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Government securing affordable petroleum products to stabilise fuel prices

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A petrol station worker fuels a car along Kimathi street on July 14 2019,after the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (EPRA) announced new retail pump prices of petroleum products effective from July 15 to August 14, 2019.price of super petrol increase by Sh0.29 per litre while diesel and kerosene decreased by Sh0.88 and SH2.31 per litre respectively.PHOTO|SILA KIPLAGAT

The Government is working to secure reliable and regular sources of affordable petroleum products for the Ghanaian market to stabilise fuel prices, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has said.

Addressing the nation on the economy on Sunday night, the President said the move, in addition to a stable currency, would, “halt the escalation of fuel prices and bring relief to us all.”

There has been a continuous rise in prices of petrol and diesel at the pumps since the beginning of year.

Currently, petrol and diesel are selling at an average GHS13.10 and GHS15.99 respectively.

In the beginning of the year, petrol and diesel was trading at an average GHS 6.8 and GHS7.0 respectively.

President Akufo-Addo said he was aware of the economic challenges occasioned by the rising cost of petroleum products, leading to increment in transport fares and price of goods and services.

“I know that the increasing cost of living is the number one concern for all of us. It is driven by fast escalating fuel prices at the pumps, which is caused by high crude oil prices on the world market and our depreciated currency. I know that this is putting intolerable pressure on families and businesses,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Institute for Energy Security (IES) has projected that the price of diesel may cross the 20 Cedis mark in the next pricing window, which will commence on Tuesday, November 1, 2022.

“In IES’ estimation, Gasoil’s price per litre is set to break the GHS20.00 mark, with a gallon price possibly going for GHS90.00 on the market. Gasoline price may also inch close to GHS18 per litre by mid-November 2022,” it said in its review of the October 2022 Second Pricing Window.

The IES blamed the projected increment on the “significant” depreciation of the Cedi and the “appreciable” increase in the price of diesel on the international market.

“The Ghana Cedi depreciated by a whopping 32 per cent from the previous rate of GHS10.89 to the current rate of GHS14.42, to the US Dollar,” it said.

Christians urged to be kind and compassionate to one another

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Reverend Fr Joseph Sackey, Parish Priest of St. Theresa’s Parish in Tamale, has called on Christians to be kind and compassionate towards one another just as God forgave them. 

He also urged them to be like-minded, sympathetic, love one another, and be compassionate and humble. 

Fr Sackey who made the call while preaching the sermon in Tamale said in the New Testament, Jesus was often moved to mercy through compassion. 

He emphasised: “We are not called to try and avoid being rude. We are called to embrace humility, patience, love and unity,” and added, “when we live and practice these things, we make less room for hate and anger.” 

Fr Sackey urged Christians to be intentional in showing kindness, and to love their neighbours as themselves. 

Western Regional Minister charges small scale miners to adopt ethical practices

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The Western Regional Minister, Mr.Kwabena Okyere Darko-Mensah has advised small scale miners to adopt ethical mining practices to save their trade. 

He said as a Region that mines and produces gold among others, it must act as the focal point for ethical mining and mining-related activities. 

He said as a critical area of livelihood, it behooved on the leadership of small-scale miners to produce realistic and integrated approach to tackle small scale mining activities otherwise known as galamsey. 

According to  Mr.Darko-Mensah, “we need a new way to stop ours from doing what is characterized as galamsey in a more purposeful way as a service than as policeman”. 

The Western Regional Minister who is also the Member of Parliament (MP) for Takoradi, expressed these sentiments in an interview with the Ghana News Agency in Takoradi adding that “we cannot fetish our own when they can easily be corrected with three washing wells or dams”. 

 He charged ” professionals in the industry to engage mining communities to educate them on the best mining practices to ensure that in whatever mining they are engaged in, they do the right thing always to save our lands and water bodies “and avoid the wrong thing of washing dirt into the rivers. 

