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Ghanaweb News from May 2012 - July 2012
June
03.06.2012 - All Latest GhanaWeb-News -
- Non-Ghanaian retailers close shops as GUTA
deadline
expires
- Forex Bureaux Face Imminent Shutdown
- Gen. Mosquito is NDC’s major threat not
Rawlings –
Adams
- Agogo: Forcible eviction of Fulanis
recommended
- Former Miss Ghana's House Burnt Down
By NDC
Supporters
- NDC opinion polls predict Mills loss
- Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly (KMA) sacks
37 NYEP
interns for misconduct
- Lands Commission Sells Police Building To
Alisa
Hotel
- Police Caution Oil Investors
- No one has divine right to rule - Veep
- Commentary: Shame On Those Who Wish
President
Mills Dead
- EC records 12,000 to 15,000 double
registration
- Break Duopoly On Cement Production -
World
Bank
- Experts to discuss control, elimination of
Neglected
Tropical Diseases
Non-Ghanaian retailers close
shops as GUTA deadline expires
* Source: JoyOnline
Some retail business enterprises
owned by non-Ghanaians have started folding up in compliance to a
directive from the Ghana Union Traders Association to foreign
retailers.
GUTA is seeking to enforce Act
478 of the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC)that bars
foreigners from petty trading, hawking or selling from a kiosk at
any place reserved as a market. The law stipulates that any
foreigner who wants to engage in retailing must first invest an
initial $300,000.
According to GUTA's President,
George Ofori the directive is not targeted at any particular
nationality but it is seeking to smoke out all non-Ghanaians who
are dealing in the retail business in areas such as Makola,
Okaishie, Nkrumah Circle and so on.
As a 3-month ultimatum given to
the non-Ghanaians in the retail business elapses on Thursday, the
Chairman of the Inter-Agency Task Force on non-Ghanaians in Retail
Business, Kofi Larbie has revealed that they would start clamping
down on those businesses on Monday, June 24.
The task force comprise of
institutions such as Registrar General's Department, Ghana
Investment Promotions Center, Ghana Revenue Authority, Immigration
Service, Police Service, Ministry of Trade and Ministry of Foreign
Affairs.
Meanwhile checks by Joy FM’s
Francis Abban at the Tip Toe Lane, Nkrumah Circle, Accra revealed
that some of the shops owned by non-Ghanaians have been
closed.
He added that some locals have
advised the non-Ghanaians to adopt a “wait and see” approach to see
whether the task force would carry out its threat.
He reported that some local
traders have welcomed the news urging the task force to enforce the
law to the letter.
According to Francis Abban, some
non-Ghanaians however called on the task force to extend the
ultimatum to ensure that they get enough time to fully shut down
their enterprises.
******************************
Forex Bureaux Face Imminent
Shutdown
* Daily Graphic
The Bank of Ghana is putting the
activities of forex bureau operators in its monitoring radar for
possible sanctions and license withdrawal. Suleiman Mustapha asks
why
The Bank of Ghana has threatened
to impose severe sanctions including license withdrawal of forex
bureau operators who accept deposits and do large foreign exchange
transactions.
Central Bank Governor and
Chairman of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Bank of
Ghana, Mr Kwesi Amissah-Arthur has on the sidelines of an MPC news
conference in Accra hinted some forex bureau operators are now
accepting deposits and doing large foreign exchange
transactions.
The bank is therefore setting
out measures to monitor the activities of forex bureau operators in
a bid to stem the rising spate of dollarization of the national
economy.
“Yes we are worried that some of
the forex bureau operators now accept deposits like the normal
banks and transact large volumes of foreign exchange
business”.
“They are part of the problem
and we will soon be rolling out tough measures to stem their
illegal activities”, the Governor said.
The Bank of Ghana is even more
worried of the growing trend of dollarization, which he partly
blamed on the activities of forex bureau operators.
According to the Governor, the
central bank will continuously be reviewing the books and
constantly monitor the activities of forex bureau operators for
possible sanction in breach of the country’s foreign exchange
rules.
“It is our view that this will
contribute to restoring confidence in the cedi” he said, adding
that “the Bank will issue the necessary notices to this effect in
due course”.
“They are supposed to do spot
transaction of the small foreign currency, which does not require
having to go to the commercial banks to exchange”.
“But what we have observed is
that some of them are accepting deposits and moving large volumes
of foreign exchange around”, he added.
