a margin of less than 1 percent.

I was the presidential candidate of the-then governing party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP), and I conceded defeat. Again, Ghana was the toast of the world and the newly-elected U.S. President Barack Obama came to our country to cheer us on in 2009. In other words, when the NPP left office in 2009, Ghana was doing well.

We started producing oil in 2010 and our traditional commodities of cocoa and gold were performing well on the markets. However, many things stalled and by 2012, as we approached elections, Ghana was having economic difficulties: real GDP growth dropped from 14 percent in 2011 to 8 percent in 2012, and the fiscal deficit increased from -4 percent to -11.6 percent in the same period due to unbudgeted election-year spending.

President Atta-Mills passed away suddenly five months before the elections in December 2012 and was succeeded by his vice-president, John Mahama. In order to retain the presidency in the elections, President Mahama went on a dramatic four-month spending spree that tipped the current account deficit into the double-digit zone. He managed a disputed slim electoral victory but the consequences have stayed with us. My party went to court to contest the election results and, as our presidential candidate, I accepted the 5-4 Supreme Court ruling in favor of the result and we maintained the peace of our nation.

The country is peaceful but under President Mahama there are no economic dividends. Youth unemployment has reached alarming levels—the World Bank said in May that 48 percent of Ghanaian youths are unemployed—and is the greatest threat to our country. The government has been on a borrowing binge that, if not stopped, will impoverish our nation and its people.

Nobody would question borrowing to invest, but the IMF’s managing director Christine Lagarde has said that Ghana’s large borrowing was not generally used for investments, but was instead used to finance large recurrent spending. The Mahama government has abandoned all transparency in procurement and big national projects are contracted out without any competitive bidding.

There are open accusations of corruption in government that have not been properly addressed. The 2016 Mo Ibrahim Index on African Governance cited Ghana as one of the two worst deteriorations in governance in the last decade among African countries.

Ghana’s economic growth rate topped 14 percent in 2011, but collapsed to under 4 percent in 2014, driven by a sharp contraction in the industrial and service sectors. The Ghana currency went into freefall, inflationary pressures rose and today bank base rates average about 33 percent.

The best way to describe the current economic situation in Ghana is one of wasted opportunities. The IMF predicts that our GDP growth in 2016 will be 3.3 percent, the lowest since 1994. Our GDP growth this year will be the lowest it has been since 1994.

National borrowing and spending are so out of control that lenders no longer consider us a good risk. As oil output increased, Ghana slid back into becoming a highly distressed indebted country. We are again dependent on payouts from the IMF, and negotiating national policies and reforms with foreign institutions. Foreign investors have been discouraged by the unstable economic conditions, and by the electricity crisis that has left Ghana with shortages and outages.

We go to the polls to elect members of parliament and the president of the republic on December 7. I am honored to be the presidential candidate for my party, the NPP. We are presenting the country with a manifesto of fully costed programmes that we term, “An Agenda for Jobs.”

We are hoping to win the forthcoming elections and are determined to do things differently to be able to give our country a solid and sustainable change for the better. After 60 years, we have run out of excuses for our poverty and slow rate of development. My party is committed to the establishment of the office of a public prosecutor to reassure Ghanaians that decisions about prosecutions are removed from political considerations.

Mahama’s government has mortgaged our future. The NDC government has borrowed heavily against our future to increase spending, but none of it has strengthened our economy, our well-being, or our regional or global standing. As attention to African markets expands, we find ourselves competing with other nations we used to outrank. But the good news is that, after eight years, the people of Ghana are looking for change.

How Ghana manages its oil wealth will determine how we are viewed by the world. But more importantly, it will determine what our people think of our nation. On December 7, Ghana has the opportunity to restore hope and set the country on the path of prosperity.

 

 

Source: Ghana/Starrfmonline.com/103.5

Dangote Foundation wins African Philanthropy award

Dangote Foundation has won the 2016 Philanthropy of the Year award at the All Africa Business Leaders Award (AABLA) held at the weekend in Johannesburg, South Africa.

The Awards is the initiative of CNBC Africa and ABN to recognize and reward outstanding African companies for their performance in 2015.

