Tag: Ghana

  • Ghana rolls out HIV self-testing kit

    Ghana rolls out HIV self-testing kit

    Ghana has launched an HIV Self-Testing, HIVST, programme. This initiative aims to empower Ghanaians with the ability to check their HIV status in the comfort and privacy of their homes.

    Among the various options available under this programme, one notable method is the oral HIV self-test. With this approach, individuals can swab their upper and lower gums using a specialised oral swab.

    The swab is then immersed in a test tube solution, and within 20 minutes, the test results are revealed. A single line indicates a negative result, while two lines indicate a reactive result.

    However, it’s crucial to note that if the test yields a reactive result, it must be confirmed at a health facility to ensure accuracy and proper follow-up care.

    According to the Ghana Aids Commission, there are currently more than 350,000 people living with HIV in the country. Shockingly, only 71% of them are aware of their HIV status.

    By offering an easy and confidential way to know one’s HIV status, this programme is poised to play a vital role in reducing new infections and enhancing overall public health in the country.

    The launch of this innovative program underscores Ghana’s commitment to combating HIV and promoting the well-being of its citizens

     

  • U-23 AFCON: Morocco, Guinea progress to semi-final, Ghana, Congo crash out

    U-23 AFCON: Morocco, Guinea progress to semi-final, Ghana, Congo crash out

    Host Morocco have scaled through to the next round of the U23 AFCON after defeating Congo 1-0 on Friday at Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium in Rabat.

    Morocco’s left-winger Younes Taha netted the first goal, giving his team a head start in the match.

    U-23 Atlas Lions Led Group A with a total of six points. In their U23 AFCON campaign opener, the Moroccan team secured a thrilling last-minute 2-1 victory against Guinea on Saturday, showcasing their resilience.

    They followed it up with a dominant display of their attacking prowess in the second match, overwhelming Ghana with a convincing 5-1 triumph on Tuesday.

    While the Atlas Lions found themselves trailing at halftime, they turned the tide in the second half by capitalizing on two penalty kicks, expertly converted by FC Barcelona player Abde Ezzalzouli.

    Ezzalzouli, who recently made waves with the senior national team in the World Cup as well, proved instrumental in the team’s success. Currently, the Atlas Lions are on an impressive five-game winning streak and have their sights set firmly on reaching the knockout phase.

    Ghana’s Black Meteors have crashed out of the 2023 U-23 AFCON in Morocco after a 1-1 draw in their final Group A game against Guinea on Friday night.

    The result means the Black Meteors will not be at next year’s Paris Olympic Games.

    The Black Meteors went into the game on the back of a 5-1 loss to hosts Morocco and needed a win to progress to the semi-finals.

    Morocco, on nine points, topped the group, Guinea claimed second place with four points and edged third-placed Black Meteors on better goal difference.

    The first three teams of the tournament will represent Africa at next year’s Olympic game holding in Paris, France.

     

  • U23 AFCON: How Morocco, Ghana recorded fascinating wins in group A opener

    U23 AFCON: How Morocco, Ghana recorded fascinating wins in group A opener

    Host Morocco came from a goal deficit to defeat Guinea 2-1 In the opening game of  the  U23 AFCON which kicked off on Saturday 24th of June in Morocco.

    Guinea had the best chances in the first half. And it was only logical that the Guineans should open the scoring in the dying moments of the 1st half. Algassime Bah (45+2) punished the Moroccans. The Moroccans had not managed a single shot in the first half. Too few to worry the Guineans.

    However, the first shot hit the target. Morocco equalised with their first shot of the game when Ez Abde won a penalty (1-1, 68′). From then on, the chances kept coming for the Atlas Cubs. It paid off when Abde doubled the lead from the penalty spot (90+7). Guinea thought they had equalised but Oularé’s goal (90+10) was disallowed.

    Similarly, the Ghanaians U23 side defeated Congo DR 3-2 to go joint top of group A with Morocco.