The Bank of Ghana has mopped up
GH¢1.2 billion in excess liquidity from the system in a bid to stem
the exchange rate pressure and reduce demand for
dollars.
In a move to halt the growing
trend of ‘dollarization’ and stabilize the cedi, the Central Bank
is also reviewing the currency composition of the reserve
requirements of commercial banks.
Dollarization is characterized
by a tendency for businesses to sell their goods and services in
foreign currencies, particularly, dollars.
The service providers quote
exchange rates that are significantly off-market. The fringe
exchange rates trickle down into the market and become benchmark
rates, unduly influencing market rates.
The situation has fuelled price
increases in the country and led the Bank of Ghana to tighten
monetary policy, alter bank reserve requirements and reintroduce
several bonds.
“The committee notes that the
measures have begun to take effect. Increase in the policy rate
have led to upward adjustments in rates of money markets
instruments and improve the attractiveness of cedi assets compared
to foreign currency assets”, Mr Amissah-Arthur said.
According to the Governor,
though the Bank of Ghana was not considering abolishing the
operation of foreign exchange accounts by citizens, it would move
to restore the pre-eminence of the cedi in domestic transactions,
which required strict adherence to the provisions of the Foreign
Exchange Act 2006 (Act 723) and the accompanying
regulations.
The Governor was worried about
the large dollar deposits in commercial bank accounts, which he
said had significantly contributed to the exchange rate
pressure.
At the moment, the share of
foreign currency deposits to total deposits in the banking system
has increased from 27.9 per cent in April 2010 to 28.2 per cent in
April 2011 and further to 31.8 per cent in April this
year.
This means that some commercial
banks have more foreign currency deposits than domestic currency in
their total deposit.
The Bank of Ghana feared that
those banks could be importing large volumes of foreign currency to
service the needs of their clients.
During the first five months of
the year, the cedi depreciated cumulatively by 15.1 per cent
against the US dollar, compared to 1.9 per cent depreciation in the
same period of 2011.
In recent weeks however, the
pace of depreciation of the cedi has moderated as a result of the
measures introduced to restore stability.
The real effective exchange rate
depreciated by 6.8 per cent in January – April 2012, compared with
a real appreciation of 5.9 per cent in the same period of
2011.
But Governor Amissah-Arthur
assured Ghanaians that the end of the cedi fall was in
sight.
********************************
Gen. Mosquito is NDC’s major
threat not Rawlings – Adams
* CitifmOnline
The office of former President
J.J Rawlings has strongly condemned the National Democratic
Congress’ scribe, Johnson Asiedu Nketia, describing him as one of
the major threats the ruling party faces in its bid to retain
power.
The General Secretary of the NDC
reportedly urged party faithfuls to turn Rawlings’ own mantra of
positive defiance on him. Speaking at a press conference in Accra,
the spokesperson to the Rawlingses, Kofi Adams, stated that the
party ought to be very careful of persons it refers to as enemies
and rather work towards restoring the principles of the
NDC.
He said the party should rather
consider tackling the scandals surrounding Mr. Nketia rather than
embarking on a fight against its founder.
“I want to tell the Secretary
General of the NDC that if he feels the chances of the NDC in the
2012 elections is anyhow threatened, then his actions, his deeds
and inactions are the reasons for which the party is facing this
challenge that it is facing,” he said.
“We have not heard this kind of
behaviours and utterances [from past secretary generals]. I see no
reason why if our General Secretary goes to engage in inside
trading business, [then] he feels that is safe and good for the
image of the party, but the founder who is calling for the
restoration of the values underpinning the formation of the party
is the one that is destroying the party.
“The General Secretary must be
called to order and the time is now. Those who keep calling and
wanting unity and coming around to engage some of us, we can’t
continue building when we have someone at the centre of affairs
destroying,” Mr. Adams said.
*************************************
Agogo: Forcible eviction of
Fulanis recommended
* JoyOnline
The committee setup by the
Ashanti Regional Security Council (REGSEC) to oversee the movement
of Fulani herdsmen from the Agogo traditional area has recommended
their forcible eviction.
The committee chaired by the
Regional Director of the Bureau of National Investigations (BNI),
Alex Daary, has given the nomads a month’s grace period to leave or
be forced out.
It follows their refusal to move
voluntarily by the end of last April.
