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PRIVATE SCHOOLS TO BE INCLUDED IN FREE SHS – NDC MANIFESTO

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The running mate of the National Democratic Congress, Professor Jane Naana Opoku Agyemang, has stated it has no plan to cancel the free SHS policy introduced by the Akufo-Addo administration.

Announcing highlights of the NDC manifesto on Monday at the University of Professional Studies, Accra, Professor Opoku Agyemang, stated that a future NDC administration will make the free SHS better and more inclusive.

“We have every plan and desire to make the free SHS much better,” she said adding that an NDC government will abolish the double-track system by completing all educational structures and E-blocks abandoned by the NPP government.

According to her, an NDC government under Mr John Mahama will expand the free SHS policy to cover students in private senior high schools.

Meanwhile, the National Democratic Congress has promised to construct a domestic airport in the Upper East region if the party wins the December 7 elections.

This was revealed by the flagbearer of the party, John Dramani Mahama during the party’s manifesto launch at the University of Professional Studies, Accra, on Monday.

Mr Mahama said “We will construct a domestic airport in the Upper East region,” adding “the land was secured when I was President and so we will continue with it.”

The former President also stated that the Kumasi Airport will be upgraded to receive bigger aircraft adding that various markets across the country will see a facelift using the Kejetia module.

“We will establish mini-gold refineries in the gold producing areas. We will partner with the private sector to help us achieve this. We will stop the exporting of unrefined gold.”

The former President added that his next government will scrap the law banning the importation of salvaged vehicles. He also reiterated his promise to legalize Okada and regulate it to provide meaningful jobs for the unemployed.

‘NEPOTISM MASQUERADING AS BUSINESSES IS NOT GOOD FOR US’ – JANE NAANA

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The running mate of the National Democratic Congress Professor Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang has condemned what she says is nepotism being masqueraded as businesses in Ghana.

Speaking at the party’s manifesto launch at UPSA in Accra Monday, the former education minister said the Ghanaian economy must work for all since the country belongs to all Ghanaians.

“Nepotism, cronyism masquerading as businesses is not good for us. Ghana is better than that. Let there no be a doubt that Ghana belongs to all of us and not few individuals who arrogate to themselves the power to share our natural resources,” she said.

Ghana’s economy working for a few people – Mahama
Former President John Mahama says the Ghanaian economy under President Akufo-Addo is working for a few people instead of all Ghanaians.

According to him, the NDC will put in place measures to ensure that the economy is able to support every Ghanaian regardless of their political affiliation or background.

“Ghana’s economy is not working for the people, it is working for only a few. We will fix the economy and make it work for all Ghanaians. We will fight the disastrous effect of the poor economic performance of this government,” the NDC flagbearer told the gathering at the party’s manifesto launch at the UPSA Hall in Accra Monday.

Mr. Mahama also promised: “We will put an end to the vindictive targeting and collapse of Ghanaian businesses”.

FREE SHS FOR PWDs – NDC MANIFESTO

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The National Democratic Congress has promised to offer free tertiary education for people living with disability if the party wins the 2020 elections.

The party also says it will maintain the payment of allowances to teacher-trainees and abolish the teacher licensure exams.

“Maintain the status quo with regards to payment of allowances for teacher and nursing trainees. Abolish the mandatory national service and teacher licensure examinations for graduates of the Colleges of Education. Restore automatic employment of newly trained teachers. Provide free tertiary education for persons with disabilities. Support tertiary institutions to invest in virtual infrastructure,” the party promised in its 2020 manifesto.

On law education, the NDC manifesto said: “vigorously reform and expand access to professional legal education and provide opportunities to all qualified LLB holders by granting accreditation to certified law faculties to undertake the professional law qualification course.

“Review the Legal Profession Act in consultation with stakeholders, and establish a Council for legal education and training, to accredit certified law faculties to run the Professional Law Course subject to the oversight supervision of the Council. Establish a faculty of law in the Northern Region to serve the northern sector”

MTN IN SUPREME COURT FOR CLARIFICATION ON MARKET SHARE RULING

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Scancom Plc, operators of telecommunication network, MTN Ghana has applied to the Supreme Court to review the High Court’s recent decision regarding the declaration of the company as a Significant Market Power (SMP).

According to MTN Ghana, it filed for the review on Friday, September 4, 2020 after a careful review of the court’s judgment on the suit against the National Communications Authority (NCA) over its market share regulation and its related matters.

On Tuesday, September 1, 2020, the High Court of Justice (Commercial Division) dismissed the company’s application for a judicial review of the declaration by the NCA of MTN Ghana as an SMP.

MTN Ghana says although it respects the decision of the Court, it is however of the view, the judgement did not address concerns that the NCA’s decision did not meet the requirements of procedural fairness.

The telecommunication giant also acknowledges the duties and powers of the NCA to promote fair competition amongst licensed operators.

In a statement sighted by citinewsroom.com MTN Ghana expressed the company’s support to the legitimate exercise of the NCA’s regulatory powers.

