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GHANA RECORDS THE NEW COVID VARIANT

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President Nana Akufo-Addo has revealed that Ghana has recorded the new COVID-19 variant at the Kotoka International Airport.

Addressing the nation on measures taken against the COVID-19 pandemic, the President announced that tests conducted on persons arriving in the country returned positive for the new variant.

The President also announced that he had directed the Inspector General of Police to ensure the strict adherence to the measures against the spread of the virus. He also added that night clubs, beaches and all pubs will be shut down to avoid the gathering of people.

Ghana has so far recorded 352 deaths from the deadly virus with 57, 714 cases recorded so far. In total over 55, 000 people have recovered and have been discharged.

The current active case count has risen to 1942.

The rapid spread of the new variant of coronavirus has been blamed for the introduction of strict tier four mixing rules for millions of people, harsher restrictions on mixing at Christmas in England, Scotland and Wales, and other countries placing the UK on a travel ban.

AVIATION, ZONGO, PROCUREMENT AND OTHER MINISTRIES TO BE SCRAPPED

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Almost all the ministries created when President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo assumed office on 7 January 2017 to help establish and give focus to his priority projects are set to be collapsed into existing ones, Asaaseradio.com can confirm.

Seven specialized ministries plus Ministers of State were created in addition to what are known as the ‘traditional ministries’ for the President’s first term in office. They are being absorbed for two reasons, according to our sources.

First is because they are said to have accomplished the purpose for which they were set up, which was the work of establishing those priority projects and programmes. Secondly, it is said to be in response to public criticism of the record size of the President’s first term government.

The Akufo-Addo first term administration over all, had 36 substantive Ministers and seven Ministers of State. The administration also had 48 Deputy Ministers as well as 16 Regional Ministers and 16 Deputy Regional Ministers, which brought the total number of Ministers and Deputy Ministers to 123. This number is expected to go down by at least 30% as the President seeks to cut down numbers, especially that of Deputy Ministers, sources close to the Office of the President have confirmed to livingavenuegh.com.

According to highly placed sources, the one seat majority being enjoyed by the governing NPP in Parliament, with the support of the independent Fomena MP, also brought with it the pressure of upholding the constitutional diktat of choosing majority of Ministers from Parliament while making sure that the work of Parliament does not disadvantage the executive with several MPs being busy with ministerial work.

The affected ministries
Among the Ministries affected, according to our sources, are Aviation, which had Kofi Adda (former MP for Navrongo Constituency in the Upper East Region) as the Minister. The functions of the Ministry are expected to be added to the Ministry of Transport.

The Inner City and Zongo Development which had Dr. Mustapha Hamid as the substantive Minister will be collapsed. However, Inner City and Zongo Development will become an agency under the Office of the President and its remaining functions will be inculcated into the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development.

The Ministry of Business Development, according to the source at the Presidency, will no longer be a substantive Ministry in the yet-to-be constituted Akufo-Addo second government. The Ministry of Trade and Industry will have Business Development added to its function.

As part of President Akufo-Addo’s agenda for the creation of new regions during his first term, he created the Ministry of Regional Reorganization and Development which was headed by MP for Okere, Dan Botwe. The Ministry went ahead to supervise the creation of six new regions in line with the laid down processes in the 1992 Constitution namely the Oti Region, Savannah Region, Western North Region, North East Region, Bono Region, and Bono East Region. The Regional Reorganization and Development Ministry having essentially completed its work, will also be collapsed and all aspects of its work which are yet to be completed will be handled by the Local Government and Rural Development Ministry.

The Ministry of Monitoring and Evaluation which was essentially responsible for conducting research on the performance of all Ministries will also not exist anymore. Asaase News’ information is that the research department of the Office of the President at the Jubilee House is expected to be revamped to perform this function. A renowned Ghanaian researcher, Dr. Isaac Owusu Mensah, has been penciled to lead the research office.

Three more ministries going
Adwoa Safo, the former Deputy Majority Leader, who also doubled as Minister of State in charge of Procurement, will also see her ministerial portfolio collapsed. Sources say that she is likely to hold another of the pre-existing portfolios. She is MP for the most populated constituency in the country, Dome Kwabenya.

As part of the reshaping of his second term government, President Akufo-Addo will not be maintaining the Ministry of Planning which had Professor Gyan Baffour as the Minister. The planning portfolio will be added to the Ministry of Finance.

The Ministry of Special Development Initiatives, which was headed by Hawa Koomson (MP for Awutu Senya East Constituency), will also no longer be a substantive Ministry in the next Akufo-Addo government.

