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Telstra outage takes down ATMs and Eftpos

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Telstra has acknowledged it is suffering an outage that has taken out some of the essentials of 21st century Australian life: ATMs and Eftpos terminals.

“We’re currently looking into an issue affecting services including Eftpos and access to ATMs,” the company said in a tweet at 4:19pm AEST on Thursday.

“We’re sorry if this impacts you. We’ll keep you updated as we know more.”

Australia’s banks were hit to various degrees.

The Commonwealth Bank said the outage took out some of its ATMs and Eftpos services, as well as some in-branch services and CommSec logins. The outage then cascaded into a higher number of calls than usual into its call centre.

Westpac said it was aware of some branches in Sydney being “non-operational due to a broader network failure in the region”.

“Our teams are communicating with external providers on when services will be restored & we’ll keep you updated. Online banking is working normally,” the red and white bank said.

ANZ acknowledged its Eftpos machines were also impacted.

For the red and black bank, the outage has seen terminals across New South Wales impacted, and parts of Queensland affected. NAB’s HICAPS health claims and payments system was also hit.

The outage is also having a crippling impact on the nation’s fast food industry.

“Ordered my food at @maccas drivethrough, move up and stuck between cars for just short of 20 minutes after ordering. at the window I’m told there is no eftpos, and so I can’t get what I ordered,” one Twitter user wrote.

“Staff wouldn’t even look at me to apologise.”

Supermarket chain Woolworths said its stores were still trading as they are able to process payments manually, however, when ZDNet walked into its Town Hall store in Sydney, a sign greeted shoppers stating it was trading as cash only.

 

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Ghana to host the African Continental Free Trade Area-Minister

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Mr Alan Kyerematen, the Minister of Trade and Industry, has disclosed that Ghana has been selected by the African Union to be the host country of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

The country, he said, was therefore required to establish a Secretariat, adding that Government had commenced the setting up of the Secretariat in Accra, which was expected to be completed by March 2020.

Mr Kyerematen said this during a media briefing organised by the Ministry in Accra to disclose to the public the status of AfCFTA and Ghana’s contribution towards its development.

He said the Secretariat when established would enable the country to become the new commercial capital of Africa, a regional trade hub and an economic epic-centre.

It would also serve as the new gateway to the continent and promote Foreign Direct Investments as it helps the country to serve as an attractive investment destination, he said.

The Minister said the Secretariat would also attract major international financial institutions and become the preferred location for siting the Corporate Headquarters of international companies doing business in Africa and provide an opportunity for Ghanaian professionals to be recruited to work in the Secretariat.

Other objectives are for AfCFTA to open up new market access opportunities under preferential terms for Ghanaian producers particularly Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) and offer the country an opportunity to host various Regional and Continental meetings associated with the AfCFTA.

AfCFTA is a single market (duty free, quota free) covering the entire African continent with a total population of 1.2 billion and a combined Gross Domestic Product of almost three trillion dollars.

Fifty-four countries out of 55 have signed the AfCFTA and 27 countries have ratified the Agreement.

Mr Kyerematen said AfCFTA was the most significant development in Africa since the establishment of the Organisation of African Unity in 1963 and was considered as the flagship project under the World Trade Organisation in terms of the number of member states.

He explained that AfCFTA was expected to increase intra-African trade through better harmonisation and coordination of trade within the African continent.

The Agreement, he said, had four key components – the Framework Agreement incorporating the principles, guidelines and modalities for negotiations; the Protocol on Trade in Goods with relevant annexes; the Protocol on Trade in Services with relevant annexes; and the Protocol on Working Rules and Procedures for disputes settlements.

He said other three Protocols comprising Investment, Competitive Policy, and Intellectual Property Rights would be concluded in the Second Phase of Negotiations.

“The strategic objectives and benefits of AfCFTA include developing regional value chains and facilitating cross border investments; enhancing access to an expanded market for SMEs in Africa on preferential trade terms; and attracting Foreign Direct Investments into Africa with strong regional and local content,” the Minister said.

AfCFTA, he said, would also facilitate the integration of Africa economies into global markets; significantly improve the Terms of Trade for African countries; enhance benefits to consumers in Africa through lower prices of goods imported from within Africa; and significantly enhance employment opportunities in Africa particularly for the youth. 

Mr Kyeremateng said it was estimated that intra-African trade would increase by as much as $35billion per annum or 52 per cent by 2022.

The benefits of signing onto AfCFTA, he explained, would not come automatically, therefore a Programme of Action to Boost Intra-African Trade (BIAT) had been endorsed by AU Heads of States for member states to harness the benefits.

The BIAT would address seven priority clusters of Trade Policy, Trade Facilitation, Productive Capacity (Industrialisation), Trade-related infrastructure (example Transportation and Communication), Trade Finance, Trade Information, and Factor Market Integration.

Speaking on the steps undertaken by Ghana to harness the benefits, Mr Kyerematen said government had introduced the One District, One Factory; Strategic Anchor Industries; and One Region One Park (Industrial Parks & Special Economic Zones) Initiatives.