Mr .Darko-Mensah stressed the need to decentralize mining licenses to enable the District Assemblies take responsibility directly for reclamation and revenue collection and account up”. 

The Western Regional Minister wondered why “the country allows foreigners to take 97 per cent of proceeds from our mining exploration and expect only 3 per cent to develop Tarkwa for example”. 

He said until something was done about the 97 per cent of Ghana’s gold which remained in the hands of multi-national corporations, the youth would continue to find unrealistic alternatives to survive. 

“We need to find new ways to ensure that more Ghanaians properly own the productive assets in the mining industry so that more of the 97% would accrue to indigenous Ghanaians”. 

Mr.Darko-Mensah expressed the hope that if Ghana entered into realistic sharing agreements with gold mining companies, the government would be able to create more jobs and use the money accruing from the mining sector to pay workers. 

The Regional Minister said mining in Ghana was a-seven-billion-dollar ($7 B) industry with direct government take of only 3 per cent yet employing over five million people directly and indirectly with 30 per cent of Ghana’s adult population of 17 million. 

Mr.Darko-Mensah said in the face of addressing mining issues in Ghana, the President has met with all traditional and local government leaders to address the illegal mining issue that was damaging Ghana’s economy and reputation. 

He said the government was much determined to sanitize the small-scale mining industry despite all obstacles to sustainably contribute to the nation’s socio-economic growth and preserve the nation’s abundant resources for today and posterity. 

On steps taken to curtail galamsey activities in the country, Mr.Darko-Mensah indicated that the government would soon launch the situational room to remotely monitor and manage on-the-ground operations across the nation. 

The move was expected to monitor activities of miners, track their equipment, and diligently relay to the Minerals Commission’s office. 

That, he noted, would complement the deployment of river guards to permanently patrol river bodies like the Ankobra, Offin and Pra. 

The Community Mining Scheme and the launch of the National Alternative Employment and Livelihood Programme (NAELP) is being implemented to promote environmentally friendly mining practices and create more opportunities for the youth and appealed to the youth to register with the Assembly’s District Mining Committees to participate in mining programmes. 

He said increasing Private Sector Participation (PSP) in the form of direct investment, exploration,financing,research, and technology transfer would help to make this a reality. 

He said the mining industry had been shown successfully as a formidable sector for long term economic growth at the 2020 Ghana Gold Expo and the 2021 and 2022 Mining Week especially with a tougher regulatory framework and rising formalization. 

To this end, the Bank of Ghana had started its responsible sourcing programme under its local Gold Buying Programme expected to enhance the formalization of the small-scale sector. 

Mr Kwabena Okyere Darko-Mensah charged the Small-Scale Miners Association (SSMA) to take up the responsibility of reclaiming degraded lands and replanting as a communal labour of their sector to save the business and the five million jobs in the sector. 

The SSMA must ensure the transfer of reclamation bonds from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to the District Assemblies through the newly activated District Mining Committees to support the reclamation effort of the small-scale mining participants. 

Mr Okyere Darko-Mensah also called for the provision of Mining Advisory Board by mining professionals especially the women miners to the small-scale mining industry as their community outreach programme especially in recirculating dam and wells so that mining tailing or washout did not end up as silt in river bodies especially for those engaged in alluvial mining. 

He noted that encouraging more women into the mining sector would stem the bad practices in the industry. 

The Western Regional Minister also called on the Association to ensure the complete decentralization of mining licensing and in-situ mobile licensing regime to help legalize and control more mining-related activities especially those that did not fall within the red zones other bodies and forest reserves. 

Build a Prisons Hospital- Retired Ashanti Prisons Commander advocates

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Mr. Samuel Yaw Tannor, the Outgoing Ashanti Regional Commander of the Ghana Prisons Service, has called  for the establishment of a Prisons Hospital to cater for the health needs of inmates, officers and the general public. 

      He said the need for a hospital for the Service had never been more important than now, considering the huge number of inmates and its attendant health challenges. 