According to a statement from the award organizers, a total of  Africa’s nine best business leaders were celebrated at the 2016 All Africa Business Leaders Awards in Partnership with CNBC Africa (AABLA), at the exclusive All Africa Finale, held in Johannesburg and attended by prominent businesses leaders from across the continent, ambassadors and the Premier of Gauteng, David Makhura.

At the West African Regional Stage of the award held in Lagos on October 20, Dangote Foundation emerged as the Philanthropy of the Year, setting the stage for its emergence as the African Philanthropy of the year.

Receiving the award, Chief Executive Officer, Dangote Foundation, Ms. Zouera Youssoufou thanked the organizers of the award, CNBC and ABN for the honour done to the Foundation and Dangote Group for bestowing such a prestigious award.

Represented by the Chief Executive Officer of Sephaku Cement, South Africa, Pieter Fourie, she said the belief of the Chairman of Dangote Foundation, Aliko Dangote that ‘to whom much is given, much is required’ led him to set up his Foundation back in 1993. 

She explained that the foundation in the last two years has grown and was restructured to have greater impact, adding that the $1.25 billion endowment by Aliko Dangote, has made it become the largest private philanthropy in Africa.

Zouera stated that Dangote Foundation is focused on improving the livelihoods of the most vulnerable Nigerians and Africans, focusing on health, education and economic empowerment of women.

According to her, the Foundation has been the single largest contributor to the fight against Ebola in Nigeria and with the African Union, and is working tirelessly to provide relief to the Humanitarian crisis unfolding in Northern Nigeria as result of the insurgency. 

Source: Ghana/Starrfmonline.com/103.5FM

Woyome: GHC4m cheque not fake; I was just confused – Woyome

Embattled businessman Alfred Agbesi Woyome has strongly dismissed claims by former Attorney General Martin Amidu that a GHC4million cheque issued as part payment of the GHS51.5million judgment debt, was fake and concocted by the government to deceive Ghanaians.

His comments come after Mr. Amidu who has been christened by Ghanaians as the citizen vigilante on Thursday, issued a statement stating that the Government of Ghana concocted the GHC4million part payment cheque.

“Does the Ghana government believe us to be so easily fooled that they concoct Woyome part payments of the judgment debt as smoke and mirrors for their election campaign? The people of Ghana should demand to know from government how its Attorney General can – in enforcing the order of the Supreme Court for Woyome to refund the unconstitutional payments made to Woyome to the Republic of Ghana – accept a cheque of GHS 4,000,000.00 drawn by Woyome dated 4th November, 2016 in favour of the Economic and Organised Crime Office as part payment of the monies ordered by the Court to be refunded, Mr Amidu said in a statement.

“The Attorney General accepted the Economic and Organised Crime Office cheque from Woyome and gave a receipt acknowledging the payment “as part payment for the Judgment Debt of GHS51, 283,483.59”. The Access Bank (GH) East Cant cheque number 890081 and the Attorney General’s receipt which were exhibited to the Attorney General’s affidavit sworn by the Attorney General herself on 9th November 2016 as Exhibits “AG 7” and “AG7A” are attached herewith in PDF for the public to judge how any Attorney General, worth the name, can accept a cheque drawn on the Economic and Organized Crime Office which was not party to the action as part payment of the refund ordered by the court on 29th July, 2014 for the Republic,”

But speaking at a press conference Friday, Mr Woyome said he was only confused as to who should be the recipient of the cheque.

“I don’t think I here, as a citizen, proud one of course, will try to play a prank on fellow Ghanaians. No, not at all! The so-called cheque was written by me. I made a cheque without writing who it’s meant for because I was confused as to who should be the recipient and after a meeting with the Attorney General in the presence of the Solicitor-General…”

Mr. Woyome also vowed to fight the decision of the Supreme Court to allow Mr. Amidu eamine him on the controversial judgment debt.

“Whatever it will take for the Supreme Court to depart from this decision concerning me…it’s just the beginning…they have erred because they’ve been misled, and I will insist and press on it until justice is done, because this judgment will be used on anybody because it is a precedent and it must not happen.”