Others steps were the establishment of the EXIM Bank to enhance trading and export, establishment of stimulus package for local industries, initiative projects to expand ports, develop SMEs, enhancement of the Ghana Commodity Exchange and the Electronic Trade Information.

By Eunice Hilda Ampomah, GNA

Cocobod holds seminar for Chartered Accounting Staff

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Joseph Boahen Aidoo, Chief Executive, Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD), has urged the Chartered Accounting staff to embrace emerging trends in the financial industry to build a formidable team in handling cocoa revenues.

Speaking at a day’s seminar for the Chartered Accounting staff in Accra, Mr Aidoo said COCOBOD was undergoing some transformations and needed financial resources to bring the ideas into fruition.

He said it was time to save as much and cut down on the losses to improve on revenue generation.

He observed that, there were some inconsistences in simple transactions and this should be addressed through reconciliation to balance the books.

“I expect that you embrace the finest accounting software and technologies and bring them to bear on your work,” he said, adding that “whatever cutting edge software that is required to facilitate your work irrespective of the cost will be considered for use.”

The COCOBOD Chief challenged the facilitators to give off their best to offer the participants the necessary skills to work using modern and highly technological trends.

Addressing the participants, the Deputy Chief Executive In-Charge of Finance and Administration, Mr Ray Ankrah, stressed that COCOBOD was a key player in the country’s development process and strengthening the skills set of the organization’s Chartered Accountants was important.

“This training programme marks the point where we bring closer to you modern technology in finance to enable you take charge of your responsibilities,” he added.

Dr Noel Tagoe, the lead facilitator, urged the participants not to be interested only in their accounting skills and profession, but also consider issues of globalisation and help their organisation remain relevant and profitable in modern business.

Mr Francis Akwasi Opoku, the Director of Human Resources and Solicitor Secretary, entreated the participants to embrace the skills gathered through the seminar well enough to improve on their performance towards strengthening a formidable accounting team for COCOBOD.

“We will continue to give you access to modern skills through consistent training to build your capacity and grow the cocoa industry,” he concluded.

Court adjourns Lucas’ trial to July 23

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An Accra High Court presided over by Justice Charles Ekow Baiden on Wednesday adjourned to July 23, the case of Lucas Agboyie, who is standing trial for allegedly defiling and causing the death of a seven-year-old girl in 2015 at Zenu, near Ashiaman.

This was when the accused Counsel, Mr Eric Opoku Brobbey, of the Legal Aid informed the Court that the Accra Psychiatric Hospital has requested to see a family of the accused person for his mental history.

He said it was to ensure that Agboyie was mentally fit to face trial as requested by the Court.

At the last adjourned date, the court heard that the report on the mental health of the accused by the Accra Psychiatric Hospital was ready and it would be forwarded to the Court.

Agboyie aka “Sympathy,” “Sky Lover,” Agbey or Gabriel was committed by an Accra District Court on April 2017, to stand trial at High Court for the alleged murder of the girl.

Briefing the Court, the Prosecution said the victim, Ruth Ankomah was a pupil of Meshach Academy School at Zenu, Ashiaman.

He said on April 2015, at about 0800 hours, the deceased mother prepared porridge and gave GH¢20.00 to the deceased to go and buy bread at a nearby shop for breakfast.

The Prosecution said having waited for some time, without Ruth’s return, the mother became alarmed and started searching for her in the area but to no avail.

Prosecution said later, one Sarah informed the victim’s mother that she saw Agboyie pulling the victim into his metal container.

He said a group of people joined her mother and they marched onto Agboyie’s container but could not find him.

He said, however, they found the naked lifeless body of the victim lying in a supine position on an old student mattress with blood oozing from her nostrils and mouth.

The Prosecution said Agboyie was nabbed by the search party where he confessed killing the victim after having sex with her for an hour.

He said Agboyie told investigators that he wanted to have sex with the victim but she kept screaming so he strangled her after which he had sex with her.

The Prosecution said when the Police visited the scene in April 2015, they saw bruises on the neck of the deceased with her vagina swollen, while her pants, sandals and dress were lying beside her.

He said they also found two wrappers of cannabis sativa, GH¢10.00, a National Health Insurance card and another Hospital card bearing the name of one Obeng Oscar.

He said Agboyie further mentioned one Ali Baba who lived nearby as the one who contracted him to kill the victim.

When the police proceeded to the house of Ali Baba, they found out that there was nobody in the house by that name and that the said house was occupied by a medical doctor.

He said the medical doctor upon interrogation denied knowing the accused and Police investigations also did not get any link of the murder with the doctor.

Prosecution said when autopsy was conducted on the victim, it indicated that the victim died as a result of strangulation.

By Gifty Amofa/Grace Tarwo, GNA 

Ghana’s president wants Africa-Europe relationship to change

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Africa must change its relationship with Europe if it wants to become self-reliant and exploit rich resources that could transform the continent, Ghana‘s president has said.

“Africa and Europe are natural partners … but [it’s] a relationship that has to be different from what we’ve had up to now,” Nana Akufo-Addo said on Thursday following talks with his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron.