       He made the call in an interview with the media after a pull-out parade held in his honour in Kumasi, after 30 years of service as Prisons Officer. 

       Mr. Tannor who retired as a Deputy Director of Prisons, said a hospital for the Service would not only address the health needs of stakeholders, but also improve service delivery. 

      He said the Service had been spending a lot of its resources taking care of the health of inmates because most of them had no health insurance, a situation, he said, justified the need for a hospital owned by the Service. 

     Mr Tannor said the Service had vast lands at both the Nsawam and Ankaful Prisons which could be used for the hospital project and called on public-spirited organisations and individuals to help build the hospital. 

      The Out-going Commander also underscored the need to scale up the farming scheme by some of the prisons to support the feeding of inmates which remained a huge challenge for the Service. 

       He said the farm produce of such prisons was what complemented the GHC 1.80 p allocated for each prisoner per day and stressed the need to expand the farming scheme to cut down on procurement of food for the prisoners. 

      He recounted how he had to engage some of their food suppliers to encourage them not to suspend their supplies to the institution due to late release of their monies, adding that, scaling up farming in the various prisons was the way to go to solve the perennial problem.   

      Mr. Tannor commended the public, especially religious bodies and other philanthropists in the Ashanti Region for their donations to the facility over the years and called for their continuous support. 

       “I want to acknowledge the support of the people of Ashanti Region and encouraged them to continue to support the facility as I leave office,” he said. 

Piesie Esther celebrates 20 years of music with a concert called ‘Waye Me Yie Anniversary.’

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Ghanaian Gospel musician Piesie Esther is set to gather all music lovers and believers of God under one roof for a night of praise and worship in her upcoming gospel concert.

Piesie Esther shared details of the concert with Captain Smart on Onua TV’s Onua Maakye. She said that apart from being an umbrella for believers to gather and worship God, the concert is also to celebrate her 20th anniversary as a gospel musician.

 

Piesie Esther, over her 20-year journey in the gospel industry, has thrilled and served music lovers and believers of God. She has serenaded God-lovers with songs like ‘Soma Ogya’, ‘Hwehwe Me Mu’, ‘Maseda Kese’ and other beautiful songs. Her latest one, ‘Waye Me Yie’ is currently winning the hearts and ears of music lovers.

The ‘Waye Me Yie Anniversary Concert’ will have other gospel musicians like Tagoe Sisters, Obaapa Christy, Celestine Donkor, Moses OK, Ernest Opoku, Kofi Sarpong, Jack Alolome, Brother Sammy and others.

 

The concert is scheduled for November 6, 2022, at the Accra International Conference Centre at 3 pm. Tickets are available online at Airport Shell, Baatsona Total, Ernesta Wholesale Ltd, Santa Maria, and other venues.

 

According to a study, UK police fail to use facial recognition in an ethical and legal manner.

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Police should be banned from using it in public spaces, the researchers say.

According to a University of Cambridge study, the use of live facial recognition (LFR) by UK police forces “fails[s] to meet the minimum ethical and legal standards.” Following an examination of LFR use by the Metropolitan (Met) and South Wales police, researchers concluded that the technology should be prohibited in “all public spaces.”

LFR compares faces captured by security cameras to photos in a database to find matches. China and other authoritarian regimes have used the technology as part of their state surveillance apparatus.

UK police have been testing its use in multiple situations to fight crime and terrorism. In two cases, LFR was used by MET and South Wales police to scan crowds and compare faces to those on a criminal “watch list.” In another, officers used FRT smartphone apps to scan crowds and identify “wanted individuals in real time,” according to the paper.

In those cases, the team found that police “kept from view” information about how they use the data and information about demographics. That has in turn made it difficult to determine whether the tools are promoting racial profiling, while raising questions about accountability. “Police forces are not necessarily answerable or held responsible for harms caused by facial recognition technology,” said lead author Evani Radiya-Dixit.