Luv FM’s Kwabena Ampratwum
reports that Mr Alex Daary who presented the report to the Ashanti
Regional Minister, said the committee recommended the eviction of
the Fulani Herdsmen among others.
“Several opinions expressed by
this committee are that the activities of the Fulani herdsmen have
adversely affected crop cultivation and disrupted social life in
the Agogo area.
“And therefore, as the High
Court has ordered, the cattle and for that matter the Fulani
herdsmen have to be flushed out from the villages mentioned earlier
in the report.”
He noted that as at the end of
April, only two cattle owners had voluntarily vacated the area as
the rest failed to comply with the agreed decision.
“The committee hereby recommends
to REGSEC the application of forceful eviction with the herdsmen
and their cattle from the Agogo land, the implementation of this
should be in accordance with the action plan, which is
submitted.”
However, the Ashanti REGSEC has
given the herdsmen up to the 21st of July to vacate the
area.
Ashanti Regional Minister, Dr
kwaku Agyemang Mensah said the security personnel would be on
standby to flush out the Fulani herdsmen if they flout the
directive.
********************************
Former Miss Ghana's House Burnt
Down By NDC Supporters
* Daily Searchlight
The entire building of the NDC
Parliamentary candidate for the Ledzokuku Constituency, Mrs. Benita
Sena Okity-Dua, a former Miss Ghana has been razed down by fire
suspected to have been set by her own party supporters who do not
want her to be their candidate.
So far, properties worth over
forty million new Ghana cedis have been reported as destroyed,
though there were no human casualties.
The incident occurred on
Wednesday between 4:30 and 5pm. Athorities are still investigating
with arson high on the list of suspicions.
In an interview with Benita Sena
Okity-Dua, she hinted that even though the Fire Service is yet to
confirm the cause, she suspects foul play.
She therefore accused some
people in her area of seeking her downfall, to force her to resign
as the parliamentary candidate for the party. The NDC Parliamentary
candidate thanked God that no casualty was recorded and said there
is no success without a story.
She assured that the party will
maintain the seat in the up-coming general elections.
*******************************
NDC opinion polls predict Mills
loss?
* New Statesman
A string of internal opinion
polls carried out by the ruling National Democratic Congress is
causing fear and panic among party officials as all the polls point
to one result: President Mills is set to become the first one-term
President in Ghana’s history.
A March 2012 opinion poll,
conducted by a South African PR Firm, which has been contracted by
the NDC for the December election, put the Presidential Candidate
of the New Patriotic Party, Nana Akufo-Addo, at 49.07%, with
President Mills lagging behind with 47.07%.
This development did not amuse
the NDC party hierarchy and therefore subsequently commissioned
“pollster” and Editor-in-Chief of the Daily Dispatch Newspaper, Ben
Ephson, to conduct an “independent” opinion poll in April on the
chances of President Mills ahead of the 2012 poll.
Ben Ephson’s poll, according to
sources at the party office, killed the morale of the top
functionaries of the NDC as the results made for grim
reading.
The results of Ben Ephson’s
poll, after being asked ‘Who they will vote for in the 2012
elections’, had Nana Akufo-Addo obtaining 50.05%. President Mills
fared rather worse in Ben Ephson’s poll, as he received 44.40% of
respondents sampled.
The results of Ben Ephson’s
April poll had Nana Akufo-Addo defeating President Mills in seven
out of the 10 regions in the country, with President Mills winning
only the Volta, Upper East and Upper West regions.
The regional breakdown of Ben
Ephson’s polls is as follows: Ashanti-79.8% for Nana Akufo-Addo,
19.1% for Mills; Brong Ahafo - 55 .7% for Nana, 40.4% for Mills;
Central Region – Nana Addo, 59.8, with 39.4 for Mills; Eastern -
68.9% for Nana Addo, 31.4% for Mills; Greater Accra -48.2% for Nana
Addo, 46.9% for Mills; Northern - 51.3% for Nana Addo, 44.5% for
Mills; Upper East - 39.8% for Nana Addo, 60.1% for Mills; Upper
West - 40.4% for Nana Addo, 52.1% for Mills; Volta - 18.9% for Nana
Addo, 74.9% for Mills; Western - 52.8% for Nana Addo, 41.5% for
Mills.
Results from the two latest
opinion polls informed decisions taken at an NDC Manifesto
Committee meeting held earlier this month. At the meeting, it was
accepted that the only way to defeat Nana Akufo-Addo was through
vitriolic attacks as results from the poll show that the NDC has
lost out on issues.