His remarks were made in an address to 400 representatives of the African diaspora in Francewho gathered at the Elysee palace in Paris.

“That relationship has enriched Europe but has not enriched Africa. So, we need to change that dynamic and we can only do it by ourselves, taking the correct measures for our future,” said Akufo-Addo.

“We have to get away from the idea that there is some Father Christmas who’s going to come and develop our continent for us. There is no Father Christmas, there is just us,” he said.

“So, Mr President, we’re saying the time has come for us to take our destiny in our own hands,” he said, directly addressing Macron.

A former British colony, Ghana does not have the same historical ties with Paris as other former French colonies in West Africa. When Macron visited Ghana in November 2017, it was the first visit by a French president.

Calling the exiles home

Since taking office in 2017, Akufo-Addo has placed a major emphasis on encouraging African exiles to return home, particularly those in the United States, dubbing 2019 the “Year of Return”.

And the diaspora could play a key role in Africa, as it did in China, whose transformation into the manufacturing hub of the world was driven in large part by massive levels of investment by its overseas community, he said.

“That development of China has changed the status and the position of Chinese all over the world,” he said.

“Once we find the means to educate this population and give it skills, then we’re putting Africa on the path of very, very strong economic growth,” he argued.

Aljazeera

Newspaper Headlines Thursday 11th July 2019

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Martin Luther King’s Solution to Racism

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The persistence of America’s racism remains a serious challenge to our hope for a nation that lives out its most cherished values – liberty and justice for all.

Continued incidents, which stir racial tensions, remind us that hatred and animosity still fester. Suspicion lurks under the surface of many interactions. News events repeatedly remind us of the tenuous and fragile nature of racial harmony in the United States of America.

We seem to live under an uneasy truce.

martin luther king's dreamIt has been many decades since the 1963 March on Washington where Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech was delivered. Yet none of us can say we have fully lived up to Dr. King’s vision of a land where each person would be judged by the content of their character, rather than the color of their skin.

Tensions continue, and regularly we hear of yet another incident somewhere in our country where race is presented as a precipitating factor.

Things are different today than they have been in the past. Yet the questions remains, why has it been so difficult for us to embrace and consistently live out Dr. King’s dream?

How Can Martin Luther King’s Dream to End Racism in America Become a Reality?

In the wake of the civil rights movement in which Dr. King was so dramatically used, there came a flood of social programs that sought to address the causes and consequences of racism. Cultural education, cross cultural dialogue, and the current multi-culturalism all hearken back to the civil rights movement for their mandates.

In the pursuit of the rights of various groups, under the civil rights umbrella, one thing has become clear. That which was called right by one group is often called wrong by another. Rather than resolving the differences, tolerance is championed as the appropriate response to the varying perspectives that have emerged.

Why Tolerance Is Insufficient

Tolerance has no cohesive nor healing power in society. It means little more than leaving one another alone. It leads to indifference, not understanding. Tolerance allows the gulfs between us to remain in place. In fact, there is little in the concept of tolerance to pull us away from racial isolation.

Tolerance brings with it an implicit moral relativism. Who is to say what is right and what is wrong?

Tolerance brings with it an implicit moral relativism. Who is to say what is right and what is wrong? Moral relativism suggests that there are no absolutes to which we can all be held accountable. Such a thing was far from the thinking of Martin Luther King. In one of his works Dr. King makes the following statements:

“At the center of the Christian faith is the affirmation that there is a God in the universe who is the ground and essence of all reality. A Being of infinite love and boundless power, God is the creator, sustainer, and conserver of values….In contrast to ethical relativism, Christianity sets forth a system of absolute moral values and affirms that God has placed within the very structure of this universe certain moral principles that are fixed and immutable.”

The Core of Martin Luther King’s Vision

Dr. King did not speak in terms of tolerance. His ideal was love.

“Hate cannot drive out hate, only love can do that.”(Strength to Love, p. 51)

Yet, in current discussions of race relations the word love is seldom mentioned. Dr. King insisted love was the dominant or critical value by which we could overcome racial strife.

The love he spoke of was a biblical love, one that is unconditional, unselfish and seeks the absolute good of another party. That kind of love is a tough love, one that confronts wrong and injustice with the truth — absolute truth as decreed by an all powerful God and enables the individual to love their enemy.

Martin Luther King’s Dream

As we consider giving new life to “The Dream,” we have to acknowledge that, in Dr. King’s speaking and writing, “The Dream” does begin with God. For without God, there is no absolute transcendent truth on which to base a call to justice. Nor is there any source from which to draw the strength to love about which he spoke.

A certain degree of skepticism about this perspective is understandable. Too often, those who claim to be Christians have failed to live in keeping with the clear teachings of the Christian Scriptures. These failures have frequently been in matters of race.

Failures Among Those Who Claim to Be Christians

It is clear from the Bible (and Dr. King affirmed) that the church ought to provide spiritual and moral leadership in society. However, as we observe the history of the American church, many parts of it have been passive, or even regressive, in matters of race. Even in the current era, the church speaks to the issues of the day with a fragmented voice.