    Ibrahim Tanko put forward his best foot by naming a strong line-up that had Ibrahim Danlad, Emmanuel Essiam, Fatawu Issahaku, Daniel Afriyieh Barnieh and Nuamah.

    Congo got more comfortable as the minutes ticked and tested Danlad twice after creating the better openings as the first half ended goalless.

    Tanko’s early changes in the second half, though, proved to be a masterstroke, with Yeboah, who replaced Barnieh, immediately setting up Nuamah for the opening goal.

    In a captivating  encounter in Rabat, the Black Meteors of Ghana emerged victorious, although they faced nail-biting moments in the dying minutes when Congo mounted an impressive comeback from a 3-0 deficit to score two late goals.

    Ghana will return to action on Tuesday with a crucial Group A clash against hosts Morocco, while Congo Brazzaville will also take on Guinea in the day’s second match.

    The first three countries will represent Africa at the 2024 Olympic games in Paris France.

  • Ghana’s famous author, Ama Ata Aidoo dies at 81

    Ghana’s famous author, Ama Ata Aidoo dies at 81

    One of Africa’s most celebrated authors and playwrights, Ghanaian Ama Ata Aidoo, has died aged 81, the BBC reports.

    In a statement, her family said “Our beloved relative and writer” passed away after a short illness, requesting privacy to allow them to grieve.

    A renowned feminist, she honoured and illustrated the plight of African women in works like Changes, Our Sister Killjoy, and The Dilemma of a Ghost.

    She resisted the “Western stereotype that the African woman is a downtrodden wretch.”

    She also served as education minister in the early 1980s but resigned when she could not make education free.

    Ata Aidoo, a professor at a university, received numerous literary honours, including the 1992 Commonwealth Writers Prize for Changes, a love story about a statistician who marries into a polygamous union after divorcing her first spouse.

    Her work, including plays like Anowa, has been read in schools across West Africa, along with works of other greats like Wole Soyinka and Chinua Achebe.

  • Ghana raises electricity tariffs by more than 18%

    Ghana raises electricity tariffs by more than 18%

    Ghana utility regulator on Wednesday said the average end-user tariff for electricity has been increased by 18.36 per cent for the second quarter of 2023.

    According to the regulator, Ghana had previously added almost 30 per cent tariff in the first quarter.

    The West African country is grappling with soaring inflation, debt, and a depreciating currency that pushed it to the brink of default.

    It has sought support from the International Monetary Fund, which is expected to approve the first loan tranche of a three billion dollars package on Wednesday.

    The Public Utilities Regulatory Commission said the tariff hike was due to the net effect of further currency depreciation, inflation, and an increase in the cost of gas.

    “Utility companies are under-covering and require an upward adjustment of their rates in order to keep the lights on,” it added, noting that the potential for outages was high.

  • DR. Mrs. Winifred Awosika AYSC Trophy Tour heads to Eldoret and Nairobi in Kenya

