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The rapid rise of ICT use in Ghana attracts global interest

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Dr Michael Owusu, Chief Operating Officer of KGL Group, says Ghana’s rapid rise in Information and Communication Technology (ICT) use has attracted global interest. 

He said one key factor in the growth had been the Government’s efforts to promote and invest in ICT infrastructure, by implementing various initiatives to increase internet access and adoption, including establishing internet kiosks and rolling out fiber optic cables to connect rural areas. 

Speaking in an interview with the Ghana News Agency, Dr Owusu added that, “as a result, Ghana’s internet penetration rate has significantly increased, reaching over 50 per cent in 2021.” 

He stated that another key factor of the growth of ICT in the country had been the expansion of internet access. 

Dr Owusu said according to data from the World Bank, the percentage of the population with internet access in Ghana increased from just two per cent in 2005 to over 69 per cent in 2021. 

He emphasised that this rapid boost has been fueled by several factors, including the expansion of mobile networks, the proliferation of smartphones, and the introduction of government initiatives aimed at increasing access to the internet. 

“The increase in internet access has had a transformative effect on various life sectors in Ghana, including education, healthcare, and agriculture. When we talk about the importance of ICT in education, e-learning platforms have expanded, providing more flexible and accessible education options for students. 

In healthcare, the use of telemedicine has improved access to medical services in remote and underserved areas. And in agriculture, using digital technologies such as precision farming and supply chain management has increased efficiency and profitability.” he stressed. 

Dr Owusu said in addition to the Government’s efforts, the private sector had played a significant role in developing ICT in Ghana because the country had seen the emergence of several local tech start-ups, including e-commerce, financial technology, and renewable energy which had received funding from global investors. 

He informed that the rapid rise of ICT in Ghana had attracted the attention of global companies and organisations, saying they would want to take advantage of the country’s growing digital market. 

Dr. Owusu acknowledged the fact that the increasing use of ICT in Ghana had had social and economic impacts. 

He said the expansion of internet access had enabled more people to participate in the digital economy, contributing to job creation and economic growth. 

Dr Owusu appealed to the Government and the private sector to continue working to ensure that all segments of society had equal access to the benefits of ICT, and this would be important for the sustainable development of Ghana’s digital economy. 

 

 

Maltese Foreign Minister inaugurates electronic medical laboratory in Kumasi

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Dr Ian Borg, the Maltese Minister for Foreign and European Affairs and Trade, has inaugurated an electronic medical laboratory (E-Learning) centre for the HopeXchange Medical Center, at Santasi-Apre, in the Kumasi metropolis.

The facility, which was constructed with financial support from the Maltese government, would help advance engagement of health officials, students and clients of the hospital across the world.

It would also be used as a centre of health conferencing and education for partners of the Catholic health facility in the diaspora.

The Minister also signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the management of the hospital to help create opportunity for staff of the hospital to work closely with counterparts and partners in Malta to deliver quality healthcare services to the people.

Dr Borg, speaking at the ceremony, said in line with Malta’s health strategy, the country had since 2013, provided support to several countries, including Ghana, to advance quality healthcare.

The COVID-19 pandemic, according to him, should be a testimony for nations to prepare adequately to solve emerging health challenges, adding that, promoting access to quality healthcare and strengthening health systems were key to promoting socio-economic progress in Ghana.

Dr Borg expressed satisfaction at the services Hopexchange was rendering to the people and urged them to maintain higher standards in healthcare delivery.

Dr Akosua Amoateng Frimpomaa, Medical Superintendent of the hospital, said the government and people of Malta had continue to provide financial, logistical and medical support to the hospital.

She said the inauguration of the E-learning laboratory would help complement the excellent services the hospital was providing to the people.

“We are able to strive for excellence in delivery of healthcare because of the strong support from partners, and we will continue to deliver world-class health care to people in Kumasi and its environs,” she stated.

Dr Frimpomaa hinted that the hospital had also received a grant from USAID to build a separate maternal and child health block, which would have state-of-the-art facilities to expand maternal and child healthcare delivery.

Dr Micah Asare Bediako, Deputy Ashanti Regional Director of Health, commended the Catholic Health Services for providing three of the district hospitals in the region.

He used the occasion to urge the management of the hospital to expedite actions on the proposed maternal and child health block to help support the delivery of maternal and child health services in the region.

 

 

Instagram has introduced a new ‘Quiet Mode’ as well as recommendation controls.