A case in point is the tendency for African-American clergy to align with Democratic candidates, while many white pastors align with Republicans. Yet, Dr. King implored people not to dismiss Christianity on the basis of these observations.

about martin luther king jr.Dr. King lived in an era when the leadership of the church in addressing racism was even less credible than it is today. Dr. King clearly understood that too often there was a difference between what Christianity taught in the Bible and the varieties of Christianity observed around him.

Martin Luther King’s Call to a Genuine Relationship with God

His life was devoted to challenging this nation to live out a more consistent obedience to the moral absolutes of the Bible. His repeated plea was for men and women to enter into the kind of personal relationship with God that transcended that which could be seen and that which was being experienced.

Hear Dr. King as he speaks to the man or woman who contends that God is unnecessary or irrelevant to our modern lives:

“At times we may feel that we do not need God, but on the day when the storms of disappointment rage, the winds of disaster blow, and the tidal waves of grief beat against our lives, if we do not have a deep and patient faith, our emotional lives will be ripped to shreds.

“There is so much frustration in the world because we have relied on gods rather than God. We have genuflected before the god of science only to find that it has given us the atomic bomb, producing fears and anxieties that science can never mitigate.

“We have worshiped the god of pleasure only to discover that thrills play out and sensations are short-lived. We have bowed before the god of money only to learn that there are such things as love and friendship that money cannot buy and that in a world of possible depressions, stock market crashes, and bad business investments, money is a rather uncertain deity.

“These transitory gods are not able to save us or bring happiness to the human heart. Only God is able. It is faith in him that we must rediscover. With this faith we can transform bleak and desolate valleys into sunlit paths of joy and bring new light into the dark caverns of pessimism.”(Strength to Love, p. 51)

Is It Possible to End to Racism in America?

Are you discouraged about the prospect of us never overcoming the racial divisiveness that permeates this nation? Or are you frustrated by your inability to genuinely love others who are different from you? Martin Luther King recommended faith in Jesus of Nazareth as antidotes for both maladies.

“Evil can be cast out, not by man alone nor by a dictatorial God who invades our lives, but when we open the door and invite God through Christ to enter. ‘Behold, I stand at the door, and knock; if any man hear my voice, and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me.’ God is too courteous to break open the door, but when we open it in faith believing, a divine and human confrontation will transform our sin-ruined lives into radiant personalities.” (Strength to Love, p. 126)

What Can Change a Heart of Racism

A relationship with God gives us the power to overcome whatever sin we may be struggling with, including the sin of racism. Racism stands not only as a barrier between people, but as an offense between us and God. The reason Dr. King could recommend Christ as a solution to the problem of racism is Jesus’ death on the cross paid the price for all of our sins. He then rose from the dead and now offers us the forgiveness of God and the power to live new lives. Dr. King put it this way:

“Man is a sinner in need of God’s forgiving grace. This is not deadening pessimism; it is Christian realism.” (Strength to Love, p. 51)

Our need for Jesus is truly the great equalizer of the races. We all are sinners in need of a Savior. We all stand before God, not on the basis of one race’s superiority over another, morally, culturally, financially, politically, or in any other way.

Evil can be cast out, not by man alone nor by a dictatorial God who invades our lives, but when we open the door and invite God through Christ to enter. —MLK

All the races of the world, all the cultures of the world, need the same Savior. His name is Jesus.

What Martin Luther King described as our need for a “divine and human confrontation” is offered at God’s initiative. It requires that we place our faith in what Jesus did as our own personal payment for sin, and inviting Him to enter our lives “when we open the door and invite God through Christ to enter.”

Dr. King’s words still ring true today. We can give new life to “The Dream,” following the path of Dr. King. Our path may not lead to martyrdom by an assassin’s bullet as it did for Martin Luther King, but it does lead to dying to our selfish ways and self-sufficiency. Such a faith is not a weak-kneed, escapist religious exercise, but a courageous pursuit of that which is ultimately good, right and true.

“In his magnanimous love, God freely offers to do for us what we cannot do for ourselves. Our humble and openhearted acceptance is faith. So by faith we are saved. Man filled with God and God operating through man bring unbelievable changes in our individual and social lives.”(Strength to Love, p. 51)

“The Dream” starts with God as revealed through His Son, Jesus Christ. Through a relationship with Him, we can be agents of healing in a world that is sick with racial and ethnic conflict. Won’t you seriously consider placing your faith in Christ, as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. did? God offers us this relationship with Him, and we simply respond:

Jesus Christ, I invite you to come into my life, to forgive me of my sin, to give me a new relationship with you. Bring into my heart your love and your power to love others. Thank you for transforming my life right now.

If you have surrendered to Jesus Christ, pray for a life-changing faith and a growing dependence on Him. Only He can bring into our hearts His supernatural love and the power to love others.

As God transforms our lives, we have the potential to embody that which Martin Luther King dreamed…an end to racism in America.

EveryStudent

Romances with Wolves

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There’s a saying that goes, “The best plan is to profit by the folly of others.” That’s what this article is about. I want to share with you a few things I’ve learned — the hard way — concerning girls and relationships.