Even for the NDC’s so-called
flagship sector, Agriculture, where it claims to have chalked
unprecedented successes, the results of the opinion poll suggested
otherwise.
Representatives of the South
African PR firm engaged by the NDC thus advised the party that it
cannot win when it concentrates on issues alone. Therefore, the
only way the NDC and President Mills can emerge victorious is to
find a way to scare Ghanaians off the opposition leader, Nana
Akufo-Addo.
This scare-mongering is to be
done through a rollout of some “serious avalanche of negative
campaigning” against Nana Akufo-Addo in the last few months in the
run-up to the December polls.
This tactic of trying to rundown
Nana Akufo-Addo in the print and electronic media seems to have
been stepped up in recent weeks, as per the advice of the South
African firm, by NDC communicators and newspapers.
It is also recalled that in
September 2011, having been confronted with empirical evidence of
their defeat at the 2012 polls at a secret strategic retreat held
at Shai Hills, the hierarchy of the ruling National Democratic
Congress resolved to embark on a sustained and brutal character
assassination of Nana Akufo-Addo, as this represented the only way
the NDC could win the 2012 general elections.
Day three of the retreat themed
“Communications skills and Strategy session” was chaired by Kofi
Totobi Kwakye. During this session, the results of surveys
commissioned by the NDC were presented and this clearly was not
pleasant news to the NDC gurus gathered.
It was disclosed that a survey
commissioned by the NDC and conducted by an international research
and polling firm put President Mills at 39% and Nana Akufo-Addo at
57% if elections were held last August.
More bad news
followed.
The results of another survey
conducted by Bureau of National Investigations were also disclosed
to participants. The BNI’s survey was conducted in the Volta,
Central and Greater Accra Regions.
Results from this survey had the
New Patriotic Party winning in the Central Region and the Greater
Accra Region; regions the NDC won in 2008.
The NDC leadership thus came to
the conclusion that since the “Better Ghana” agenda and the
declaration of this year as “Action Year” had obviously not worked
based on the results of the surveys conducted by the two bodies, a
desperate course of action had to be taken.
It was therefore agreed that the
only way forward for the party in their hope of winning the 2012
election was to attack Akufo-Addo, attack his personality and
attack his family.
But Ben Ephson has denied the
publication.
In an exclusive interview with
Peacefmonline, the renowned pollster stridently denied the story
saying "it is not true".
********************************
Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly
(KMA) sacks 37 NYEP interns for misconduct
* GNA
The Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly
(KMA) has sacked 37 personnel of the National Youth Employment
Programme (NYEP) attached to the Assembly for
misconduct.
This has come in the wake of
street protests and strike actions over unpaid monthly allowances
of NYEP personnel.
The dismissed persons reportedly
accused the management of the Assembly of deliberately refusing to
pay them and made false allegations against some of its officials
on some local FM Radio Stations in Kumasi.
A press release signed by Mr.
J.K. Anhwere, Chief Personnel Officer, said by their actions, they
had brought the KMA into disrepute, in contravention of Section 76
(1) D of the Service Law, Section 27 (1&2) and 28 of the code
of conduct of the Service.
It asked the affected personnel
to hand over their uniform and other items to the Metropolitan
Security Coordinator.
Meanwhile, the sacked interns on
Friday continued with their demonstration in front of the KMA’s
office building.
They insist their dismissal is
nothing but political victimization.
********************************
Lands Commission Sells Police
Building To Alisa Hotel
* The Informer
Shocking!!!
At the time when people are
calling for the Ghana Police Service to be adequately resourced so
as to enable it perform its traditional role of maintaining law and
order as spelt out in Chapter 15 of the 1992 Constitution, the
Greater Lands Commission, is fast derailing the effort of
government in its quest to crystallize the expectation of the
constitution and the ordinary Ghanaian.
Totally setting aside the
above-quoted constitutional provision, members of the Greater Accra
Lands Commission, in the character of conscious-less spivs, decides
to sell an office accommodation at Ridge in Accra, duly allocated
to the Police Institution by government to help in the discharge of
its duties, to Alisa Hotel.
The facility which was recently
rehabilitated with financial assistance provided by the British
government had served as the Headquarters of the Police
Intelligence and Professional Standards Bureau (PIPS) – the very
division that ensures professionalism in policing in
Ghana.