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Instagram is introducing a slew of new features aimed at giving users more control over the app, beginning with a new Quiet Mode. The tool works similarly to your phone’s Do Not Disturb setting. Instagram will not send notifications to your device while it is active. Your profile will also show that you’re “in quiet mode,” and anyone who messages you will receive an automatic response stating that you’re not available.

Quiet Mode can be set to activate automatically at certain times of day. Instagram will send you a summary of your notifications once you’re outside of those hours. Anyone can use Quiet Mode, but the company claims that if it notices teens spending a lot of time scrolling, it will prompt them to use it. Quiet Mode is available starting today in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, the United States and the United Kingdom.

Instagram Quiet Mode
Instagram

Alongside the new mode, Instagram is introducing a handful of features designed to give people more control over the photos and videos they see on the platform. Specifically, you can now tell the app the types of content you don’t want to be recommended to you. Starting with the Explore tab, you can select multiple tiles and tap “Not Interested” to shape Instagram’s content algorithm. Doing so will also affect what you see when you search for posts. Additionally, in an expansion of a feature that was already available for comments and direct messages, you can list specific words, hashtags and emoji you want Instagram to filter for when recommending content. You can access that tool through the “Hidden Words” section of the app’s privacy settings. One limitation is that filters will only work when the app detects the words you listed in hashtags and captions. Lastly, Instagram notes it recently added a feature that allows parents to see their teen’s app settings.

The subject of inappropriate recommendations came up during Adam Mosseri’s congressional hearing in 2021. Members of the Senate subcommittee on Consumer Protection, Product Safety and Data Security grilled the head of Instagram about the content they saw the app steer them toward after creating fresh Instagram accounts designed to impersonate teens. Specifically, Utah Senator Mike Lee said he saw the Explore page of his finsta account change dramatically after following a single account recommended by Instagram. According to Lee, the app began recommending posts promoting body dysmorphia, sexualization of women and other content inappropriate for teen girls. “It went dark fast,” he said.

Whether the changes Instagram is introducing today will sufficiently address the concerns raised by lawmakers is hard to say, as Instagram is putting the onus on teen users to filter their feeds instead of doing that work itself.

 

 

49 bodies discovered in mass graves following militia attacks in eastern DRC – UN

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The bodies of 49 civilians were discovered in mass graves in northeastern Congo following a weekend attack blamed on a local militia, the UN said Wednesday.

Farhan Haq, the United Nations’ deputy spokesman, told reporters in New York that the graves had been discovered in two villages in Ituri province, about 19 miles (30 kilometres) east of the town of Bunia.

According to Haq, 42 victims, including six children, were discovered in a mass grave in the village of Nyamamba, and the bodies of seven other men were discovered in another village, Mbogi.

“Peacekeepers launched a patrol to the area immediately after receiving reports of attacks on civilians by the CODECO militias over the weekend. This is when they made the gruesome discoveries,” Haq said in New York.

Local authorities have said that CODECO — Cooperative for the Development of Congo — militants also abducted a number of women during the attacks on the villages.

Last June, seven CODECO factions announced an end to violence against civilians in Ituri, mainly in the Djugu territory where they were very active. Yet they have gradually resumed attacks in the area.

At least 195 people have been killed since December in a series of attacks blamed on the CODECO militia and other armed groups, the U.N. said. More than 1.5 million people in Ituri province have been displaced by fighting.

 

 

Trump begs Meta to reinstate his Facebook account.

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Donald Trump has officially asked to be able to return to Facebook, his campaign team said on Wednesday, calling not to “reduce a presidential candidate to silence”.

The former American president’s lawyer wrote to the platform’s founder, Mark Zuckerberg, requesting “a meeting to discuss Donald Trump’s rapid readmission” to the social network.

“We believe that President Trump’s Facebook account suspension has radically distorted and limited public debate,” writes Scott Gast in this Tuesday missive.

He urges the platform to “promote genuine dialogue, not silence a presidential candidate”.

The former Republican leader had been suspended from the social network for two years after the attack carried out by his supporters against the Capitol on January 6, 2021. Facebook had estimated that Donald Trump could only return when the “risks to the security of the public would have disappeared”.

Asked by AFP on Wednesday, a spokesperson for Meta, the network’s parent company, promised a decision on the fate of the former president “in the coming weeks”.