Specifically, I’ve jotted down ten reasons why I’m now waiting until marriage to have sex.

#1: I now know that sex isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.

When I was in college, I remember having an experience that I referred to as a “love hangover.” After being with a girl, the next morning I always felt an emptiness. That’s something you won’t see on TV or in the movies, but it happens a lot. There was emptiness, even regret, afterwards.

The “love hangover” was a strange occurrence for me. Mainly because when I was in college, sex was my “god.” As a male, it’s what I thought about morning, noon and night. So you would imagine that having sex would have been completely fulfilling — the crowning achievement in the worship of my “god.” And yet, there was often a lack of fulfillment afterwards.

Has that been your experience, too? Have you ever had a “love hangover”? If you have, you should stop and consider, “Why is that? Why is it that sex, if it’s so important to me, leaves me with an empty feeling?”

I remember being confused by this emptiness. I then concluded: “I just need more [sex], that’s all.” (We often think this way about stuff we hope will fulfill us, then doesn’t. For example, we get the car we’ve always wanted, but then it’s just “okay” after awhile. Instead of realizing that a car can’t really satisfy us, we usually make the error of thinking, “Well, I guess that wasn’t the right car. A different one will give me lasting fulfillment.”)

But the emptiness continued. So, finally, I came to the conclusion that premarital sex wasn’t all it’s cracked up to be. It gets too much hype. It’s not what the movies make it out to be. If it were, it would be completely fulfilling. There wouldn’t be any “emptiness.”

#2: I now want to be more honorable toward women.

I’ve found that girls often don’t fully understand what’s going on when it comes to sex. That is, their perspective on the whole thing is very different from a guy’s. Often a girl will justify sex by saying, “But I love him,” even if she doesn’t really want to go through with it. Why does that happen? It’s been said that, “Girls use sex to get love; guys use love to get sex.”

This is how it works: the girl is picturing marrying the guy some day; the guy is picturing everything he wants to do with the girl before he goes back to tell his buddies about it. And while something inside her is telling her it’s the right thing to do, something inside the guy is telling him just the opposite, yet he proceeds. Why? For the physical pleasure no doubt, but also, I think, for another reason: it makes him feel like a man. But there is a great irony in that, for what is manly about deceiving a woman?

Something I’ve discovered is that, when you honor a woman, you are honoring yourself. Why? Because someday you will have regret, and the regret will last much longer than the pleasure. In the movie Rob Roy, the main character says, “Honor is a gift a man gives himself.” When you honor a woman by doing what you know to be right in your heart (that is, what’s in her best interest), you honor yourself and insure that you will have no long-lasting regrets to live with.

#3: That’s somebody else’s wife.

Here’s what I mean: most of the girls I’ve been with are now married to other men. When I put myself in the shoes of those men, I wish that I hadn’t done what I’ve done. In fact, I might even like to punch myself in the nose for it.

And so it goes without saying that when I get married, I’m not going to like the idea that someone else has had his way with my wife. What about you? Do you like the idea of someone else being with your wife? If you have a girlfriend now and feel that way, think of how much stronger that feeling will be with your wife someday.

You can even take it a step further. That girl is someone’s daughter. What if she were my daughter? Or what if she were my sister? Would I want some guy like me taking advantage of her? I now see girls from a different perspective. They’re someone else’s future wife, someone else’s daughter, sister, etc.

#4: Sex has killed my best relationships.

For example, I had a college sweetheart, the girl of my dreams. With her, there was never a dull moment. We totally “clicked.” We waited for awhile, then, through my initiation, we started having sex.

Sex soon became the focus of our relationship. I stopped wanting to get to know her on any other level. And so, instead of growing closer together, we actually started drifting apart. That’s what I mean by “sex killed my best relationships.” People can relate on many different levels — emotionally, mentally, physically, spiritually. But when my girlfriend and I started relating mostly physically, it short-circuited the other parts of our relationship. As a result, the relationship as a whole started to go south. We might still be together today if we (I) had waited.

I’ve seen this happen with countless relationships, not just others of my own, but those of many other people. And I think there’s a reason for this, which I’ll explain next.

#5: Sex before marriage ruins the other parts of the relationship.

For me, two things happened once I had sex with a girl. As I look back on it, I can say that they happened literally every time, although I was unaware of these dynamics at the time. The two things were this: 1) I lost respect for the girl (even though I didn’t want to); and 2) she began to mistrust me (even though she didn’t want to).

I don’t know why this happened, I just know that it did. Maybe it’s just built into “the system.” But one thing’s for sure: I’m not alone. I’ve seen it happen over and over again. I know many people having marital problems because they engaged in premarital sex. They go into the marriage with lack of respect and lack of trust, two absolute necessities for the health of any marriage.

I know a newlywed couple who have sex less than once a month because of this — he doesn’t respect her, she knows it, and she doesn’t trust him, so she doesn’t want to give herself to him. It’s very sad, and more common than you might think. But nobody talks about this kind of thing in public. And the movie and TV portrayals of couples having sex before marriage never present it either. It’s like no one wants to acknowledge that it’s happening, even though it is.