The Met has claimed that the latest algorithms have improved LRF accuracy, with false alerts less than .08 percent, according to The Guardian. They boasted of a 70 percent success rate up to 2020, but an expert from the University of Essex hired by the police force found it was actually just 19 percent. “That the court of appeal explicitly stated in 2020 that South Wales police use of this technology was ‘unlawful’ makes it difficult to argue this technology should be used,” he said.

However, the Met said its work was supported by law. “LFR is regulated by a number of sources of law. These sources of law combine to provide a multilayered legal structure to use, regulate and oversee the use of LFR by law enforcement bodies,” it told The Guardian. UK’s parliament has yet to weigh in, even though it’s created legislation around internet privacy.

 

Elon Musk is thinking about making verification a Twitter Blue perk.

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FILE - Tesla CEO Elon Musk speaks before unveiling the Model Y at Tesla's design studio in Hawthorne, Calif., March 14, 2019. Musk's legal team is demanding to hear from a whistleblowing former Twitter executive who could help bolster Musk's case for backing out of a $44 billion deal to buy the social media company. Twitter's former security chief Peiter Zatko received a subpoena on Saturday, Aug. 27, 2022, from Musk's team, according to Zatko's lawyer and court records. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)

Employees reportedly have until November 7th to make the change or they’ll be fired.

According to Platformer’s Casey Newton and The Verge, with Elon Musk in charge, Twitter plans to raise the price of its Blue subscription plan from $5 to $20 per month and make it mandatory for verified users. If the plan is launched, verified users (celebrities, politicians, journalists, etc.) must sign up for the service within 90 days or lose the blue check mark. Employees working on the project have reportedly been told they will be fired if the changes are not implemented by November 7th.

Twitter launched Blue in the United States late last year for $3 per month, but raised the price to $5 in July. It provides subscribers with benefits such as top articles, custom icons, and, most recently, the ability to edit tweets. The company has not disclosed subscriber numbers, revenue, or other details for Twitter Blue, but according to Investopedia, the vast majority of its revenue (89 percent) comes from advertising.

Musk hinted at the change in a tweet yesterday, saying that “the entire verification process is being revamped right now.” As Newton pointed out, Twitter’s @verified currently follows approximately 428,000 accounts that bear the blue check, representing a small percentage of the site’s 206 million daily active users.

A lot of those folks have tweeted about the change, and many wouldn’t pay $20 to keep their verified status. At the same time, users have pointed out that the new system could increase Twitter’s bot and spam issues that Musk seems to hate. “The point of Twitter verification is that… it’s useful to be able to verify their statements are coming from them,” tweeted cosmologist and writer Katie Mack. “It’s supposed to help combat disinformation, not be a status symbol.”

Musk has been busy in the few days he’s been “chief twit.” He has reportedly ordered company-wide layoffs, according to The New York Times. On Saturday, the SpaceX and Tesla boss reportedly told managers to begin drawing up lists of employees to cut.

 

Economic Hardship: Gov’t to continue 30 per cent cut in discretionary expenditures of appointees

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President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo says the government will continue with the 30 per cent cut in discretionary expenditures of Ministries, Departments and Agencies.

He said: “We have decided also to continue with the policy of thirty per cent (30%) cut in the salaries of political office holders, including the President, Vice President, Ministers, Deputy Ministers, MMDCEs, and SOE appointees in 2023.”

President Akufo-Addo said this on Sunday when he addressed the nation on the economic challenges and Government’s efforts at restoring the economy to “good shape”.

The President’s address focused on the high cost of living and the immediate reforms needed to restore economic growth.

The country is witnessing depreciation of the cedi and rising cost of fuel, which are impacting negatively on food prices.

Before his address, the President had in the past few days, met cabinet and other interest groups on how best to improve and strengthen the fiscals.

The Cedi has seen a huge depreciation losing close to 50 per cent of its value since the beginning of the year.