Our investigations indicate
that, the “new owners” (Alisa Hotel) have sought to consecrate
their unlawful gains by going to court to secure an order to eject
the police from the facility, a just refurbished edifice, part of
which they have already pulled down.
Presently, the division (PIPS)
is operating from an unbefitting structure with electricity and
water supply completely cut off, by the supposedly “new owners” of
the said property, when The Informer investigations team visited
the area to have first-hand information about developments as
regards the sale of the facility.
The division’s commander, Deputy
Commissioner of Police (DCOP), (Mr.)Timothy Ashiley, in an
exclusive conversation with this paper, expressed shock about the
conduct of the Greater Accra Lands Commission, in its decision to
sell the facility to Alisa Hotel, when it knew it has an occupant.
According to him, the Lands Commission should have informed the
police of its intended plan, so that they could be appropriately
relocated by government following the sensitive role the police
play with regards to the security of the nation.
“In fact, the commission should
have weighed the pros and cons of its action, judging from the
pivotal role they play as far as the security of this nation is
concerned”, DCOP Ashiley averred.
Asked when he will finally
vacate the premises since the “new owners” have secured a court
order to eject them, he replied that so far as he takes
instructions from the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), he will
wait patiently for his advice.
However, credible information
gathered has it that, the authorities of Alisa Hotel have asked the
police to look for another office apartment for them to pay for,
and we wonder what really might have influenced their mental
process to come with such an idea.
In fact, those of us at The
Informer hold the view that with the financial valour of Alisa
Hotel; they could look for land at other prime areas owned by
private individuals to buy instead of fighting with the police over
a government property.
The decision by both the Greater
Accra Lands Commission and Alisa Hotel is morally wrong and we
expect that whoever instituted the sale action, must, with
immediate effect reverse it or face our wrath.
We are also calling on the
government to institute a serious action against Alisa Hotel’s
pulling down of the refurbished office apartment of the
aforementioned division, since their action can lead to strain
relations between Ghana and the British government.
The British government used part
of its taxpayer’s money to renovate the facility and government
shouldn’t allow any self-seeking entity to amass wealth to the
detriment of ordinary Ghanaians since their security cannot be
compromised.
*****************************
Police Caution Oil
Investors
* Daily Guide
THE MILE 7 Police Commander DSP
Peter Yembila has cautioned persons who wish to invest in the oil
sector to be wary of fraudsters who are taking advantage of the oil
find to defraud investors.
The police chief was worried
over the emergence of some fake products such as CMC oil drilling
grade or cement and oil drilling sealant being used to defraud
unsuspecting victims of colossal sums of money.
He explained that police have
had several complaints but unfortunately the fraudsters always
bolted before they were traced.
The Mile 7 police have since
taken custody of many related exhibits.
Meanwhile, the Accra Regional
Command according to Crime Officer Chief Superintendent Frank
Adufati has arrested 30-year-old Isaac Otoo in connection with an
oil fraud case.
Otoo was arrested on Friday,
June 15 at Sakaman near Odorkor while trying to dupe a restaurant
operator.
According to C/Supt Adufati, the
restaurant operator who is the complainant in the case said she
received a call from a certain Nii the previous day telling her of
a business contract which could fetch her much profit.
Claiming that they had met in
her restaurant where he came to dine with some expatriates, he
introduced himself as a worker of the Jubilee Fields at Cape three
points in the Western region.
Isaac Otoo went further to say
his company was in dire need of a product called the CMC oil
drilling grade but the complainant who became suspicious feigned
interest and reported the matter to the police.
The suspect, who posed as Nii,
told the complainant that she would need $12,000 for him to get her
samples from a white man who deals in the product.
The complainant informed the
suspect that the money was ready and a meeting was scheduled for
Friday June 15 at Sakaman.
However, the police ambushed the
fraudster.
When the suspected fraudster
popped up and started a conversation with the complainant the
policemen appeared on the scene and arrested him together with a
jute bag (Ghana must go), with the supposed CMC oil drilling grade
concealed in it.
Suspect Otoo is currently caged
in the cells of the Striking Force Unit at Accra
Central.
**********************************
No one has divine right to rule
- Veep
* Joy Online
Vice President John Dramani
Mahama has said the expansion of governance at the local level to
include ethnic and religious minority is key to averting
conflicts.
According to Mr. Mahama,
government is continuing to provide the kind of leadership needed
to consolidate and deepen decentralization at a faster
pace.