“But as a good corporate citizen and considering the international investment community we believe that a decision by the highest court of the land would provide certainty and veritable precedence on the procedural fairness in this, and future regulatory decisions of the Authority. This will no doubt safeguard the interest of customers, shareholders, investors and the wider industry. I believe Friday’s step still provides an opportunity for further engagements with the regulatory authorities”, MTN stated.

MTN Ghana further assures its cherished customers, shareholders and other stakeholders of its unflinching commitment to its regulatory obligations and support for the Ghanaian Government’s efforts to enhance growth and competition in all segments of the telecommunications market.

“The company will continue to invest and innovate to realise its belief that every Ghanaian deserves the benefits of modern connected life. MTN Ghana will refrain from further statements or comments on this matter until it becomes necessary to update all stakeholders of future material developments”, it added.

MTN Ghana is the market leader in the increasingly competitive mobile telecommunications industry in Ghana, offering subscribers a range of exciting options under Pay Monthly and Pay as You Go Services and Mobile Financial Services.

The company has committed itself to delivering reliable and innovative services that provide value for subscribers in Ghana’s telecommunications market.

Since its entry into Ghana in 2006, MTN has continuously invested in expanding and modernizing its network in order to offer superior services.

EC to exhibit voters’ register on September 18

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The Electoral Commission will from Friday 18th to Friday 25th September 2020, exhibit the 2020 provisional voters’ register.

The register has over 16.9 million voters with over 30,000 voters delineated onto an exception list.

It is however still not clear how many registrations have been successfully challenged.

The 8-day exercise will thus afford registered voters the opportunity to match their details against what has been captured in the register and to confirm the registrations.

The Commission has also availed a mobile service through which registered voters can equally check and confirm their registration.

Voters using this service are to send their voter ID Numbers to the shortcode 1422 for their details, but can only effect corrections where necessary at the EC’s respective district offices.

The Commission ahead of the exhibition says the full COVID-19 protocols will be observed at all exhibition centres and voters visiting the centres must all wear nose masks.

Many concerned stakeholders, particularly the opposition NDC have downplayed the Electoral Commission’s (EC) defence for the compilation of a new register arguing that the numbers recorded during the mass voter registration exercise would not have been so different if the old register was used.

The EC claims over 19.8 million voters would have been recorded if an entirely new register was not prepared.

Provisional figures from the electoral management body put registered voters at over 16.6 million pending the verified data.

 

MAHAMA APPEALS TO GHANAIANS AHEAD OF MANIFESTO LAUNCH

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My brothers and sisters,

On Monday, we will launch our manifesto for 2020.
Let me take this opportunity to offer some personal reflections on the political substance of this manifesto.

You offered me the humbling chance to serve you from the highest offices in Ghana – first as Vice-President, for four years, and then as President for another four years. For this, I will forever be grateful, and I will fight for your wellbeing, for your hopes and for your rights with all my strength for the rest of my life.

But since I have already been there, why run again? I know many of you ask this question – sometimes openly, sometimes in silence. Why run again? It is a fair question, and it deserves a fair, personal answer.

In a sense, our manifesto will provide the answer, but it will be a collective answer, coming from all the fabulous NDC members and supporters, men and women, who participated in its formulation.

In all honesty, I didn’t take the decision to run for a second term as President neither easily, nor quickly. I didn’t jump into it. I did it out of a sense of urgency, after I began to contemplate more and more thoroughly about our vulnerabilities as a nation.

No country can aspire to become developed; no society can be truly resilient in the face of crisis and adversity without a solid economic and social infrastructure.

To create sustainable and ever-growing prosperity – something we all deserve – it requires building a robust social and economic infrastructure, one that supports creativity, innovation and the production of high value-added products and services.

This is precisely why, during my Presidency, I took aggressive steps to develop and consolidate our healthcare infrastructure, our educational infrastructure, our transport infrastructure and our digital infrastructure. This is the only way to build a resilient nation. Without creating and consolidating a developed infrastructure, no nation can resist global shocks.

Unfortunately, this current government has refused to continue on this path and therefore failed to make our nation less vulnerable and more resilient.

Let me give you just one example: access to electricity. In 2012, 69.2% of Ghanaians had access to electricity. In 2016, when I left office after my first term as President, 79.3% of Ghanaians had access to electricity. A 10 percentage points increase in 4 years. When I left the office, I was confident that a new government will deliver 90%, if not 100% access to electricity in the next four years.

However, the NPP government increased overall access to electricity from 79.3% to only 82.3%, a mere 3 percentage points increase.

It is our sacred mission to turn Ghana into an advanced nation as soon as possible! It is our moral obligation to be bold and to aim for greatness!

“Good enough” is no longer good enough! To prosper and thrive, we need fundamental change! We need to set our standards and expectations far higher than “good enough”! If we settle for “good enough”, we settle for a slow death of our very soul and of our pride.

I run for President because I want to leave a legacy: a solid infrastructure, with 100% access for all. With this legacy, we will build a truly developed Ghana, on a par with the advanced nations.