    DR. Mrs. Winifred Awosika AYSC Trophy Tour heads to Eldoret and Nairobi in Kenya

    The first of its kind, the Pan African Youth Scrabble Championship Trophy Tour which began in Accra, Ghana on Sunday will be heading to two Kenyan cities of Eldoret and Nairobi on Friday.
    A very elated President of the Pan African Scrabble Association (PANASA), Adekoyejo Adegbesan, said, “I’m leaving Accra the Ghanian capital a very happy and satisfied man because of the way the Dr. Mrs. Winifred Awosika AYSC Trophy Tour went.
    The Dr. Mrs. Winifred Awosika AYSC Trophy was received on arrival at the Kotoka International Airport, Accra, Ghana by the Scrabble fraternity in Ghana led by the President of Scrabble Association of Ghana (SAG), Haruna Adamu.
    On the second day of the Trophy Tour, Monday a mini scrabble tournament was held in Tema, in honour of the former World Scrabble Champion, Wellington Jighere who was part of the tour delegation.
    It was the turn of top Ghanaian Government officials led by that country’s Minister of Youth and Sports Honourable Mustapha Ussif and his Deputy and the Deputy general of Ghana Sports Authority among other notable sporting figures to receive the Trophy.
    On Wednesday and Thursday the Trophy Tour took the Pan African Scrabble Association delegation (PANASA) to some selected schools before closing the day at the Ghana Olympic Committee (GOC) where they met with the President, Ben Nunoo Mensah.
    Besides the Trophy Tour, the PANASA President, Adekoyejo Adegbesan, used the meeting with the Ghana Olympic Committee boss, Ben Nunoo Mensah and the Chairman of the Local Organizing Committee of the All African Games, Ofosu Asare, to drum up the call for both the French and English version of the game of Scrabble to feature as a demonstration sport during the 2024 All African Games that Ghana is hosting.
    From Accra, the Dr. Mrs. Winifred Awosika AYSC Trophy Tour will be heading to Eldoret and Nairobi in Kenya for the second leg of its African tour on Friday.
    Already, the sporting authority and the Scrabble family in that East African State have concluded all the needed and necessary arrangements for a hitch free and equally exciting Trophy Tour starting with the city of Eldoret.
    Eldoret is a renown city of sporting legends, champions, heros and heroines like David Rudisha, Kipchoge Keino, Leah Mallot, Eliud Kipchoge and recently the London marathon crowned king Kevin Kiptum.
    On arrival the President of PANASA, Adekoyejo Adegbesan and the former World Champion, Wellington Jighere, will be received at the Eldoret International Airport by Uasin Gishu County Government Officials accompanied by the President Scrabble Kenya Kipkemboi Limo and the host John Sang.
    The delegation will proceed to the Uasin Gishu County Government (UCG) headquarters for signing of visitor’s book and breakfast courtesy of Uasin Gishu County Government.
    From there, the PANASA delegation will proceed to the venue of the Eldoret International Scrabble Tournament in company of the Uasin Gishu County Governor Jonathan Chelilim and the Kenya Sports Minister Engineer Lucy Njoroge.
    Top wordsmith from Kenya, Uganda, Liberia and Nigeria led by two time African Champion, Wellington Jighere will be competing for honours at Eldoret Tournament which is part of the AYSC Trophy Tour that will be taking round some selected schools in Eldoret.
    The Dr. Mrs. Winifred Awosika AYSC Trophy Tour of Eldoret will start on 5th and end and the 7th of May, 2023 before the Trophy Tour caravan move into Nairobi the Kenyan capital.
    Liberia, Uganda and host Nigeria are the other countries that the AYSC Trophy will tour before the start of the Inaugural edition of the Pan African Youth Scrabble Championship holding at the Chrisland School Idimu-Lagos, Nigeria between the 24th and 28th of August, 2023.
    Over a hundred and twenty children from 12 African countries are expected to compete for honours in two categories, U-15 and U-19 Championships with princely prizes on offer.
  • Ghana first to approve Oxford’s malaria vaccine

    Ghana first to approve Oxford’s malaria vaccine

    Ghana on Thursday said it is the first country in the world to approve a new malaria vaccine from Oxford University, with children under the age of three-years-old in line to benefit.

    The mosquito-borne disease kills more than 600,000 people each year, most of them children in Africa, and scientists have been trying for years to develop vaccines.

    It is unclear when the Oxford vaccine will be rolled out in Ghana.

    Childhood vaccines in Africa are typically paid for by international organisations such as Gavi and UNICEF after they have been backed by the World Health Organisation (WHO), which is still assessing the vaccine’s safety and effectiveness.

    However, Oxford scientist, Adrian Hill said Ghana’s drug regulator has approved it for the age group at highest risk of death from malaria, children aged 5 months to 36 months.

    It has a deal with Serum Institute of India to produce up to 200 million doses annually.

    This is the first time a major vaccine has been approved first in an African country ahead of rich nations, Hill said.