Bloomberg rated the currency the worst-performing worldwide after considering a basket of 148 currencies worldwide.

Currently, inflation stands at 37.2 per cent while Producer Price Inflation has risen to 45.5 per cent, reducing purchasing power for many.

On Saturday, October 29, Ghanaians started paying more for commercial transportation following a 19 per cent increase by the Ghana Private Road Transport Union.

Currently, diesel and petrol are selling for over GH¢19 and GH¢16 respectively at major fuel pumps; a situation transport operators said was eroding their profit.

Worker unions are also demanding better working conditions.

Meanwhile, there are ongoing discussions between the government of Ghana and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a US$ 3 million bailout to fix the economy.

Ghana-IMF negotiations: Ministry of Finance cautions against falsehoods

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IMAGE COPYRIGHT / AFP/

The Ministry of Finance (MoF) has cautioned the public against the spread of falsehoods and misrepresentations, which is weakening national efforts to ensure macroeconomic stability.

Such publications come amid the ongoing negotiations between the Government and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for the Fund’s loan support programme to help Ghana navigate through the current economic hardship.

The publications include the allegation that the Ghana-IMF negotiations is not going well, there is no programme for consideration by the IMF and that there are inaccuracies in the figures presented to the IMF by the Government

However, in a statement issued and copied to Ghana News Agency on Sunday, the Ministry said the spread of falsehoods and misrepresentations, which was gaining notoriety in various recent public discourse was untrue.

“We caution that such falsehoods contribute to the erosion of stability in the Ghanaian economy and could unduly hold back the strong progress of negotiations so far,” the Ministry said.

It, therefore, urged all who engage in public discourse on the current state of the economy and the IMF negotiation, particularly journalists, to verify claims related to the ongoing IMF negotiations from  official dedicated websites.

“Well-meaning Ghanaians are entreated to disregard false narratives, and instead refer to official communications from the Ministry of Finance and the IMF,” the statement read.

It also called to the use of “responsible in utterances related to the IMF negotiations,” and assured that the Government is working assiduously to complete negotiations and restore the economy to macroeconomic stability.

Referring to publications of the IMF on negotiations done so far, the Ministry said among others that constructive discussions on policies aimed at restoring macroeconomic stability had been made.

It also noted that “good progress” had been made in identifying specific policies that would help restore macroeconomic stability, with both the IMF team and the Ghanaian authorities still being fully committed to reaching agreement on a framework and policies for an IMF by the end of 2022.

On the issue of figures presented to the IMF as part of Debt Sustainability Analysis, and for a possible loan facility, it said, “None but accurate figures have been presented to the IMF; and the Ministry has been fully transparent at all times.”

“The Ghanaian negotiation team remains credible and highly respected and has enjoyed great cooperation from the IMF. To suggest otherwise is false, misleading and pure mischief which must be ignored,” the statement emphasised.

 

President announces measures to curb economic downturn

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Government Sunday announced sweeping measures to curb the rising cost of living, especially fuel and food, to boost the country’s faltering economic growth.

In a televised address to bring the country up to speed on the economy, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo outlined with optimism a raft of new measures, which he said would break the pace of the current economic downturn.

The actions include improvement in revenue collection from the current tax-revenue to GDP ratio of 13 percent to between 18 to 20 percent, review of the reforms in the energy sector, capping of statutory funds, implementation of the exemptions Act, and a new property rate regime.

He said the Government would also continue with the policy of 30 percent cut in the salaries of political office holders, including the President, Vice President, Ministers, Deputy Ministers, Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives, and State-owned Enterprises appointees in 2023, as well 30 percent cut in discretionary expenditures of Ministries, Departments and Agencies.

The plan also targets a reduction of total public debt to GDP ratio to some 55 percent by 2028, with the servicing of external debt pegged at not more than 18 per cent of the country’s annual revenue also by 2028.