#6: Waiting to have sex with my wife will mean better sex in my marriage.

Why? Because we’ll go into the marriage with me having more respect for her and her having more trust in me. One thing I’ve learned: if a girl doesn’t trust a guy, she doesn’t want to give herself wholly to him. Deep down, she doesn’t really enjoy being with him.

This is how it works. Since “girls use sex to get love, and guys use love to get sex,” a couple will have sex before marriage. The girl does this to hold on to the relationship. The guy does it because he wants it even more than the relationship itself. Then, after the marriage, the woman has what she wants: a commitment from the man. So she doesn’t need to use sex to get him anymore. And, because she may be harboring resentment because he had sex with her before they were married, she is now not interested in sex. And the guy — who doesn’t treasure his wife because of the sex before marriage — still wants sex but not as a total bonding experience with his wife. It’s just sex, which she figures out. So, there is a lousy sex life in the marriage.

I’m not making this stuff up. Now that I’m out of college and many people around me are getting married, I’m seeing it happen all the time. The antidote: waiting for marriage to have sex will give the man a greater respect for his wife and the woman a greater respect for her husband. And consequently they’ll have better and more frequent sex because they respect each other more and love each other more deeply.

#7: Not having sex with other women will mean better sex in my marriage.

Sex is a mysterious thing that causes a deep bond between people, even if we call it “casual.” The problem is this: the more I bond with other girls, the less I’ll be able to bond with my future wife. It’s like a piece of scotch tape — the more you use it on different surfaces, the less it sticks to things. After awhile, it won’t stick to anything.

If I bond with other girls before I get married, I won’t be able to bond as well with my wife someday. I won’t cherish her as much as I could have, and consequently I won’t love her as much as I could have. Each day that passes that I’ve remained faithful to my future wife means that my relationship with her will be better.

It’s a funny thing: our culture decries adultery, yet it freely condones premarital sex, even with multiple partners. That’s ironic. Because, if you take the element of time out of the equation, premarital sex isadultery. We can imagine how adultery would greatly injure a marriage relationship, maybe premarital sex actually has nearly the same result. It injures the potential bond between a man and a woman.

#8: I don’t have to sleep with a woman to know if we’re “sexually compatible.”

Sex is meant to complement a relationship, not be the most important aspect of it. That’s what I’ve found out. It’s supposed to be the icing on the cake when all the other aspects of your relationship are working well. I’ve come to understand that the sex will be good if the rest of the relationship is good. That’s why I know I don’t have to sleep with my wife to find out if we’re sexually compatible. If we get along in every other area, the sex will be fine.

Something else needs to be said here. Another thing I think I’ve “discovered” is this: when you place sex as the determining factor of the relationship, it will probably result in poor sex. Think about it. If you put your sexual relationship under a microscope, always judging it and judging the relationship by it, it’s doomed to fail. It’s like being in prison. You’re locked in to something that is supposed to be freeing, not incapacitating.

But, when you focus on the other parts of the relationship, and the sex isn’t the focus, then you’re freed up to have a more enjoyable sex life, with no pressure of having to make it always spectacular. (Because it won’t be.) And yet, I don’t think that as a college-age adult I was capable of not focusing on sex, that is, unless it wasn’t present at all. That’s why I think it’s best to wait altogether.

#9: I have found something more satisfying than sex.

I know what you’re thinking: “Yeh, right.” But it’s true. And in fact, in a way sex helped me to discover the something that outdoes it. And that something is not really a something, it’s a someone. It’s God.

Just hear me out on this one, I know it sounds far-fetched, but the whole thing makes sense. God has created us in such a way that we can’t be ultimately satisfied by anything except Him. He built that into the human system, and into each one of our individual systems. As one man put it, “Inside every person is a God-shaped vacuum that only God can fill.”

That’s why we see people change careers, mates, fashions, and more — because in our search for ultimate fulfillment, we get frustrated with the things (and people) that have not achieved it for us. So we discard them and move on to something (or someone) else, hoping that in them we will find the kind of fulfillment we are all really looking for. But the problem is, we never find it unless we come to God for it, because only He can provide it.

God loves us too much to see us truly satisfied by anything other than Himself. He wants the best for us, and that means Himself. Nothing or no one is more important than God. I know that’s true because I found it out for myself. The emptiness I had — after buying this and buying that, after sexual escapades, after all my efforts to be fulfilled in life — the emptiness came to an end when I asked God into my life. More specifically, when I asked Jesus Christ into my life. Jesus Christ said, “He who comes to me will never go hungry, and he who believes in me will never be thirsty” (John 6:35). Those words came true in my life. When I entered into a relationship with God, the God-shaped vacuum inside me was finally filled. I didn’t feel empty anymore. Consequently, knowing God has given me a deeper satisfaction than sex ever did.

#10: God has given me the strength to wait.

It’s been years since I’ve had sex. I wish I could say that I totally waited for marriage, but I can’t. I do have regrets (and, as I said before, they have lasted much longer than any momentary pleasures). I have regrets about the way I’ve treated girls. I have concerns about the stability of my future marriage (if and when I get married). But God has helped me to deal with my past acts and with my concerns for the future. He is in the process of changing me, and has changed me a lot already.