 

 

Source: Ghana/Starrfmonline.com/103.5FM/Kobina Welsing

Kanye West: I didn’t vote but if I did, ‘I would have voted for Trump’

Could this be a very early campaign stunt?

Hip hop superstar Kanye West, who famously declared his intention to run for President in 2020, told a shocked audience in California that he didn’t cast a vote in the presidential election earlier this month, but if he did, he “would have voted for Trump.”

After the slightly-too-late endorsement for Donald Trump, the shock winner and now-President-elect, given between songs during the show at the SAP Center in San Jose on Thursday night, a large section of the audience booed the singer.

Trump’s election has led to protests across the country, as well as a spike in hate crime.

The moment was captured from afar by one concert-goer. While the majority of the crowd boos, one audience member can be heard clapping.

Fans took to Twitter to voice their frustration with the singer’s political position. One said that the show “was not the move,” and that the singer “lost me at ‘I would have voted for Trump.'”

Kanye show was not the move. He lost me at “I would have voted for Trump” 🙄

— Jewel Burks (@jewelmelanie) November 18, 2016

Another said the unexpected line meant “San Jose is packing its bags up.”

Kanye just said he would’ve voted Trump. San Jose is packing its bags up.

— Rahul Krishnakumar (@rkrishnakumar) November 18, 2016

One previous fan said that for him, the seeming endorsement was the last straw for his support of the outspoken artist.
“And with that, Kanye is completely over, for me. I was hanging on to give him a chance. But, he’s done,” he wrote.
One Twitter user evaluated why the singer might see Trump as a role model, of sorts.
“This isn’t surprising. Kanye loves sensationalism and wants influence — two things that Trump possesses,” the tweet reads.
Yeezy has appeared with Trump before, in a way. In the video for his song “Famous,” from earlier this year, he appears in bed with a number of celebrity lookalikes, one of whom is the new President-elect.
Last year President Barack Obama addressed West’sintention to run, joking that he was running “for Speaker of the House,” before saying, “it couldn’t get any stranger.”
How naive we all were back then.
Source: CNN

Murray sweeps into Tour Finals semis

Tennis - French Open - Roland Garros - Mathias Bourgue of France v Andy Murray of Britain - Paris, France - 25/05/16. Murray reacts. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

Andy Murray swept into the semifinals of the ATP Tour Finals with a 6-4, 6-2 victory over Stanislas Wawrinka on Friday as the world No 1 remained on course for a final showdown against Novak Djokovic.

Murray brushed aside Wawrinka in 86 minutes at London’s O2 Arena to ensure he finished top of his group and avoided a last four clash with Djokovic.

Instead, the 29-year-old will face Canada’s Milos Raonic in Saturday’s semifinals.

Wawrinka’s defeat means Japan’s Kei Nishikori qualifies as runner-up to Murray and he takes on defending champion Djokovic in the other semifinal.

Murray ended Djokovic’s 122-week reign at the top of the rankings two weeks ago, but to guarantee finishing 2016 in pole position, he must win the Tour Finals for the first time.

He looks in the mood to do just that on the evidence of a ruthless performance against US Open champion Wawrinka, which took his winning streak to 22 matches and equalled his career best run earlier this year.

This has been an incredible year for Murray, who has won Wimbledon for the second time, claimed a second Olympic gold medal and become a father for the first time.

To finish it on another high, Murray must repeat this year’s Wimbledon and Queen’s final triumphs against the big serving Raonic.

That would set up a possible winner-takes-all meeting with his old rival Djokovic to determine who secures the Tour Finals title and the world No 1 ranking.

After spending three hours and 20 minutes locked in a punishing duel with Nishikori that eventually went Murray’s way on Wednesday, the Scot had to ignore his aching limbs and win three matches in three days to finish the season on top of the world.

He got a pre-match boost just before stepping on court when he learned his brother Jamie was guaranteed to finish the year as doubles world No 1 with partner Bruno Soares.

DOUBLE CELEBRATION

Maintaining the Murray family’s hopes of a double celebration when the brothers head off for their father’s stag do next week, the Scot matched Wawrinka blow for blow.