Mr. Mahama was speaking at this
year’s annual consultative meeting between government and
development partners on Thursday.
He said the promotion of better
engagement with traditional authorities and civil societies will
ensure that the decentralized government becomes an arena where
citizen fulfill their aspirations.
According to the Vice President,
as Ghana goes into an election, there is the need for everyone to
keep a level head.
He further added that no one has
the divine right to rule the country.
Mr Mahama also stated that “the
honour to serve as a government is one that is bestowed by the free
will of the people of Ghana”.
He assured government’s
commitment to ensuring a peaceful general elections in
December.
****************************
Commentary: Shame On Those Who
Wish President Mills Dead
* The Informer
The National Democratic Congress
(NDC) ought to fight a common enemy, which is the New Patriotic
Party (NPP), yet the NDC problems, seem boiling within, with
self-destruct menacingly staring it in the face.
When the latest political
mischief of ‘President Atta Mills’s death’ broke last week, the
large majority of Ghanaians and political observers believe the
mischief, as it happened in the 2008 election year, was being
re-enacted by the opposition NPP.
However, when an intel picked
from the Osu-Castle, pointed to the fact that the latest news of
another ‘death’ of President Mills emanated from the Castle itself,
the Informer wasn’t only flabbergasted, but was also
sad.
The Castle doom-mongering
prophets, believe Ghana was going to experience Nigeria’s Musa
Yar’Dua’s debacle and whispered this through the secret megaphones,
loud and clear into the opponents’ quarters for onward relay to the
cacophonous media which pounced on same without cross-checking the
fact. The NDC needs, as matter of urgency, to look within for a
quick solution to the basket-mouth epidemic it is inflicting upon
itself, especially so, in an important year of a competitive
elections which must be won ‘at all cost’ and won within ‘all die
be die’ atmosphere.
The NDC is, arguably, becoming
escalated bits of self-destruct individuals with personal interests
to safeguard than a political party with a common purpose, industry
and destiny – which should hold itself together with single purpose
of pulling together, the so-called floating voters, without whose
magnanimity the party couldn’t have returned to power in the first
place.
The individual interest in
political office, has today over-blotted collective party interest;
and this is, on daily basis becoming a bother, and creating
sleepless night for those who seem to have loved that party than
even themselves.
When these bunch of egocentric
individual would climb up top on the tree of NDC, but unwisely cut
down the trunk from the top, with unwise-thinking that the tree
would fall and they survive, the Informer, would give its candid
advice that when the tree they are cutting eventually falls, they
would become the most-hurt individual victims of the disastrous
result than the party supporters and floating voters.
To cite a case-study as it
happens in the Ledzokuku Constituency in Accra; A local apex
decision-making body went to congress to elect a parliamentary
candidate it feels could stand up to the challenge. However,
certain individuals who think their sheer opportunity to serve on
various governmental department boards; in ministries, as Municipal
Assembly Heads etc. choose to behave ultra vires the party
decision, therefore, end up creating animosity, public hatred and
apathy towards once a vibrant NDC party.
Indeed, in the NDC today, people
think more about their individual interest than the party’s ; and
therefore the party continues to suffer under the excruciating
burden of this petty liability, than asset, of people who seem to
forget that they are in an elections year, which cruises on,
menacingly toward the fast-approaching December.
But to those who choose to
destroy the party, and to large extent, the Castle from within, The
Informer says SHAME!!! on them.
********************************
EC records 12,000 to 15,000
double registration
* Source: GNA
The Electoral Commission (EC)
recorded between 12, 000 to 15,000 multiple registrations at the
end of the biometric voter registration exercise, Mr. Safo
Kantanka, Deputy Commissioner in-charge of Finance and
Administration has said.
He said the EC was still
compiling the registration figures nationwide and also cross
checking to find out areas of multiple registration and accidental
multiple registrations.
Mr. Safo Kantanka said this at
the opening of a one-day workshop in Koforidua on Thursday, to
educate political party executives on the in-built integrity of
Ghana’s electoral process.
The programme, which was
organized under the theme “The in-built integrity of Ghana’s
electoral process”, was attended by 22 regional executive members
from nine registered political parties in the Eastern
Region.
Mr. Kantanka said some of the
multiple registrations were accidental in cases where an EC
official who was not satisfied with the quality of the picture of a
voter during the registration exercise, requested to retake the
picture and the biometric registration machine registered it as a
multiple registration.
