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Kufuor to visit UK on March 13


Accra, March 8, GNA - President John Agyekum Kufuor would begin a three-day state visit to the United Kingdom (UK) at the invitation of Queen Elizabeth II from Tuesday, March 13.

As guest of her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, the President would reside at the Buckingham Palace. He leaves Accra on Monday, March 12. Sixteen African Heads of State have paid similar visits to the UK at the Queen's invitation since 1954. President Kufuor happens to be the first Ghanaian Head of State to receive such an honour.

Mr Andrew Awuni, Press Secretary to the President, told a Castle press briefing on Thursday that President Kufuor, who would be accompanied by his wife Theresa and other senior Government officials, would have a heavy schedule.

According to the programme line up, he would be engaged in 25 activities, at least three of which would be beamed live on television in Ghana.

President Kufuor, he said, would start the visit with a Horse Guard ceremonial welcome by the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh After, which he would ride with her Majesty on a state drive to Buckingham Palace.

Among other engagements would be the holding of separate meetings with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, the leader of the British Opposition Party, the Commonwealth Secretary General and the leader of the Liberal Democrats.

He would also be making a major policy statement at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, have a working breakfast with African Heads of Mission and meet with the West African Business Association as well as the Commonwealth Business Council and lay a wreath at Westminster.

Mr Awuni said the President would deliver a lecture at the Liverpool John Moores University, where he would also receive an honorary Doctorate Degree.

He would join Ghanaians in the UK at a big rally in celebration of the country's 50 years independence from British colonial rule. Meanwhile, President Kufuor has granted audience to the American Civil Rights activist, the Reverend Jesse Jackson, at the Castle, Osu. The meeting was held behind closed-door.

Source:
GNA
A history of International Women's Day

 


March 8 is celebrated across the world as International Women's Day (IWD), and provides us with an opportunity to recognise the achievements of women and their contribution to society.

It is celebrated in many countries as a national holiday. It is when women, often divided by national boundaries and by ethnic, linguistic, cultural, economic and political differences, come together to look back to a tradition that represents a rich history of struggle for equality, justice, peace and development.

IWD is today regarded by many as the story of ordinary women as makers of history, and it is rooted in the centuries-old struggle of women to participate with equality in society. However, the idea of an IWD first arose at the turn of the century, which, in the industrialised world, was a period of expansion and turbulence.

IWD inherited a tradition of protest and political activism. In the years before 1910, from the turn of the 20th Century, women in industrially developing countries were entering paid work in some numbers. Their jobs were sex segregated, mainly in textiles, manufacturing and domestic services where conditions were wretched and wages worse than depressed. Trade unions were developing and industrial disputes were starting to occur.

In continental Europe, some socialists saw the demand for the women's vote as being unnecessarily divisive in the working class movement, while others successfully fought for it to be accepted as a necessary part of a socialist program.

The first IWD was held on March 19, 1911 in Germany, Austria, Denmark and other European countries. German women chose this particular day because, on that date in 1848, the Prussian king, faced with an armed uprising, had promised many reforms, including an unfulfilled one of votes for women. A million leaflets calling for action on the right to vote were distributed throughout Germany before IWD in 1911.

Since those early years, IWD has assumed a new global dimension for women in developed and developing countries alike.

 
Source :
 
Accra, March 8, GNA -
The National Planning Committee of Ghana@50 on Thursday reminded the public that the Golden Jubilee celebrations are year-long, hence they should keep the Ghana flag flying.

In a statement signed by Mr Henry Okyne, Public Affairs Officer of the Secretariat, activities planned for the celebrations would be published in the media and urged all members of the public to endeavour to participate in the events and activities.
 
Energy experts recommend nuclear energy

Accra, March 8, GNA - Energy experts have played down the viability of hydro-electricity in Ghana and recommended that the medium and long-term energy needs of the country would be better served by the development of nuclear energy.

They have therefore recommended to government to set up a nuclear planning committee to discuss the full implications of developing a nuclear energy in Ghana, which is becoming a favoured energy option for many countries, both developing and developed.

The experts, researchers and policy makers in the fieLd of energy in Ghana met at a roundtable in Accra under the auspices of the George Benneh Foundation, according to a statement released in Accra on Thursday by the Foundation.

The statement said they reviewed the energy resources of the country and discussed the problems and threats facing the various energy options.

The roundtable concluded that given the impact of climate change on water bodies hydro-power was not a viable energy option for Ghana in the medium to long term.

"It also concluded that the energy needs of a middle income economy that Ghana is aspiring to be in 15 years time cannot be met by the development of hydro and renewable sources of energy."

The Minister of Energy, Mr Kofi Adda invited the Foundation to work closely with his ministry to find solutions to the energy problems that confront the country.