I know how to do it, part of it I’ve already accomplished, and since I know how to do it and the current government doesn’t, I feel I have the moral duty to ask for a second term. This is not about me, it’s about Ghana and Ghanaians.

This is what Monday’s manifesto is about.
This is why I encourage all of you to watch the launch ceremony.
God bless Ghana! God bless each and every one of you!

YOU HAVE LOST THE RIGHT TO COMPLAIN – MAHAMA TELLS NANA

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Former President John Dramani Mahama has admonished President Akufo-Addo to control his temperament in public in order to be seen as a good leader.

Speaking in an interview on TV XYZ, the flagbearer of the opposition National Democratic Congress, (NDC) said the president has no right to be angry over a description of some members of his government as “Akyem Sakawa boys” after he consistently described former presidents with unprintable words when he was in opposition.

“President Akufo-Addo has lost the right to complain a long time ago, he was the opposition leader who called presidents before him anything you can imagine, including ‘professor Do little’ and then he described somebody as ‘simpa panyin’. He is the president who has called his critics naysayers, professional jeremiah’s, I don’t understand on what standard he can be offended at this time because he has a precedence.

“I think that temperaments in leadership is very important and there are many things a president must attend to and you must not appear in public to have lost your cool and I think he should maintain his temperament to come across as a good leader,” Mr Mahama said.

His comments come after President Akufo-Addo complained to Catholic Bishops at a meeting at the Jubilee House after Mr Mahama shared an article by lawmaker Isaac Adongo which used the labelling ‘Akyem Sakawa Boys’ for some individuals in government.

“Archbishop, this name-calling seems to be a feature of Ghanaian public life. But sometimes, when things come out, we would hope that you will comment on them. The comment made by my opponent, “Akyem Sakawa people,” I have not heard any public figure, independent person, yourselves, comment on it. It is completely unacceptable. If I were to get up to make comments about Northerners or Gonjas, you can imagine the uproar that would be in the country.

“Presidential candidate, a former President of Ghana, you can call a group of Ghanaians “sakawa people”, and it involves the group for which the sitting President comes, and that statement goes without comment, and at the same time we hear all these statements, let all try and bring the politics of insults to an end,” the President bemoaned.

Awards do not define me – Akwaboa

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Celebrated singer-songwriter Akwaboah has insisted that receiving an award is not a validation of his hard work.

He shared this view during a live studio discussion on Happy FM.

When questioned about why he receives awards internationally for best highlife artiste but local awards seem to elude him, Akwaboah replied by saying he does not have the right answers to that.

He noted that his main aim is to keep focused and work hard to serve his fans with the good music that they want to enjoy from him; hence, he is not bothered when he is not nominated for or does not win awards.

“When I organise shows, you know the number of people who come so I can’t be defined by the fact that an award show has been organised and I didn’t win any award. The organisers sat down and decided how they want their event to go, so I’m not bothered,” he stated.

“If it comes, that’s fine. If it doesn’t, I am still Akwaboah,” the highlife artiste was also quoted by eTV Ghana.

MY CONVOY HAS NOT BEEN INVOLVED ACCIDENT – PROF JANE

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The Vice Presidential candidate of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) Professor Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang has denied media reports that her convoy has been involved in an accident.

It comes after reports by some news portals that her convoy was involved in a crash at Sefwi Wiaso in the Western North region. The report added the accident was caused by the dusty nature of the roads.

But in a Facebook post, the academician dismissed the reports and said her team is doing fine.

“My convoy has not been involved in an accident. Kindly ignore the fake news. My team and I are all fine and very thankful to the good people of the Western North Region for their warm and mammoth reception during this four-day tour”.

 

I WILL NOT HONOR AGYAPA DEAL – MAHAMA

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Flagbearer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), John Dramani Mahama, has restated his decision not to respect the Agyapa Mineral Royalties agreement when he becomes president.

President Mahama says he will abrogate the agreement and has therefore urged government to desist from signing the deal.

Addressing the chiefs and people of Kaleo, as part of his tour of the Upper West Region, Mr. Mahama said the attempt by government spokespersons to justify the Agyapa deal in the name of a 2011 proposed Ghana Gold Company is both inaccurate and disingenuous.

He said the proposed company was 100% was intended to be owned by government and the people of Ghana, adding that it had no planned secret beneficial owners.

The former President pointed out that the Agyapa deal is shrouded in secrecy, its beneficial owners are unknown, and it seeks to “monetise Ghana’s gold royalties for the next 15 years and even in perpetuity without the consent of the people of Ghana”.

He added “civil society and right thinking Ghanaians have all expressed misgivings about this Agyapa deal”.

The NDC flagbearer said government should back down from signing the deal because “we will do everything legitimately in our power to oppose the agreement and make sure it doesn’t happen”.

Mr. Mahama said a small group of people cannot arrogate to themselves the right to monetise the country’s gold royalties without building consensus with the chiefs and people, adding the Agyapa agreement does not serve Ghana’s national interest.