He landed the crucial blow on his first break point when a fortunate net-cord bounced his way, flustering Wawrinka into an ill-timed error that gifted Murray a 4-3 lead in the first set.

Wawrinka had made the semifinals of the Tour Finals for the last three years and knocked out Murray in the group stages last year.

But Murray won their last meeting in the French Open semifinals in June and he pressed home his hard-earned advantage by closing out the set in businesslike fashion.

Murray knew he only needed to take one set to be certain of reaching the last four, but he had to win the match to be assured of topping the group.

He kept his foot on the gas and broke Wawrinka again in the first game of the second set.

A huge serve from Murray got him out of trouble when Wawrinka finally got his first break point in the next game.

Murray effectively ended Wawrinka’s resistance with a clinical volley that secured another break in the third game and prompted the frustrated Swiss star to smash two racquets and draw a code violation.

Tormented by Murray’s changes of pace and angles, Wawrinka folded and one last miscued forehand sealed the Scot’s regal progress.

Amidu being used as a weapon against Mahama – Woyome

Disgruntled businessman Alfred Woyome has accused former attorney general Martin Amidu of allowing himself to be used as a weapon against President John Mahama and the people of Ghana.

According to him, Mr Amidu is being manipulated by unseen hands to settle scores with the President and the NDC.

The Supreme Court has granted an application by Mr Amidu to cross-examine the businessman over the controversial GHC51 million that was paid by the State.  The ruling came after an initial application to cross-examine him orally by the attorney General was withdrawn.

Addressing a news conference on the matter Friday, Mr Woyome described the anti-corruption campaigner as a bitter man who cannot get over the fact that the late President John Mills chose Mr Mahama as his running mate in 2008 and subsequently won the polls.

“He felt that he must be the vice president. When the current president was chosen as vice, Martin went haywire. He was given an office at the Castle [then seat of government], still he was causing troubles everywhere. …Martin has a problem…he is being used by unseen forces as a weapon against Ghanaians and against the President.

“He’s even being used against himself,” he stated.

 

Source: Ghana/starrfmonline.com/103.5FM

Tagoe’s bout postponed to Dec. 2

Ghana’s Emmanuel Tagoe’s world title bout against Argentine opponent, Fernando David Saucedo has been rescheduled to December 2.

The much-anticipated bout was initially scheduled for November 25 at the newly built Bukom boxing arena in Accra.

However, Saucedo’s camp in the early hours of Friday sent a communique asking for a reschedule of the bout due to a shoulder injury and  therefore request for an extra seven days for recovery.

Meanwhile, BabyJet Promotions, who are promoting the bout have apologized to all stakeholders since the postponement have been accepted to accommodate the time for the Argentine to recover fully.

“He has a clause in his contract and if he is injured and that clause protects him only if he proves with evidence, we have to give him the chance”, promoter Sammy Anim told Starr Sports.

“Since he can only recover and fight on December 2, the excuse has been accepted by BabyJet promotions so it’s been rescheduled to December 2”, he added.

 

Source:  Ghana/Starrfmonline.com/103.5FM/Tony Bebli

Status of the NHIS: The bare facts [Infographic]

The National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) is a social intervention program which provides financial risk protection against out-of-pocket healthcare expenditure for all residents in Ghana. The scheme is currently operational in all parts of the country.

In 2003, the law establishing the Scheme, National Health Insurance Act, 2003 (Act 650) was passed to regulate the operation of the NHIS. The law was reviewed in 2012 (Act 852) to make the Scheme more efficient and administratively more robust.

Membership of the NHIS: Growing or dwindling?

Membership of the NHIS has been growing steadily since 2005 when full operations began. About 40,000 people register/renew their membership of the scheme daily. From a membership of 1.3 million people in 2005, the NHIS now has a total of 11.3 million active members across the country (2015), representing 42% of Ghana’s current population. Membership of the Scheme is open to all Ghanaians and legally resident persons in Ghana.