    It was unusual that a regulatory authority in Africa had reviewed the data quicker than the WHO, he added.

    “Particularly since COVID, African regulators have been taking a much more proactive stance, they’ve been saying…we don’t want to be last in the queue,’’ Hill said.

    The first malaria vaccine, Mosquirix from British drugmaker GSK (GSK.L), was endorsed by the WHO in 2022 after decades of work.

    However, lack of funding and commercial potential thwarted the company’s capacity to produce as many dose as needed.

    GSK has committed to produce up to 15 million doses of Mosquirix every year through 2028, well under the roughly 100 million doses a year of the four-dose vaccine the WHO says is needed long-term to cover around 25 million children.

    Ghana, Kenya and Malawi were all involved in the pilot programme for the roll-out of Mosquirix, and have begun rolling it out more widely in recent months.

    Since it began in 2019, 1.2 million children across the three countries have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

    Meanwhile, the WHO said in march that in the areas where the vaccine has been given, all-cause child mortality has dropped by 10 per cent, a sign of its impact.

    Mid-stage data from the Oxford vaccine trial involving more than 400 young children was published in a medical journal in September.

    While the vaccine effectiveness was 80 per cent in the group that received a higher dose of the immune-boosting adjuvant component of the vaccine, and 70 per cent in the lower-dose adjuvant group, at 12 months following the fourth dose.

    The doses were administered ahead of the of peak malaria season in Burkina Faso.

    Data from an ongoing phase III clinical trial in Burkina Faso, Kenya, Mali and Tanzania that has enrolled 4,800 children is expected to be published in a medical journal in the coming months.

    However, late-stage data, which suggests a similar vaccine performance as in the phase II trial has been shared with regulatory authorities over the last six months, Hill said.

  • Kamala Harris pledges $1B to advance Ghana women’s economic participation, Nigeria misses

    Kamala Harris pledges $1B to advance Ghana women’s economic participation, Nigeria misses

    U.S. Vice President, Kamala Harris, announced Wednesday in Ghana a $1 billion initiative to improve women’s economic empowerment in Africa as she wrapped up the first leg of her tour of the continent.

    Harris’ office unveiled the program, largely funded by the private sector, in the capital Accra. The U.S. vice president then left Ghana for Tanzania.

    Scheduled to last until April 2, her tour of Ghana, Tanzania and Zambia comes on the heels of a December U.S.-Africa summit in Washington, D.C., where President Joe Biden called for a broad partnership with Africa as the U.S. seeks to assert its presence on the continent in the face of growing influence from China and Russia.

    Harris has already announced several aid packages, including $139 million for economic and cultural development in Ghana and a $100 million investment in coastal West African countries facing the risk of spillover jihadist violence from the Sahel.

    Kamala Harris pledges $1B to advance Ghana women's economic participation, Nigeria misses

    The African Women’s Economic Empowerment Initiative includes nearly $400 million from the private sector “to help bridge the gender digital divide.”

    “Improving the economic status of women and girls is not only a matter of human rights, justice and equity, it is also a strategic imperative that reduces poverty and promotes sustainable economic growth,” the U.S. vice president’s office said.

    More than $500 million, again from the private sector, will also be used to support women’s economic empowerment in Africa, the statement said.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that on Tuesday, the vice president called for more investment in innovation in Africa, particularly in the digital economy, good governance and democracy.

    “We’re all-in on Africa,” she added, repeating the words of Joe Biden during the U.S.-Africa summit last year.

    Ms. Harris is expected later this week in Zambia, the last stop on her Africa tour.

  • Fans disappointed as Wizkid is spotted in Ghana during Nigeria’s presidential election

    Fans disappointed as Wizkid is spotted in Ghana during Nigeria’s presidential election

    Fans of popular Afrobeats singer, Ayodeji Ibrahim Balogun, aka Wizkid, have expressed their disappointment in him after he was spotted attending an event while elections are ongoing in his country.

    The presidential election was held in Nigeria on the 25th of February, 2023, with some states still carrying out the process.