Also, God has given me the ability to wait for marriage to have sex again. Sure, it’s been a struggle at times, but God has been big enough to get me through it. All things are possible with Him. And each day, week, year that goes by, I know I’ll have a better and stronger marriage someday because I’ve waited. Too, I have a stronger relationship with God, today, as a result of depending on Him in this vital area of my life as a man.

Where to Start

If you want to be successful in relationships someday — as a husband and a father — the best place to start is with yourself. The trick is not in finding the right wife, or having the right children. The key is to start with you. And the most important relationship you can have — one that will make you a better husband and father — is a relationship with God.

God is the author of sex, love and relationships in general. He created these things for us to enjoy. And we can enjoy them fully if we follow His design for them. I’ve come to discover that God is not a “moralizer.” He doesn’t say, “Do this” or “Don’t do this” for no reason. When He says, “Don’t do this” (for example, wait for marriage to have sex), He’s not saying that to show me who’s boss, He’s saying it because it’s in my best interest. He’s saying it because He knows how He’s built me as a man, what is best for me, and what will bring me the most fulfillment.

Petroleum hub: A possible dream …but with strong private-sector participation

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To turn Ghana into a petroleum hub in the West Africa sub-region with state-of-the-art refineries, storage facilities, pipelines and efficient transportation facilities, the private sector must be part and parcel of the idea’s formulation, implementation – and even allowed to be managers of the hub, panelists at the 2019 Ghana Energy Summit have noted.

“If you want the private sector to participate, then politicians should stay out,” Kwame Jantuah, CEO of African Energy Consortium said, as part of the first panel discussion on the theme ‘Ghana’s Petroleum Hub Project: The Dream, Opportunities and How to get There’.

“This concept of a hub, how many private sector players are part of the thinking process? If you do not start now to get the private sector interested so as to understand the policies that are coming out, how do you expect the private sector to participate? We must actively involve the private sector right from the get-go,” he added.

Mr. Jantuah, a lawyer and energy expert, noted that even though politicians are needed, the country will be best served if the private sector is allowed to manage the hub with government providing policy and regulatory guidelines.

“Yes, we need the politicians to set the line; but we need the private sector to be part and parcel of it from the word go. We are talking about refineries, petrochemical plants, light industries; which private sector players can do any of these? If we do not sit down and put these things on paper and invite the private sector in, we will start this thing and, unfortunately, it will end due to the kind of politics we practice in this country,” he cautioned.

Ghana has been hard at work trying to turn the country into the sub-region’s petroleum hub by 2030. Expected to cost US$60 billion, the hub – which is expected to be established in the Western Region – will include refineries, petrochemical plants, power plants, light industry, waste and water treatment facilities, storage facilities, and business and residential centres.

With a location scouted and feasibility being undertaken, industry analysts believe that the hub should not just create jobs but also establish a sustainable means of refining local crude, create the environment for synergies between public and private to flourish, and unify all three spheres of the petroleum industry: upstream, midstream and downstream.

Isaac Osei, Managing Director of the Tema Oil Refinery (TOR), also stressed that the business of government is to create the enabling environment needed for the private sector thrive.

“I believe that the business of managing enterprises is not in the domain of government. Government’s role is to create an enabling environment that enables private sector operators to succeed. Also, government is to provide the regulations that govern these entities.

“I’d be very happy to see investment in TOR from private equity, so that they can take over the place and run it so I can exit quietly. That is the thing we should be thinking about. Investment should be done by both private and public; but management of the system, I believe, the private sector is best-equipped to do that,” he added.

Mr. Osei also pointed out that currently there are a lot of synergies that can be capitalized on, even with the hub yet to take off. To him, institutions such as Ghana Gas and TOR are already working hand in hand to produce premium petroleum products for the local market.

With respect to training, TOR, he said, has become a training institute for a pool of engineers all over the world. “In more recent times, we have cooperated with MODEC to train many of their young engineers for a period of six months. There is that linkage which I believe we must harness,” he said.

He therefore called for more investment in TOR to revamp its facilities. “TOR today is as good as any refinery, it’s just that we do not have enough resources to stay in continuous operation, and that is why it has made losses,” he added.

Abigail Asolange Harlley, CEO of AI Energy, noted that the vision to establish a petroleum hub is a laudable one and government needs to be commended for it. To her, when actualized the value it accrues will be of enormous benefit.

“The first benefit will be the creation of synergies that will be formed. These synergies include joint ventures, strategic collaborations, public and private partnerships: private and private partnerships will go a long way to help the private sector,” she said.

She urged government to offer tax-breaks to private sector players to spur them into taking part in making the dream a reality. Also, she believes that a regulatory institution that enables government to realize the full vision of a hub is needed.

“A hub of this nature should see government put in place a coherent, comprehensive and clearly-defined regulatory framework that will spell out the roles of both government and private sector. Also, a regulatory authority must be established to be mandated with a one-stop service for the entire sector, to ensure the vision of government is achieved seamlessly,” she added.