The graph below depicts the scenario;

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The graph below shows NHIS membership as a percentage of Ghana’s population;

 nhis-2

Utilization of healthcare services under the NHIS

Utilization means the number of times people have used the NHIS card for seeking healthcare within a given period. In 2015, people visited the health facilities (NHIS-credentialed facilities – hospitals, clinics, health centres, pharmacies etc) 31 million times on account of the Scheme. This compares to less than 600,000 in 2005. The NHIS has certainly improved access to healthcare by reducing the financial barriers Ghanaians faced in seeking care prior to the NHIS. The NHIS has also helped to improve the healthcare seeking behavior of residents in Ghana. On average 85,000 hospital attendances are made every day by holders of the NHIS card.

The utilization trend of the NHIS over the years is shown in the chart below;

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Membership Distribution: Various categories

Patronage of the NHIS is diverse. This ranges from people in the formal and informal sectors and other vulnerable groups. The scheme has an elaborate exemption policy, where about 70% of its total members do not pay premiums, either as a result of their status of belonging to one vulnerable group (aged, children etc) or another or because they have monthly payroll contributions from their pension fund (Social Security and National Insurance Trust, SSNIT). In 2014, the NHIS registered 1.5 million indigents onto the Scheme for free underscoring the pro-poor credentials of the program.

The chart below shows the membership distribution of the NHIS in 2015.

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Source: Ghana/Starrfmonline.com/103.5FM

Airtel Ghana joins fight against breast cancer

Employees of Airtel Ghana have donated proceeds from their month-long employee-led breast cancer awareness campaign to Breast Care International – a leading breast healthcare organization in Africa providing enabling environment to control the incidence of breast Cancer in women.

The presentation was made to the organisation at the Peace and Love Hospital on the Spintex Road last week Friday led by Airtel Ghana’s CSR Manager, Maame Dufie Cudjoe who reiterated Airtel Ghana’s commitment to supporting causes that make the most impact in the lives of Ghanaians.

She said “This donation is in line with our commitment to raise awareness on breast cancer prevention, early treatment and management. Every year, we dedicate the entire month of October to creating awareness and raising funds in support of this cause.
“Our employees, the biggest advocates of our CSR programmes, have actively championed this cause over the years – raising funds through various initiatives in support of the fight against breast cancer”.

“This year, we selected Breast Care International because of their track record and the amazing work Dr. Addai and her team have been championing to create awareness about prevention and early treatment. Their goals are in line with ours and we are happy to be supporting them this year” she concluded. Last month employees of Airtel Ghana organized and participated in various activities to create awareness on breast cancer whiles empowering the general public with healthy and preventive lifestyle tips.

The activities included the ’Run for a Cure’ a flea market, health talk and a cooking competition. The exciting events which brought the employees together were organized alongside a robust campaign on social media with the hashtag #eatwelllivewell.

The donation was received by Mr. Osei Boakye, Public Relations Manager of Breast Care International who expressed the foundation’s appreciation for the donation, indicating that it will boost the work of the organization.

Last year, Airtel Ghana supported the Sweden Ghana Medical Cancer Foundation and the Judith Ellen Awuah Darko Foundation with funds raised through employee donations.

Airtel Ghana continues to lead in sustainable corporate social responsibility programmes spanning health, education and community empowerment. Its CSR programme has been globally adjudged ‘Best Corporate Social Responsibility Initiative’ at the 2016 Global Carrier Awards held in Paris, France.

Source: Ghana/starrfmonline.com/103.5FM

Trump election: Jeff Sessions tapped for top law job

Donald Trump has asked Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions to be attorney general, US media is reporting.

Senator Sessions, a former prosecutor elected to the Senate in 1996, has been one of Mr Trump’s closest allies throughout the campaign.

Meanwhile, retired three star lieutenant general Michael Flynn is understood to have accepted the position of national security advisor.

Both men have courted controversy over their views previously.

However, Mr Trump has yet to confirm the appointments himself.

Transition officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, have said Mr Sessions and Mr Flynn have been offered posts in the new administration.

However, Republican National Committee spokesman Sean Spicer, who is involved in the Trump presidential transition, would not confirm the reports on CNN.

“Until Donald Trump says it, it’s not official,” Mr Spicer said.

 

Source: BBC