Thursday, 30 October 2014

Journalist trained on PPP program



The Public Investment Division (PID) of the Ministry of Finance this week organized a capacity building workshop for Journalists from the Eastern, Volta, Ashanti, Brong – Ahafo and the three Northern Regions on the concept of the Public Private Partnership (PPP) and its related issues in the Ashanti Region.

 The three-day capacity building workshop equally aimed at briefing the media on how to carry out factual and accurate reports on PPPs.

Mrs. Magdalene Apenteng, Director of the Public Investment Division, Ministry of Finance, in her opening statement indicated that, the main objective of the Workshop was to create awareness, improve knowledge and understanding on PPPs, and to attract advocacy for PPPs on a national level. This was read on her behalf by Mr. Michael Kwatia Awuah, PPP capacity building Specialist.

According to Mrs. Apenteng, the understanding of PPPs can only be achieved through systematic public information and education through the media, and dialogue with key stakeholders hence the need for building the capacity of Journalists has become crucial for the survival of the PPP Program.

Professor Linus Abraham, a media expert and a resource person at the workshop, urged the participants to cultivate the habit of civic journalism which guarantee the use of building stories around the thematic areas of PPP rather than the adopting the watchdog journalism style which only deals with episodic story telling instead of focusing on the thematic stories.

According to him understanding the Public Investment Division (PID) and its work, and gaining access to its key themes and messages, provides the basis for developing story ideas and story angles that go beyond simple episodic stories whiles “thematic stories,” build the public’s understanding and knowledge of what PPPs are, their processes, and importance to the economic development of the nation.

Mr. Micheal Kwatia Awuah , a PPP capacity building Specialist noted that, PPP enables Government to provide better infrastructure and services by adopting some of the efficiencies and good practices of the private sector .

Also, it frees public resources that would have been used for such project for other equally important uses. The private sector, on its part, derives benefit from the revenue generated from the projet.

‘’Generally we see the PPP program as necessary and good for the country ‘’, noted Mr. Awuah.

This, he said is due to the fact that government does not have enough funds to undertake the entire needed infrastructure project.

‘’It has work for many countries like British, USA, Canada, India and many more in terms of  developing and we must make it work for us here, ‘’He added.

Mr. Awuah stressed that it is important to note that the PPP arrangement significantly impacts on some core values which are different from the traditional relationship between public institution and citizens.

 He noted that PPP project cut across all spheres of the economy; from transportion to health, business to community development, new government projects supported by the private sector are taking over.

Wednesday, 3 September 2014

Kofi Annan fights US$35b/yr food imports by Africa


Former UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, says investment in farmers and fisher folk in Africa could be a game changer for the Continent, as far as food sufficiency and poverty reduction are concerned.

He is befuddled by the Continent’s colossal appetite for, and spending on food imports, when, in his view, that money could be channelled into investing in local farmers and fisher folk for greater and lasting impact.

“A statistic to pause and make you think: Africa spends roughly US$35 billion a year on food imports. Could you imagine if this money or a substantial portion of it went to African farmers and the fishing communities instead of foreign businesses?” Annan wondered.

“Could you imagine what impact this would have on the lives of those who toil on our farms day in and day out, out there alone, often with very little help from the government or the society?”

Annan, who is championing a green revolution in Africa, said: “Four out of five Africans depend on farming and related activities to provide for their families”.

He believes funnelling enough capital into local farming in Africa is the key to unlocking the poverty shackles of many an African.

“At the Kofi Annan Foundation, we believe that smart investments benefiting smallholder farming have the potential to lift millions out of poverty and hunger”, he wrote on his Facebook wall.http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=324132

Friday, 29 August 2014

Asuogyaman Youth Dialogue with District Assembly


A meeting dubbed, "Youth Dialogue with the District Assembly" has taken place in the Asuogyaman district of Eastern Region.

The meeting which was organised by the Youth Bridge Foundation, (YBF) and sponsored by United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) was to provide the youth a platform to interact with some officials of the Assembly.

Issues of vital concern to the youth including the lack of job opportunities, lack of electricity in some communities which effected education of the young people as they could not study after school hours were raised.

According to them, "their poor performance in the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) was as a result of their inability to revise their notes after the normal school house due to the absence of electricity."

They also highlight that due to lack of clinic, pharmacy shops and Drugs stores in some, some of them lose they

Other concerns raised included poor sanitation, lack of toilet facilities, lack of potable drinking water and the high rate of teenage pregnancy.



Yokwenor gets chips compound


A mother at chips centre
 A new Community Health Improvement Services (CHIPS) Compound equipped with facilities has been inaugurated at Yokwenor in the Lower Manya Krobo municipality of the Eastern Region.

 The Health centre was sponsored by Socio serve- Ghana, a non- governmental organisation based in Akosombo and with a joint effort from the Member of Parliament for the area, Mr. Ebenezer Okletey Teilabi and other philanthropic organisations.

The programmes manageress of Socio serve- Ghana, Ms. Rita Ntoso, said the centre was committed to offering high class services and carrying out a wide range of investigations on patient’s conditions for the right treatment.

She said, the objective of Socio serve- Ghana was to team up with hospitals to bring health care to the door step of every individual, especially, the pregnant women to avoid maternal deaths.

She explained that most pregnant women did not attend antenatal care due to the distance they had to travel adding that bringing the centre closer would encourage them to frequently utilise the facility.

Inaugurating the centre, the Member of Parliament for Lower Manya Krobo, Mr. Ebenezer Okletey Teilabi, said providing access to quality health care should be the priority of every leader, adding that the human resource of a country could not be enhanced when the citizenry did not have access to quality health care and not heathy to work.

 Mr. Teilabi, therefore, promised to register 300 under- privileged people into the National Health Insurance Scheme to enable them to access the health facilityhttp://www.ritefmonline.org/agro/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1861:yokwenor-gets-chips-compound&catid=65:featured-articles&Itemid=126