He also spoke of the need for government to work closely with the academia and industry to resolve the energy problems. Ghana has been experiencing energy crises since the 1980s, as the Akosombo Dam, which supplies the bulk of the country's needs, has been running out of water in the reservoir to generate power. The government has been negotiating with China to build Bui dam in the Brong Ahafo region.Source:
GNA

Make domestic violence law operational -
NGO
Tamale, March 8, GNA - The Centre for Human Rights Education and Advocacy, a Tamale based non-governmental organisation, has commended Parliament for passing the Domestic Violence Law and called on the government and civil society organisations to establish the necessary structures to make the law operational.

It called for the establishment of "Temporal Support Homes or Centres" where victims of domestic violence could seek protection and support while receiving counselling and treatment.

In a statement issued and signed by its Executive Director, Mr. Issah Mahmudu on Thursday to mark this year's International Women's Day, it noted that many women in Ghana were still deprived of some of the basic human rights they were entitled to under the constitution.

The statement said human rights abuse such as rape, defilement, assault and inhuman cultural practices including widowhood rites, female genital mutilation, suspicion of witchcraft, banishment and forced marriages were still common among Ghanaian women.

These violations, it noted, suggested that there has been lack of attention to those issues and welfare of women by policy makers. The NGO acknowledged the active participation of Ghanaian women in the struggle for independence and paid tribute the late Madam Hannah Cudjo and many other women who played a yeoman's job to obtain independence for Ghana.

On the policy of granting scale credit facilities to women as a means to reduce poverty it said the policy needed to be reviewed to give it a human face.

"Some of the women who had benefited from such credits ended up becoming heavily indebted and worse off than they were before. Some also fled their homes and communities, deserting their families and children because they are unable to repay their loans due to high interest rates".

The NGO therefore called on the government to give financial management training to beneficiaries to enable them to effectively invest the funds profitably.

The organisation called on the government to come out with a policy framework to curtail the Kayayo phenomena. It noted: "Until serious efforts are made to bridge the development disparity between the north and south, females from the north will continue to travel down south to engage such businesses". "The northern economy is not as poor as it is being portrayed. What the north needs are not handouts by way of charity, it needs pragmatic policies to revamp the: rice, cotton, tomato and sheanuts industries to create employment and generate income for the people." 08 March 07Source:
GNA

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 What Hope for Thousands of Street Children?


Source:
UN Integrated Regional Information Networks

08.03.2007


Thirteen-year-old Joshua Anderson is confident, even cocky, about his life on the streets of Ghana's largest city, Accra. But he struggles to hold back tears when asked why he left his family in the countryside nearly one year ago.


His mother wouldn't let him keep going to school, he said. Instead, he was forced to go to work with her at the market.



So one night he quietly left. He went to Accra where he hoped he would find someone to support his education.


Instead of school, Anderson had to work. He lugs boxes and cases, often taller than he is, in one of the city's bus stations. In exchange he gets a handful of coins.


At night, he sleeps on a cardboard mat in front of a meat shop.



Anderson's best friends are also 13 years old. They stick together for protection, but sometimes it's not enough.


"Sometimes the grown-up boys beat us, even take our money and that sort of thing," he said. He also risks being raped and sexually abused.



Ghana's Department of Social Welfare and local NGOs believe there are 21,000 children living and working on Accra's streets without a parent to protect them.



Nationwide there could be as many as 50,000, the department said, with many of them in Ghana's second city, Kumasi.



"There are enormous groups of children on the streets," said Jos van Dinther, director of Catholic Action for Street Children (CAS), an NGO based in Accra. "This is a very bad sign for the country."


Street culture

Place of birth, ethnic group and religion do not appear to be important in deciding who ends up on the streets as family stability and poverty.



More than 80 percent of under-sixteen's working the streets in Ghana left home because of family problems, such as neglect or parents' separation, according to CAS surveys.



Other causes cited by CAS are the collapse of rural livelihoods as traditional industries like fishing go into decline, lack of jobs, poor schools outside the cities, and forced marriage.


The breakdown of traditional African family structures, wherein it used to be normal for children to be sent to cities to live with distant relatives, is another factor that has contributed to growing numbers of street children throughout West Africa.


But social workers are quick to add that ultimately parents have the responsibility to care for their children and keep them off the streets. They say Ghana's street children symbolise a failure on the part of the country's parents.



"There are many nice slogans - rights of the child, right to education," said van Dinther. "But these are just ignored. They have no rights."



Once on the streets, children receive no formal education, are at increased risk of illness, have poor diets and hygiene, and must struggle to earn money for food. Many of them experience theft and violence, and girls are frequently raped.