    Nigerians have expressed disappointment in their favourite celebrities who kept mute during the elections.

    Fans of wizkid also lamented bitterly on how the singer was uninvolved in the process as a viral video captures him at an event in Ghana.

    It was gathered that the “Joro” singer was at KillBeatz (a Ghanaian music producer) mum’s burial.

    Fans disappointed as Wizkid is spotted in Ghana during Nigeria's presidential election

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that Wizkid is a prominent figure in the modern-day Afrobeats music scene.

    He is regarded as one of the biggest and most influential African artists of all time.[4][5] He began recording music at the age of 11 and released a collaborative album with the Glorious Five (5), a group he and a couple of his church friends formed.

    In 2009, Wizkid signed a record deal with Banky W’s Empire Mates Entertainment (E.M.E). He later rose to the limelight after releasing “Holla at Your Boy”, the lead single from his debut studio album, Superstar (2011), which also spawned the singles “Tease Me/Bad Guys” and “Don’t Dull”.

    In September 2014, he released the self-titled second studio album, Ayo. The album was supported by six singles, including the song “Jaiye Jaiye”. Wizkid left E.M.E. after his contract expired. In 2016, Wizkid achieved international recognition following his collaboration with Drake on the hit single “One Dance”, which reached number-one on the US Billboard Hot 100 and topped the charts in 14 additional countries.

    The song broke multiple records, making Wizkid the first Afrobeats artist to appear in the Guinness World Records.

    In March 2017, he signed a multi-album deal with RCA Records; and released his third studio album Sounds from the Other Side, later that year. The album was supported by five singles, including “Come Closer” featuring Drake.

    In 2018, he was featured on the song “Checklist” by Normani and Calvin Harris, which reached number-one on the Billboard World Digital Song Sales chart.

    The following year, he was featured on Beyoncé’s project The Lion King: The Gift on the single “Brown Skin Girl”, which also reached number-one on the World Digital Song Sales chart, and won him a Grammy Award for Best Music Video.

    In October 2020, he released his fourth album, Made in Lagos, which received commercial success and acclaim,[8] reaching number-one on the Billboard World Album Chart.

    The album includes the single “Essence” featuring Tems, which became the first Nigerian song to chart on the Billboard Hot 100, and reached the top ten following a remix released by Justin Bieber. Wizkid’s fifth album More Love, Less Ego was released on 11 November 2022.

    By February 2021, Wizkid was the most-streamed Nigerian artist of all time on Spotify, with over 3.4 billion streams across all credits.

  • Egypt 2023: Senegal book quarter-final place, beat Mozambique 3-0

    Egypt 2023: Senegal book quarter-final place, beat Mozambique 3-0

    The Junior Teranga lions of  Senegal have a booked a place in the Quarter-final of the 2023 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations with a dominant 3-0 victory over Mozambique on Wednesday.

    Pape Amadou Diallo opened scoring for Senegal in the 45 minute of the encounter to register a first half win.

    Upon resumption in the second half, Pape Demba Diop scored in the 54th minute before  Pape Amadou Diallo  registered his second of the day.

    Mozambique, with a point from their two games, will likely need to defeat Nigeria on Saturday to have any chance of joining Senegal in the quarterfinals.

    The Senegalese team were labeled favorites to win the competition and continue to live up to expectations, as they already grabbed  a last eight ticket.

    The Senegalese would have to surmount their Quarter-final ticket to book a place in the U-20 World Cup holding in Indonesia in May.

    Host Egypt and Nigeria will battle for the second group A encounter as both teams will be hoping to secure the runners – up position in the group.

    Four teams who would make the semi-finals of the tournament will represent Africa at the U-20 World Cup holding in the Asian country of Indonesia.

    Ghana remains the only African country to have won the U-20 world Cup.

    Tetteh led the Ghana U20 team to success in Egypt, beating Brazil in the finals on penalties to claim the global title in 2009.