UGANDAN ELECTION: MUSEVENI IN CLEAR LEAD

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Uganda’s long-time President Yoweri Museveni has a clear lead in the presidential race following Thursday’s vote, preliminary results show.

The country’s electoral commission has dismissed allegations of vote rigging, made by opposition candidate Bobi Wine, a former pop star.

But election monitors say confidence in the count has been damaged by a three-day internet outage.

Final results are expected to be confirmed on Saturday.

Dozens of people were killed during violence in the run-up to the election. Opposition politicians have also accused the government of harassment.

President Museveni, who has been in power for 35 years, is hoping for a sixth term.

The 76-year-old says he is standing for stability. Meanwhile Bobi Wine – the stage name for 38-year-old Robert Kyagulanyi – says he represents the younger generation in one of the world’s youngest countries, where the median age is 16.

On Friday, as the results came in, Bobi Wine said that Ugandan soldiers had surrounded and breached his home.

“None of these military intruders is talking to us,” he said on Twitter. “We are in serious trouble.”

But a government spokesman accused him of “dramatising” the incident “to seek sympathy”.

“Bobi Wine at this moment is a very important person. It is the duty of the state of Uganda to ensure he is secure,” Don Wanyama said.

What are the latest results?
Based on provisional results from two-thirds of polling stations, Mr Museveni has so far won 62% of the vote compared to Bobi Wine’s 30%, the electoral commission said.

Election commission chief Simon Byabakama said the vote had been peaceful and called on Bobi Wine, who said some of his polling agents were arrested on Thursday, to make public the evidence for his fraud allegations.

The opposition candidate believes the internet shutdown is being used to block communication and as a way of compromising the vote.

As well as being unable to get online, people have been having trouble sending text messages.

“Several of our phone numbers, including mine and my wife’s, have been switched off, have disconnected illegally,” said Bobi Wine, according to Reuters news agency.

“I will be happy to share the videos of all the fraud and irregularities as soon as the internet is restored.”

The security forces are patrolling the streets of Kampala
The electoral commission says only two polling stations in the country reported major irregularities and voting was cancelled in those locations.

Mr Wanyama, who is a spokesperson for President Museveni, also hit back at Bobbi Wine’s claims of vote rigging.

“He came short of the expectation of Ugandans,” he said, speaking to the BBC. “He had no message and Ugandans have told him he has to wait a little longer.”

Mr Wanyama added: “We have challenged him to provide proof for his claims, he has not a single iota of evidence.”

BBC correspondents say there is tight security in the capital, Kampala, with soldiers and police patrolling the streets.

The EU, United Nations and several rights groups have previously raised concerns about the integrity of Uganda’s election.

But, aside from an African Union mission, there is currently no major international group monitoring the vote. Earlier this week the US – a major aid donor to Uganda – cancelled its diplomatic observer mission to the country, saying that the majority of its staff had been denied permission to monitor polling sites.

How bad was the violence during the campaign?
Violence reached an unprecedented level in the build-up to the race, and dozens have died during crackdowns by security forces.

The government says the ban on gatherings was to prevent the spread of coronavirus while the opposition say it was a smokescreen for repression.

It has been quiet in Kampala on Friday morning, the day after the vote
Bobi Wine and other opposition candidates have been arrested on several occasions, and during protests that followed one arrest in November, more than 50 people were killed.

Who is Yoweri Museveni?
Mr Museveni, who came to power on the back of an armed uprising in 1986, is standing as leader of the National Resistance Movement (NRM).

President Yoweri Museveni says he represents stability
He has long been depicted to Ugandans as a liberator and peace bringer.

But he has managed to maintain his grip on power through a mixture of encouraging a personality cult, employing patronage, compromising independent institutions and sidelining opponents, says the BBC’s Patience Atuhaire.

I WAS ELECTED BY MAJORITY DECISION – ALBAN BAGBIN

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Speaker of the 8th Parliament Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin says it was a majority vote that propelled him into his current position.

In his maiden address to the 275 members on Friday, the 63-year-old immediate past Second Deputy Speaker of Parliament declared his legitimacy to the nation’s third-highest office.

He said, “The message in the votes of 136 in favour of Prof Aaron Mike Oquaye, as to 138 for Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, with one spoilt ballot,…propelled me to this high office of Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana.”

He repeated a mantra of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo that “The battle is always the Lord’s, adding “glory be to the Most High God,” which attracted applause from both sides of House.