Donald Trump had already been readmitted to Twitter on November 19, 2022, four days after declaring his candidacy for the 2024 presidential election.

He is yet to post on that account, however, communicates primarily through his own platform, Truth Social.

 

 

South Africa will hold joint naval exercises with Russia and China in February.

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South Africa, which has consistently refused to condemn Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, announced Thursday that joint manoeuvres with the Russian and Chinese navies will take place off its coast in February.

“From February 17 to 27, South Africa will host the Chinese and Russian Federation navies in a multilateral maritime exercise,” the South African military confirmed in a statement.

“In order to strengthen the already flourishing relations between South Africa, Russia, and China,” the joint manoeuvres will take place off Durban, southern Africa’s largest port, and Richards Bay, 180 kilometres north, according to the statement.

This will be the second time that such an exercise is held in the presence of the three naval forces, the first having taken place in November 2019 in Cape Town, South Africa,” recalls the army.

These maneuvers will involve more than 350 South African military personnel “from several services and divisions” alongside “their Russian and Chinese counterparts with the aim of sharing skills and operational knowledge,” the statement further said.

South Africa, one of the continent’s powers, has taken a neutral stance since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24, refusing to join Western calls to condemn Moscow.

Meanwhile, the opposition Democratic Alliance has slammed the decision, saying it means that contrary to its “neutral” stance on Russia’s Ukraine war, South Africa’s ruling African National Congress party has effectively sided with Moscow.

The China-Russia-South Africa drills is named Operation Mosi, which means smoke.

 

 

Senegal opposition leader to face rape trial: lawyers

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A Senegalese judge has ordered Ousmane Sonko, a prominent opposition leader, to stand trial for alleged rape, according to lawyers for Sonko and his accuser on Wednesday.

Sonko finished third in Senegal’s presidential election in 2019 and has declared himself a candidate for the 2024 elections, thanks in part to his popularity among young people.

However, he has also had legal issues. Most notably, he has been accused of rape by a beauty salon employee where he went for a massage.

Sonko, a 48-year-old former tax inspector, has denied the charge and says he is the victim of a plot by President Macky Sall.

The judge on Tuesday signed an order to send Sonko’s case to a criminal court for alleged crimes he was charged with in 2021, including rape and death threats, the plaintiff’s lawyer El Hadji Diouf said.

“She is satisfied. She appreciates the fact that, despite the campaign of lies and manipulation by Sonko’s supporters who are afraid of the trial, the judge stood firm,” he said.

One of Sonko’s lawyers, Cheik Khoureyssi Ba, confirmed the move.

Ba stressed that the order was subject to legal challenge and said Sonko’s legal team intended to appeal.

Sonko has described the rape accusation as part of a scheme to torpedo his 2024 candidacy.

The polarising politician is considered a populist firebrand by his critics.

Sonko’s supporters hail his efforts to speak up on corruption and social elitism, as well as slamming the economic and political grip of multinational firms and Senegal’s former colonial power, France.

His indictment in March 2021 triggered violence in which around a dozen people were killed.

Senegal has a general reputation for stability in a region where political turbulence is widespread.

In recent years, several other prominent opponents of the president have had their political careers cut short by legal cases.

Authorities have denied any misuse of state institutions in the legal proceedings against Sonko.

 

 

Pedri contract: wages, contract expiry date, and release clause

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The Spanish youngster has emerged as a key figure at the Camp Nou, and his current contract reflects that.

Pedri made an immediate impact after joining Barcelona from Las Palmas in the 2020/21 season.

At the age of 18, the Spaniard played 52 games in all competitions for the Catalan giants, scoring four goals and providing six assists.

His consistent performance for Barcelona earned him the Golden Boy award in 2021, as well as a spot on the Spanish national team.

But what are the terms of his existing employment deal? GOAL takes a look…

How much does Pedri earn at Barcelona?

Barcelona secured the services of the midfielder in 2019 for an initial €5 million transfer fee, but he was immediately sent back on loan to Las Palmas. He only joined them the subsequent year.

He joined the club on a two-year deal but extended his stay by penning a new five-year deal in 2021 and currently earns €38,000 per week in wages.

When does Pedri’s contract at Barcelona expire?

The midfielder’s current contract expires at the end of the 2025-26 season, having extended in 2021.

At 20, Pedri is already an asset to Barcelona. He has formed a formidable midfield partnership with compatriot Gavi and the duo often draws comparisons with former Spain and Barcelona legends Xavi Hernandez and Andres Iniesta.