He said the EC supported the
presence of polling agents of the political parties at the polling
stations to enable the parties to witness the conduct of the
elections as part of the in-built integrity process of the
system.
Mr. Kantanka appealed to
political parties to appoint knowledgeable people as their agents
and said polling agents who understand the electoral system would
not cause problems at the polling or registration
centres.
He said during the elections,
the EC would be providing verification machines at all the polling
stations in the country with back-ups in case of break
downs.
Mr. Kantanka said as part of
planning for the smooth running of the elections, the EC would be
engaging the representatives of the political parties at the
Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC) to decide what should be done
in a situation where a verification machine breaks down and the
other equipment brought in to replace it also breaks
down.
He said if the verification
equipment arrived early, it would be tested during the exhibition
of the voters register in August.
Mr. Paul Boateng, the Eastern
Regional Director of the EC, said ensuring the integrity of an
electoral system was a collective responsibility which would only
work if all the stakeholders in the elections would play their
roles and be prepared to work within the confines of the electoral
law.
*******************************
Break Duopoly On Cement
Production - World Bank
* Source: Daily
Graphic
The recent hike in the prices of
cement has reignite debates on the impact of the Ghana Cement
Company (GHACEM) on prices of cement and the building and
construction industry in general.
The World Bank is uncomfortable
with the continuous dominance of the Ghana Cement Company (GHACEM)
and the Diamond Cement Company in the construction and sale of
cement in the country.
The bank is worried that GHACEM
and Diamond Cement’s more than 80 per cent hold of the market
suppresses competition in the sector with dire consequences on
prices and the supply of the product to the building and
construction industry.
It has thus called for urgent
steps that would liberalise the market “to engender competition and
drive down prices.
“I do not see any justification
for a ‘monopoly’ in the cement market in Ghana. It makes no
economic sense,” a World Bank Lead Economist in the country, Mr
Sebastien Dassus, said in a recent interaction with financial
journalists in Accra.
The Association of Building and
Civil Engineering Contractors of Ghana (ABCECG) recently expressed
similar misgivings on the matter.
The Chairman of the
association’s Technical Committee, Mr Rockson Dogbegah, had earlier
said in an interview with graphic.com.gh that the government needed
to break GHACEM and Diamond Cement’s de facto duopoly in the cement
business or leave the nation’s construction and building sector to
the whims and caprices of the company.
“We need a conscious effort to
get other cement factories into the system because where you have
only Diamond Cement and GHACEM controlling the market, it means
that we (builders and contractors) will continue to be at their
whims and caprices,” he said.
The recent increase in prices of
the product partly as a result of the weakening cedi has since
reignited that debate over the impact of the two companies’ actions
on the building and construction industry as far as prices and
supply of cement was concerned.
Currently, GHACEM comfortably
controls close to 60 per cent of the market share. Diamond Cement,
on the hand accounts for about 35 per cent of total cement sale and
production bringing to over 90 per cent the stake of the two
companies in the industry.
Fears are that the dominance of
the two companies in the sector, however accidental it was, makes
it possible for them to ‘technically’ determine prices of the
product nation-wide.
Concerns over artificial
shortages created by key distributors aligned to these market
leaders in favour of price hikes also abound, allegations GHACEM
and Diamond Cement have often denied knowledge of.
Given these companies’ dominance
in the sector, their actions with regards to pricing and supply of
cement have become more of a roll-over effects on competing cement
producers and suppliers like Greenview, and the other cement
companies which all together account for less than 20 per cent of
cement production and sale in the country.
According to the World Bank’s
Lead Economist, having a de facto duopoly in the manufacturing and
sale of an essential commodity like cement is not good for the
country, especially given the rising housing and infrastructural
deficit.
With Ghana’s status as a
developing nation and undertaking lots of infrastructure and
housing projects, Mr Dassus said “liberalising the cement sector
will help drive down prices and create more jobs for the teaming
youth.
“The more there is competition
in the sector, the better for consumers,” he added.
On fiscal and monetary issues,
Mr Dassus also advised the Ghana Government to double up on tax
collections and pull back on unprofitable expenditures or risk
missing its fiscal targets for the year and subsequently pushing
the entire economy into disarray after the December 2012 general
elections.
But while that happens, World
Bank’s Lead Economist said the government, policy makers,
development partners and all political parties in the country also
needed to find a long-term solution to the classic destabilisation
of the economy in and after every election years.