Overworked, underfunded

The man tasked with dealing with this problem, Stephen Adongo, deputy director at Ghana's Department of Social Welfare, is sanguine about the government's chances of curbing the problem.


He said the department's social workers have too much work and too little resources to adequately respond to the needs of street children, much less to stop the problem from continuing.



He said his Child Rights Protection Division, which is one of three in the department, has a nationwide operating budget of about US$1,700 for the first quarter of 2007, which parses down to $170 for each of the country's ten regions.



"We are forced to do sedentary social work," he said. "You sit in your chair and wait for people to come."


Adongo said Ghana's policymakers who control the government's purse strings do not appreciate the problems of street children and have not made the issue a priority.



"It's an issue that is far away and doesn't touch them," he said.



"If we had more people and more resources, we could do preventive social work. With more funding, the department could intervene before the children land on city streets," he argued.


The department does support periodic public sensitisation campaigns and workshops for street children on topics such as health and hygiene. But any sustained efforts in Ghana for now, he said, is coming from NGOs.



Hitting the streets

For the meantime it is NGO's like CAS that send out field workers to comb the streets of Accra every day.


They know where the street children work and sleep, earn their trust and then invite them to the organisation's day care centre, or House of Refuge.



The refuge caters to about 80 street children per day. It is the nearest thing to a home for them, where they can bathe, wash their clothes, rest, and play games.



"I come to learn and for the library," said Nancy Mensah, 15, who has been in Accra for less than a month and was told about the refuge by a friend. She said she left her family because as the seventh child she was neglected.



At the refuge, the children participate in formal class work, such as literacy and mathematics, and in workshops like weaving and pottery. There is also a modest library and computer centre.


Many of the children just use the place as a safe, clean place to rest.



But those children who show they are serious about leaving the streets are sponsored to go to CAS's Hopeland Training Centre.



At this separate facility outside Accra, the children get more one-on-one attention and do intensive class work that is intended to prepare them for entry into vocational school or formal education.



Once their training is finished, graduates are given a modest amount of money to start a business or assisted in job placement. About 1,500 children have been freed from the streets through the process.



But for every child assisted by CAS or other NGO like it in Ghana, many more go unassisted.


"The urgent action should come from politicians, from people in authority," said CAS's van Dinther. "We want to know where is the button


 

Rescued Angolan fishermen flown back home

 


Accra, March 8, GNA - Three Angolan fishermen who were rescued at sea and brought to Ghana were on Wednesday flown back home. Briefing journalists at the Airport in Accra, officials from the Angolan Embassy said the fishermen -

Cesar Joao, Tchimba Kobwa and Estevao Antoinette -

lost their bearing in Angolan waters last December and were brought to Ghana after being rescued by a Portuguese fishing vessel.



They were then handed over to the Ghana Immigration Service,who arranged and put them on an Angolan flight that was performing VVIP duties at the Kotoka International Airport.


The Angolan flight flew back home the Guinea Bissau delegation which came to celebrate Ghana's 50th anniversary.



"Their families might be thinking they are dead after being lost at sea for three months," the officials said.

 

Source:
GNA

 Beware of tricksters - Rural dwellers advised


Awutu-Akrabong (C/R), March 8, GNA-People in rural areas, particularly the illiterate, have been advised to guard against activities of charlatans who would want to capitalize on their unfortunate situations to dupe them when the change over from the current cedi notes to new ones in July this year.

Even though the exercise has about five more months to become operational, effective mechanisms should be put in place to check such abuses so that they did not rear their ugly heads at all. Mr. Francis Atoh Doughan, Awutu-Effutu-Senya District Co-ordinator of the National Disaster Management Organization (NADMO), gave the advice at the inauguration of a 30-member functional literacy group at Awutu-Akrabong in the Central Region.

Mr. Doughan, who represented the District Chief Executive for Awutu-Effutu-Senya, Solomon Kwashie Abbam-Quaye, also counselled farmers, palm wine tappers, smokers and hunters in the district to ensure proper handling of fire to protect the ecology against bushfires. Mr. Atta Asante-Agyei, Awutu-Effutu-Senya District Director of the Non Formal Education Division of the Ministry of Education (NFED), emphasised the importance of the mass education towards national and community development and advised the illiterate in the district who have not registered with any functional educational group to do so. He outlined the numerous benefits they stand to gain from the various literacy educational activities the NFED had programmed for the people and charged the Akrabong group to strive to bring all illiterate people in and around the village under its fold for them to enjoy the fruits of the NFED.

Madam Hanna Eshun, the District Births and Deaths officer, advised people in the rural communities to endeavour to register the children they produce as well as the deaths that occurred in their respective communities to help the Awutu-Effutu-Senya District Assembly plan its development programmes successfully.Source:
GNA

 

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