The immediate past Second Deputy Speaker, MP for Nadowli Kaleo Constituency, Upper West Region, for 28 years used the occasion to caution the Members of Parliament (MPs) to be civil and disciplined in their deeds and utterances in their parliamentary work.

His caution stems from unruly and rowdy behaviour of some members of the House during the election of the Speaker last week, which attracted military presence onto floor of the House.

He tasked the leadership of the house to investigate those incidents to prevent their recurrence and to save and redeem the sunken image of the august House.

Speaker Bagbin noted his almost three decades service to the House on the ticket of the current opposition National Democratic Congress(NDC) but assured the House that he would remain fair, firm, impartial and resolute in the discharge of his duty as Speaker.

He pledged also to respect the dictates of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana, and the will of the people of Ghana.

With a Parliament of 138 members that constitute a majority (NPP side) and 137 representing the NDC Minority, Speaker Bagbin stressed on the need for more “consensus building, cooperation, dialogue and accommodation”, in the transaction of Parliamentary business and to satisfy the aspirations of Ghanaians.

“Let me also say a few words about the office of Speaker as envisioned under our Constitution. While past practice might lead some to think otherwise, the truth of the matter is that, the Speakership is not a partisan political office. Regardless of which party nominated or voted to elect him or her, and regardless of his or her previous political background, the Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana occupies a nonpartisan, impartial office.

He added: “There is no NPP Speaker or NDC Speaker; there is only a Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana.

“Unlike my counterpart in the American House of Representatives, the Ghanaian Speaker is not a Member of the House.

“The Ghanaian Speaker presides over but does not participate in proceedings of the House; and he or she has no vote, not even a casting vote, in matters before the House.

In fact, the Speakership in Ghana is designed to be even more impartial and more apolitical than the Speaker of the House of Commons in Westminster. It is indeed to ensure that the Speaker remains impartial in presiding over the affairs of this House and Parliament that his election is done by secret ballot.

“The independence and impartiality of the Speaker is particularly evident from one line in the Speaker’s Oath. That line is not found in the Presidential Oath, the Oath of Vice-President, the Oath for Ministers of State and Cabinet, or the Oath of a Member of Parliament.

“…. That last phrase, “without fear or favour, affection or ill will”, defines the office of the Speaker as an impartial, nonpartisan office. I assure you I don’t take this Oath lightly at all.

“Speaker Bagbin referred to having harmoniously with Speakers of diverse political backgrounds, including on one occasion supporting the nomination for re-election as Speaker of the 4th Republic, a well-known figure of the New Patriotic Party.”

He however made it clear that the office I now occupy is an impartial, independent, and apolitical office, akin, in that regard, to the position of a Justice or Chief Justice.

He pledged to live by the Oath he swore on the occasion of his new office and said he would respect, obey and abide by the will of the House.

“I am fully committed to being fair and impartial. But I am also fully committed to being firm, he said, adding, “We must work together for the betterment of Ghana and Ghanaians.

NPP SIDE IS MAJORITY OF THE 8TH PARLIAMENT – SPEAKER RULES

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The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin says the New Patriotic Party (NPP) Caucus and the Independent MP for Fomena Constituency constitute the majority in Parliament.

This decision according to the Speaker is based on a formal letter by Andrews Asiamah Amoako, notifying him of his intention to do business with the NPP in Parliament.

“What we have now, you have the New Patriotic Party wing or caucus in Parliament together with the independent Member of Parliament from Fomena, and they now constitute the Majority group,” he said during the second sitting of the 8th Parliament, Friday.

The declaration by the Speaker brings an end to weeks of debate between the members of the two caucuses in Parliament on who can claim majority status.

With both the NPP and NDC having 137 members each, the NDC had argued that there will no longer be a majority or minority side.

ELECTION PETITION PANEL UNFAIR – A MEMBER OF MAHAMA’S LEGAL TEAM

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A member of John Mahama’s legal team Dr Abdul Baasit Bamba has described the seven-members panel to hear the 2020 election petition as unfair and unbalanced.

He insists senior judges were not made part of the panel but rather judges who were mainly appointed by New Patriotic Party (NPP) governments.

The seven-member panel hearing the matter includes Chief Justice Kwasi Anin-Yeboah, Yaw Appau, Marful Sau, Nene Amegatcher, Prof. Ashie Kotey, Mariama Owusu and Gertrude Torkonoo.

The Chief Justice was appointed to the Supreme Court by the NPP’s John Agyekum Kufuor in 2008 and elevated as Chief Justice in 2020 by President Akufo-Addo.