George Mensah Okley, CEO of BOST, noted that for the private sector to be fully committed to the project, transparency is required. He believes that with the vision of the hub currently at policy and discussion level, what’s needed is for a state agency to be deployed to handle the process.

“Give that agency a timeline, and if we need to turn it into a public institution via the stock exchange, then private sector players can invest in that vehicle,” he said.

‘We’re fulfilling promises’ ; Prez tells Ghanaians in France

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President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has stated that his administration was on track in fulfilling many of the promises it made to Ghanaians in the run up to the 2016 elections.

“We are two and a half years into a four-year mandate, and what I continue to insist and tell the people of Ghana is that, by the end of my mandate, they will see that I came to tell them the truth about what I wanted to do. I didn’t come to deceive anybody,” the President said.

Addressing members of the Ghanaian community in France last Monday as part of his official visit to that country, President Akufo-Addo indicated that over the course of the last two and a half years in office, his government had, indeed, fulfilled a considerable number of the promises made.

“I know that my opponents will be saying something else, but that is their right. God willing, on December 7, 2020, the day of accountability, we will know who is telling the truth,” he stated.

Free Trade Secretariat

President Akufo-Addo made these comments on the back of the announcement by the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the African Union that Ghana had been chosen as host country for the Secretariat of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

A statement from the Jubilee House said the President described the AfCFTA as “one of the most important things that the AU has done” and explained that Ghanaians who had been resident in France for some time could appreciate the significance of what was achieved at the 12th AU Extraordinary Summit, held in Niamey, Niger, last Sunday.

“Maybe some of the grey beards can remember 30 years ago, at the beginning of the common market, what France was like, and what it is like today… there is no doubt about the massive impact that the European Union has had on the lives of European people, in terms of increasing their economic circumstances, and we believe that the African Continental Free Trade Area is going to do the same for us,” he explained.

President Akufo-Addo said he was confident that the AfCFTA would offer Africa the opportunity to bring the 1.2 billion people on the continent into active play in developing the continent, adding: “We have to find a way of developing our continent ourselves. We can’t continue to depend on foreigners to develop our continent for us.”

The AfCFTA, he noted, would increase considerably intra-African trade, create millions of jobs for African youth and help the continent develop its enterprises and said the siting of the AfCFTA Secretariat in Ghana was a great opportunity for the country, especially as Ghana had been at the centre of pan-African matters.

“It is going to mean that all the ancillary activities of AfCFTA are going to be Accra- and Ghana-centred.

It is also a recognition of the contribution we have made to the struggle of pan-Africanism and for the decolonisation of the continent,” he added.

Prof. Atta Mills

President Akufo-Addo paid tribute to the late President John Evans Atta Mills who first moved the motion for the establishment of the Continental Free Trade Area in 2011.

“Every country should have its goals and policies that it follows successfully, leader after leader. When national goals are set, all of us who come to occupy the seat of office should then be obliged to follow them,” the President noted.

Ghana Card

The President also admonished Ghanaians to cherish their nationality and citizenship and not help non-Ghanaians obtain the national identity card – the Ghana Card.

“Let us cherish our nationality; let us cherish our citizenship. Don’t let any of you be party to any attempt to get the Ghana Card for people who are not Ghanaians.

A lot of the time, it is our own people who are leading this exercise of getting non-Ghanaians our Ghana Card,” he said.

He indicated that the Ghana Card provided certain benefits, such as access to the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) for Ghanaians.

“We are trying to make sure the NHIS works for Ghanaians and adding non-Ghanaians to that only strains the service. I don’t think Ghanaian taxpayers should be subsidising our health care for others.

I say this with the greatest of respect to those who are not Ghanaians, but if you have the card, then you have access,” a release issued from the Office of the President quoted the President as saying.

President Akufo-Addo, therefore, urged Ghanaians to be vigilant in making sure that only Ghanaians got the card.

Election

“These elections that we have — some people want to translate Ghanaian elections into West African elections. We have not yet got to the situation where Togolese, Ivorians and Malians can vote in Ghana elections.

That should not be the case. Ghana elections should be for Ghanaians, and if all of us are vigilant, we can make sure that that is the reality,” he added.

With the National Identification Authority (NIA) set to complete the registration of all Ghanaians resident in the country by the end of this year, the President indicated that Ghanaians resident abroad would have the opportunity to receive the Ghana Card from next year.

“My own belief is that we should make sure that this process is completed for everybody before we bring the elections overseas. We all know that there are people holding our papers who are not necessarily Ghanaians.

It is not a secret and we shouldn’t be dishonest about it and deny it. It is a fact,” he stated.

President Akufo-Addo said if the process of giving each Ghanaian an identity card was “what is going to be able to determine who is and who is not a Ghanaian, I think that we should have that process completed before we can bring the overseas vote into play”.

New Chamber

On the controversial matter of the proposed building of a new Chamber of Parliament, the President said: “I am happy to announce to you also that the matter has been brought to a conclusion.

I hear that today the Public Relations Officer of Parliament announced that it has been suspended. So there it is!”

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