He said such actions were
necessary to help save the country the cost of rebuilding the
economy after every other election year. He was however optimistic
that the country will achieve its fiscal targets for 2012 despite
having to surmount some risks in the months to come.
The government is aiming to
achieve an overall growth rate of 9.4 per cent, end-period
inflation of 8.5 per cent, overall budget deficit equivalent to 4.8
per cent of GDP and not less than three months of import cover in
2012.
Many analysts and economic
watchers are however sceptical about the government’s ability to
attain those targets given the current depreciation in the cedi,
rising government expenditure and the decline in the country’s
foreign reserves from U$5.4 billion in December 2011 to US$4.3
billion as at June 8, 2012.
This is equivalent to 2.5 months
imports cover of goods and services.
To Mr Dassus, however, those
targets are achievable provided the government exhibits the needed
political and economic discipline.
“I think Ghana can definitely
meet the fiscal targets for 2012, but it is the question of
will.
He said the recent fluctuations
in gold, cocoa and crude oil prices in the commodity market also
posed “real risks to the government and the economy” hence the need
to “accelerate tax collections and spend wisely” in this election
year.
*****************************
VRA seeks private investment in
some of its assets
* JoyOnline
The Volta River Authority,VRA is
engaging some private investors to develop some of its assets as
part of measures to generate more revenue for its
operations.
The assets include some of the
authority’s land properties lying fallow and unutilized as well as
hotels.
The Chief Executive, Kweku
Awotwe revealed this to JOY BUSINESS at a knowledge forum organized
by the Ghana Chapter of the Society for Human Resource
Management.
“We have Akosombo Hotel Company,
Kpong Farms and Volta Lake Transport among others. All these we are
preparing business plans for them that would allow us to do a
market study of the available opportunities to attract these
prospective investors" he noted.
“We started with the process to
identify partners for this and we are getting a lot of interests
expressed. In the Akosombo and Akuse areas in particular we have
many lands we think we can develop for hotel establishments. What
we are looking for is to create value by getting rent or income and
help the authority cut overhead-costs and retain my workforce” he
concluded.
************************************
Experts to discuss control,
elimination of Neglected Tropical Diseases
* Source: GNA
More than 100 experts, policy
makers and heath leaders will gather in Accra from June 25-27, to
discuss ways of scaling up interventions to control or eliminate
Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) in the Africa Region of the
World Health Organisation (WHO).
A statement issued in Accra on
Friday said the three-day Regional Stakeholders’ Consultative
Meeting on NTDs would bring together representatives of endemic
countries, donor agencies, pharmaceutical firms, WHO and other
partners to discuss and agree among other things, coordination
mechanisms at national and regional levels for NTD programme
implementation.
It said participants at the
meeting, which is aimed at obtaining stakeholder commitment for
funding NTD financial resource requirements, would exchange
experiences on the use of country Master Plans for decision making
regarding NTD control.
The meeting would discuss and
agree on the major elements that would constitute the regional
roadmap for accelerating control and elimination of NTDs in endemic
countries.
The statement said high on the
agenda for the meeting would be the inauguration on June 27 of the
WHO Regional Advisory Groups on NTDs.
“The principal briefs of the
advisory group are to provide WHO with high quality, well
considered advice and recommendations on NTD control and
elimination, as well as facilitate and monitor the scale up of
interventions for the control of NTDs.”
WHO Regional Director for
Africa, Dr. Luis Sambo, said, “Genuine partnership and effective
coordination of initiatives and actions are key to improving the
efficiency and effectiveness of tools and interventions for the
control and elimination of these poverty-related
diseases.
The outcomes of this
consultation should propel countries to establish, by 2015,
suitable NTD control programmes.”
Among those expected to address
the meeting are former President John Agyekum Kufuor, who is the
current NTD Special Envoy of the Global Network for NTDs, a
Washington-based initiative which works with governments, partners,
business and civil society worldwide to improve access to NTD
treatments to those who need them most.
The consultative meeting will be
followed by the annual NTD National Programme Managers’ Meeting on
Preventive Chemotherapy to be held on June 28.
The statement said the meeting
would provide a platform for national NTD programme managers and
their partners to review current programme strategies and
performance, as well as share experiences and clarify future plans
to control and eliminate NTDs in endemic countries.
*********************************
Ghana Flood 2015
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