JoyNews/AdomNews · Supreme Court panel unfair and unbalanced – Mahama’s legal team
He was part of the judges during the 2012/13 petition and in his ruling called for fresh elections to be organized since the polls were fraught with irregularities and statutory violations that have been proven.

Justice Yaw Appau was appointed to the Supreme Court by the NDC’s John Mahama in June 2015.

One of the most recent public interest cases he participated in is the Case filed by the AG asking that the court sets aside an injunction granted against the gazetting of John Amewu as Hohoe MP.

He was actually the Presiding Judge and the court ruled 5-0 that the Judge erred in granting the injunction.

Justice Appau was also part of the panel that heard the case filed by Prof Kwaku Asare challenging the monopoly of the Ghana School of Law.

He agreed with his colleagues in dismissing this case.

Justice Marful Sau was appointed to the Supreme Court in July 2018 by President Akufo-Addo. He was previously a Court of Appeal judge.

He was also part of the panel in the SALL case at the Supreme Court mentioned earlier and the Ghana School of Law case and also agreed with his other colleagues.

Justice Marful Sau participated in the voters register case prior to the 2020 elections and agreed with his colleagues that the EC can compile a new register ahead of the polls.

He was also part of the case that challenged the eligibility of Martin Amidu as a Special Prosecutor.

Justice Sau agreed with the majority opinion that Mr. Amidu was eligible to hold office.

Again, he participated in the National Cathedral case and agreed with his colleagues that the decision to build the cathedral was in tune with the social and political objectives of the constitution.

Justice Nene Amegatcher was appointed as a Justice in July 2018 by President Akufo-Addo. Prior to that, he was a Private Legal Practitioner.

He participated in the following cases; Amidu’s eligibility, Ghana School of Law monopoly, and the EC voters register compilation.

In all these cases, he agreed with his colleagues mostly unanimously in dismissing it or with the majority opinion.

Justice Prof Ashie Kotey joined the Supreme Court in July 2018. He was part of the EC voters’ register case, and the Amidu eligibility case.

In both matters he agreed with his colleagues.

Justice Mariama Owusu joined the Supreme Court in December 2019 and was part of the voters register case as well.

She agreed with her colleagues.

Justice Gertrude Torkonoo joined the Supreme Court in December 2019 and was part of the SALL case that unanimously held that the High Court judge erred in granting the injunction against Amewu.

Speaking to Mamavi Owusu Aboagye on the AM Show on JoyNews, Dr Aziz Bamba said Mr Mahama’s legal team deserves some answers even on why the Chief Justice has decided to settle on 7 Judges instead of 9 as happened in the 2012 election petition.

He also said it would have been better if other experienced Judges at the Apex Court had been placed on the panel.

But a member of the President’s legal team, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah took exception to the attack on the panel.

He described Dr. Bamba’s assertions as bogus and geared at embarrassing the Judges.

He insisted this claim together with the allegation of bribery leveled by Asawaase MP Muntaka Mubarak is part of a grand scheme to cause disaffection for the court because the NDC knows it does not have a strong case.

Source: myjoyonline

NPP MPs REPORTS TO PARLIAMENT AT 4AM.

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New Patriotic Party (NPP) Members of Parliament clad in white have arrived early in Parliament to occupy the Majority side of House ahead of the first sitting of the 8th Parliament.

Some of the NPP MPs on social media said they had been in Parliament as early as 4 am for proceedings which are expected to start at 10 am.

There were over 70 NPP MPs in the chamber by 8:30 am.

For the inauguration of the 8th Parliament, the National Democratic Congress MPs did something similar, arriving early to occupy the Majority side which is to the right of the Speaker.

No NDC MP has arrived in the chamber.

The NPP and NDC MPs are yet to agree on which side has the Majority in Parliament.

NDC and NPP have 137 seats apiece, with one independent MP, Andrew Asiamah Amoah of Fomena, who has aligned with the NPP.

The House’s first engagement will be the resolution of who forms the Majority and Minority of the House.

Three previous meetings between the leadership of both caucuses in the House to resolve the matter proved futile.

It is expected that today’s sitting will see Speaker Alban Bagbin bring finality to the matter.

Meanwhile, both parties are in court over the results from 16 constituencies

Each of them is challenging the results from eight constituencies.

The NPP is challenging results in the Buem, Kintampo North, Savelugu, Pusiga, Jomoro, Assin North, Banda and Krachi West constituencies.