In fact, Xavi, who is also the manager of the club, had suggested that even Iniesta and himself were not as good as Pedri and Gavi when they were 20.

Recently in an interview with Mundo Deportivo, the Barcelona boss said, “Me at 20 years old and Andres at 20 years old, we were not at the level that Pedri or Gavi are. Eric Garcia, at twenty; Ansu… How Gavi competes, the passion he puts in… We were not at his level.”

 

What is Pedri’s release clause?

Exit clauses are a mandatory part of contracts in Spanish football and clubs have been making sure these release clauses are high enough to deter any potential suitors ever since Barcelona lost Neymar to Paris Saint-Germain for €222m back in 2017.

Pedri is no exception to that custom and his release clause is set at €1 billion.

 

 

Chelsea’s transfer craze has a method, but Boehly’s approach threatens to destroy the Blues’ academy.

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The Blues’ co-owner has begun to build an army of young players, but is this a hindrance rather than a boon to the Blues’ future?

Todd Boehly has been accused of taking a scattergun approach to the transfer market since his multi-billion pound takeover of Chelsea in May 2022. While there are questions about how Graham Potter is supposed to fit all of these players into a cohesive line-up, there is clearly a policy at work in west London.

11 of the 14 incoming transfers and loans Boehly has negotiated in his brief tenure as manager have been for players aged 25 or younger. This figure includes the most recent addition, Mykhailo Mudryk, who cost £89 million ($109 million).

While the captures of big-name experienced campaigners Raheem Sterling, Kalidou Koulibaly and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang dominated many of the headlines in the summer transfer window, they were joined by Denis Zakaria (25), Marc Cucurella (24), Wesley Fofana (21), Carney Chukwuemeka (18), Omari Hutchinson (19), Cesare Casadei (20) and Gabriel Slonina (18).

Six months on, and with Chelsea marooned in mid-table and out of both domestic cup competitions, the club’s new stewards have not treated the normally frugal January window any differently. Big-money Mudryk has followed David Datro Fofana (19), Benoit Badiashile (21), Andrey Santos (18) and Joao Felix (23) into the club. By all accounts, they aren’t finished either.

Joao Felix Chelsea 2022-23Getty Images

Twenty-year-old PSV winger Noni Madueke is under serious consideration as another new year reinforcement, and the failed pursuit of Benfica’s Enzo Fernandez (22) has seen the Blues turn to breakout Brighton star Moises Caicedo (21). Meanwhile, England international midfielders Jude Bellingham (19) and Declan Rice (24) are long-term targets.

The remarkable injection of youth over the past eight months has unsurprisingly provoked a buzz, but with the current squad and this new philosophy teetering on imbalance, there must be a clear plan for all these starlets and prospective new arrivals to forge a career at Chelsea; a repeat of the lost years of the so-called ‘loan army’ must be avoided at all costs.

The defensive signings are justified. Chelsea only really compensated for the departures of Antonio Rudiger, Andreas Christensen and Marcos Alonso in the summer without adding quality depth. With a fully-fit squad, Fofana and Badiashile certainly provide that, and should eventually push to start.

In midfield, all the signs point to an upcoming overhaul – indeed, it has probably already begun. Though it remains to be seen whether they are ready to be thrust into action, Andrey Santos and Casadei have huge potential, while any of Fernandez, Bellingham or Rice would represent a significant upgrade in an area of the field that has become stagnant.

All pretty logical so far, then.

Enzo Fernandez Chelsea GFXGetty/GOAL

However, when you analyse the attacking additions, the rationale becomes blurred. While Chelsea still lack a proven goalscorer, they have signed a raft of roaming young forwards whose profiles are very similar to Kai Havertz and Christian Pulisic, neither of whom have yet celebrated their 25th birthdays themselves.

With Madueke potentially joining too, the pathway to the first team appears both overcrowded and winding for the likes of Chukwuemeka and Hutchinson. Felix – who is likely to become a permanent signing, all being well – and Mudryk have arrived to occupy the wide areas, while Pulisic, Sterling and Hakim Ziyech are already there and vying for starting places.

It’s rumoured that Havertz, Pulisic AND Ziyech are all on the Stamford Bridge chopping block, and that is perhaps the only way to make sense of the plethora of talent that has been brought in. Some serious streamlining will be required over the coming transfer windows.