It would also prioritise imports, and review the management of foreign exchange reserves in relation to imports of products such as rice, poultry, vegetable oil, toothpicks, pasta, fruit juice, bottled water and ceramic tiles, and others.

The President said with intensified government support and that of the banking sector, the above could be manufactured and produced in sufficient quantities in the country.

The measures also seek to sanitise the foreign exchange market to ensure that banks and forex bureaus operate along international best practices, to make the market more resilient against external vulnerabilities.

Those measures were adopted after a cabinet retreat that was necessitated by soaring food prices, steep depreciation of the Cedi, and the rising cost of fuel, sparking public outcry for an improved economy.

Following the economic shocks, the government applied for three-billion-dollar support programme from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to enable the country deal with balance of payment, stem the depreciation of the Cedi and generally help stabilise the economy and put it back on a firm trajectory of growth.

President Akufo-Addo in the address stated that the government was working to secure reliable and regular sources of affordable petroleum products for the Ghanaian market.

He said the arrangement, when successful, coupled with a stable currency would halt the escalation of fuel prices and “bring relief to us all.”

The President also called on Ghanaians to patronise goods and produce made in the country to reduce imports, which would subsequently bring down the pressure on the Cedi.

“We must work to ensure that the majority of goods in our shops and market places are those we produce and grow here in Ghana. That is why we have to support our farmers and domestic industries, including those created under the 1-District-1-Factory initiative, to help reduce our dependence on imports, and allow us the opportunity to export more and more of our products, and guarantee a stable currency that will present a high level of predictability for citizens and the business community.

“We must, as a matter of urgent national security, reduce our dependence on imported goods, and enhance our self-reliance, as demanded by our overarching goal of creating a Ghana Beyond Aid,” he stressed.

President Akufo-Addo made a passionate appealed to market women and traders to stop the arbitrary increase of prices of foodstuffs and goods for fear of future higher cost.

“I hear from the market queens also that another factor fueling the high prices is the high margins that some traders are slapping on goods for fear of future higher costs. I say to our traders, we are all in this together. Please let us be measured in the margins we seek.

“I have great respect and admiration for the ingenuity and hard work of our traders, especially those that take on the distribution of foodstuffs around the country, and I would hesitate to join in calling them names. I do make a heartfelt appeal that we all keep an eye out for the greater good, and not try to make the utmost profits out of the current difficulties,” he pleaded.

The President also warned that the organs of State would rein in speculators, whose false narratives on social media, predicting a reduction in the interest to be gained on their investments in Government bonds and treasury bills,  had led to the further deprecation of the Cedi.

“All of us can play a part in helping to strengthen the Cedi by having confidence in the currency and avoiding speculation. Let us keep our Cedi as the good store of value it is.

“To those who make it a habit of publishing falsehoods, which result in panic in the system, I say to them that the relevant State agencies will act against such persons. ”

“I also want to assure all Ghanaians that no individual or institutional investor, including pension funds, in Government treasury bills or instruments will lose their money, as a result of our ongoing IMF negotiations.

“There will be no ‘haircuts’, so I urge all of you to ignore the false rumours, just as, in the banking sector clean-up, Government ensured that the 4.6 million depositors affected by the exercise did not lose their deposits,” he assured.

The President urged all to lend support to the reforms that the government would be implementing on the long to short term to put the nation’s economic health on an even keel.

“It is obvious, fellow Ghanaians, that you have a government that cares. We are determined to restore stability to the economy and provide relief. We are all in this together, and I am asking for your support to rescue Ghana from the throes of this economic crisis.

“I believe we can, and we will find the means to achieve these goals, even if the immediate measures we have to take are painful.

“I have total confidence in our ability to work our way out of our current difficulties. We are not afraid of hard work.  We will triumph, as we have triumphed many times before.

“Let us unite, and rally around our Republic, its institutions and its democratic values, and insist that, under God, we will emerge victorious from our current difficulties. For this too shall pass, as the Battle is the Lord’s,” he said.

GNA