The NDC, on the other hand, is challenging results in the Techiman South, Hohoe, Tano South, Tarkwa Nsuaem, Essikado Ketan, Tema West, Zabzugu and Sefwi Wiawso constituencies.

DROGBA DIVORCED WIFE AFTER 20 YEARS TOGETHER

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Former Ivorian international and Chelsea legend, Didier Drogba has announced divorce from Lalla, his wife after 20 years of marriage.

He announced the separation via an Instagram post. The couple got married in 2001, and have had three children over two decades of being together.

“(I) am not used to discussing my private life, but due to speculation in the media today, I will confirm that unfortunately after 20 years together, Lalla and I have made the difficult decision to go our separate ways.

“We remain very close and our main goal has been our children and to protect them and the privacy of the family,” he added.

AKNDOH’S WIFE SUES URSULA OWUSU

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The wife of Member of Parliament (MP) for Juaboso, Kwabena Mintah Akandoh has reportedly filed a court suit against Member of Parliament for Ablekuma West Ursula Owusu-Ekuful for causing her emotional pain and trauma when she harassed her husband in Parliament and same went viral on social media.

During the election of Speaker of Parliament, it will be recalled that the encounter between the two MPs caused a stir when Mrs Owusu-Ekuful was seen sitting on the lap of Mr Akando with her arms folded comfortably. This was after she claimed the Juaboso MP had taken her seat in Parliament. Some persons on social media accused the NDC MP of “enjoyment” when Ursula sat on him.

In fact, before his wife’s reported court suit and which she is seeking compensation for emotional damages, Mr Akandoh himself had in an interview on Peace FM, said he rather feels harassed contrary to claims that he had fun.

“I am sure Hon. Ursula Owusu was rather enjoying me whilst she sat on my lap since I wasn’t feeling anything for her,” he said.

Mr Akandoh then revealed that his wife was angered by Mrs Owusu-Ekuful’s conduct and has threatened to sue her for sexual harassment.

It appears to be serious now that the process has started.

FOMENA MP DOES NOT MAKE NPP THE MAJORITY – HARUNA

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The leader of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) caucus in parliament, Mr Haruna Iddrisu says his side has no difficulty sitting on the left side of the Speaker in the Chamber.

“Let me assure the Ghanaian people that the NDC 137 MPs have no difficulty sitting to the left of the Speaker so long as our numerical strength is respected and respected in the composition of committees and in the determination of leadership of committees, whilst we continue to pursue legitimate legal and constitutional processes to procure what we deserve as a majority party, someone will say, what is on the left or what is on the right, we have no difficulty at all,” Mr Iddrisu said at a press briefing in Parliament on Thursday, January 14, 2021.

 

He also stated that despite the fact that the Fomena MP Andrew Asiamah Amoako, who is an independent MP has officially written to do business with the NPP caucus in Parliament, it does not make the NPP side the majority in Parlaimnet.

“Advisedly and wisely, he is not seeking to join a political party and therefore nobody should do an easy mathematics of a 137 plus one. I will cooperate, or I will collaborate does not mean I am joining, or I am crossing over because it has its own constitutional implications which probably will require that a by-election be conducted if he was to join a political party,” Mr Iddrisu indicated.

In his view, both parties still have 137 seats apiece in Parliament and therefore the NPP cannot claim to have majority seats in the House.

 

Fomena MP officially joins NPP caucus in Parliament

The Independent Member of Parliament for Fomena, who has also been elected second deputy speaker of the eighth Parliament Andrew Asiamah Amoako has officially written to the Speaker informing him of his decision to do business with the New Patriotic Party (NPP) caucus in parliament.

This comes as the two sides engaged in endless debates over who has the majority and is entitled to sit on the right side of the Speaker.

Both the NPP and the NDC have 137 seats each in the house with no clear majority.

But the NPP through MP for Effutu, Alexander Afenyo Markin has written to the Speaker to declare their side the majority because the Fomena MP has agreed to do business with them giving them 138 seats.

Although the Fomena MP had told the media he was going to work with the NPP, there was no official communication to that effect to Parliament.

However, on Wednesday, 13 January 2021, the lawmaker wrote to officially confirm his position.

The letter read: “I Andrew Asiamah Amoako an independent MP for Fomena constituency and now the second deputy speaker for the same parliament do hereby declare that I shall for purposes of transacting business in the house, associate with the NPP caucus in the 8th parliament.”

“For the avoidance of doubt, I do hereby affirm that I shall cooperate and collaborate with the NPP caucus in parliament,” it added.