Forgotten man Callum Hudson-Odoi must be watching on from Germany dismayed as his hopes of finally making an impact upon his return from a loan at Bayer Leverkusen are being essentially extinguished.

The same could be said of others who are either on loan or on the fringes of the first team. Levi Colwill is beginning to demonstrate his huge potential at Brighton, while Armando Broja, Trevoh Chalobah, Conor Gallagher and Lewis Hall – all academy products themselves – are part of the current squad but far from guaranteed starters.

Hudson-Odoi was something of a pioneer – the first quasi success story of Chelsea’s academy in the Roman Abramovich era after the oligarch syphoned some of his obscene wealth into the youth setup way back when, with Mason Mount and Reece James picking up the mantle a few years later and reaching even greater heights.

Reece James Chelsea RB Salzburg 2022-23Getty Images

That is another route to the first team that seems even more complicated now, though, especially given only a minute percentage of academy players ever make a top-level breakthrough. The Telegraph reports that the influx of new, young first-team players has set off alarm bells among the agents and parents of current hopefuls at Cobham, with German clubs alerted to their potential availability as they see their dreams of starring for Chelsea dashed.

That should be a huge concern for the hierarchy given the recent success of the academy, and it makes the sudden departure from the culture of promoting from within all the more strange. Another era of endless loans before an eventual sad free transfer to a Football League club for those who choose to stay feels almost inevitable.

Boehly is reportedly keen to create a multi-club model to replicate the City Group and Red Bull set-ups to avoid that, earmarking France for its location. An in-house platform to demonstrate their credentials offers hope for future generations, but it will surely come too late for the current crop.

Throughout the Abramovich era, Chelsea supporters were crying out for talent to be promoted from within; for a group of stars to call their own. They have had a taste of the potential for homegrown success as a team that mixed academy products, experience and new signings lifted the Champions League in 2021 – albeit against the odds – and that balance is now viewed as part of the club’s identity.

It would be remiss for Boehly and his new transfer negotiators, Christopher Vivell and Paul Winstanley, to overlook that, and there must come a time when they put the chequebook away and take stock.

At present, they are risking the future of a now-famed talent pipeline when the club is only just reaping the rewards.

 

 

More significant than Bruno Fernandes? Man United’s talisman is Casemiro.

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  • South American signed from Real Madrid
  • Has made an immediate impact
  • Will miss Gunners game through suspension

WHAT HAPPENED? The 30-year-old midfielder, who won five Champions League crowns at Real Madrid, linked up with United towards the end of the summer transfer window when he completed a £60 million ($74m) move to England. Casemiro’s pedigree was never in doubt, but he could be considered to have exceeded expectations after slotting seamlessly into a squad that was struggling for consistency prior to his big-money arrival.

WHAT THEY SAID: Former United defender Brown has told Marriott Bonvoy – the Red Devils’ official hotel loyalty partner – of the impact the combative but classy South American has made in Manchester: “Casemiro has brought vision. Complete vision. And the players have begun to realise that and they can see the passes he is making. The wide players now are making runs and they know he’s more than capable of reaching them. [Christian] Eriksen is the same, with his little one-twos. Everything is quicker and better. Casemiro doesn’t wait, he just plays it and if he can do so first time, he will. There are times when he’s off balance but he’s still trying to get these balls through. It’s something we have missed.

“Bruno has done this over the past couple of years but now teams are unsure who to pick up. They can’t just target Bruno; they have to look at Casemiro as well. You can see the class coming out of him, from his first touch and his control. He’s become the talisman for the team.”

THE BIGGER PICTURE: Casemiro is already up to 26 appearances for the Red Devils across all competitions, with two goals recorded along the way, and will be hoping to help them bring a six-year wait for major silverware to a close in 2023 as Erik ten Hag’s side remain in the hunt for Premier League, Carabao Cup, FA Cup and Europa League honours.

IN THREE PHOTOS:

Casemiro Manchester United Crystal Palace 2022-23Getty Images

 

Casemiro Manchester United 2022-23Getty

 

Bruno FernandesGetty

WHAT NEXT? United will have to cope without Casemiro’s reassuring presence in the heart of their midfield the next time they take to the field, with a costly yellow card picked up in a 1-1 draw at Crystal Palace meaning that the Brazilian must sit out Sunday’s trip to Premier League leaders Arsenal through suspension.