Tag: Ghana

  • Remains of Black Stars player, Christian Atsu return to Ghana

    Remains of Black Stars player, Christian Atsu return to Ghana

    The remains of former Ghana international footballer, Christian Atsu, who died in a devastating earthquake in Turkey, are being flown home, the country’s foreign ministry said on Sunday.

    According to Ghana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, the remains are accompanied by his family and Ghana’s Ambassador to Turkey on a Turkish airlines flight.

    The remains will arrive in Accra at 7:40 p.m. today Sunday, 19th February, 2023, the ministry disclosed in a statement.

    The statement reads: “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration hereby informs that the Government of Ghana is making arrangements to receive the mortal remains of the late Christian Atsu, a former Black Stars player.

    “The remains will be accompanied by his family and Ghana’s Ambassador to Türkiye on a Turkish airlines flight and will arrive in Accra at 7:40 p.m. today Sunday, 19th February, 2023.

    “The remains will be received at the Kotoka International Airport by the family, the Ghana Football Association (GFA), and the Government upon its arrival from Istanbul, Türkiye.

    “Our thoughts and prayers are with the bereaved family, and we pray for the eternal repose of the soul of Christian Atsu”.

  • SAD: Ghanaian footballer, Christian Atsu found dead in Turkey

    SAD: Ghanaian footballer, Christian Atsu found dead in Turkey

    Ghanaian footballer Christian Atsu has been found dead under the building where he lived in southern Turkey, following last week’s massive earthquake.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the ex-Chelsea winger’s Turkish agent made the disclosure on Saturday.

    “Atsu’s lifeless body was found under the rubble,” Murat Uzunmehmet told reporters in Hatay, where the athlete’s body was found.

    “Currently, more items are still being taken out. His phone was also found,” Uzunmehmet added.

    Atsu had been scheduled to fly out of southern Turkey hours before the quake.

    But Hatayspor’s manager said on Friday the Ghanaian opted to stay with the club after scoring the game-winning goal in a Feb. 5 Super Lig match.

  • [LISTEN] ‘Biggest highlight in my career’ – Sarkodie on feature with Bob Marley

    [LISTEN] ‘Biggest highlight in my career’ – Sarkodie on feature with Bob Marley

    Ghanaian rapper, Sarkodie has shared he’s excited about his collaboration with Bob Marley and the Wailers band on a new rendition of late Bob Marley’s classic “Stir it Up” released in 1973.

    The Adonai artiste disclosed that the project is the biggest highlight in his music journey.

    He tweeted: “Finally, we get to share with the World. Definitely, my biggest highlight in my music journey, big honour. Friday, we enjoy this.”

    Fellow Ghanaian artiste, Shatta Wale reacted to the new song by saying ‘We have someone who can feature a ghost’.

    Listen to the song:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cd_EyS62OE4

  • Asake and Stefflon Don spotted partying at club in Ghana

    Asake and Stefflon Don spotted partying at club in Ghana

    Afropop music star, Asake, and British singer, Stefflon Don, has sparked reactions online as they were spotted having a good time at a club in Ghana.

    You may recall that Stefflon Don and the Grammy Award-winning singer, Burna Boy had dated for some time till they parted ways in 2021.

    Recent filming has captured Asake and Stefflon Don having a cozy time at a club that has set tongues wagging.

    Some have wondered whether the two are now together, or whether it was just a casual meet-up.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that a series of Instagram posts from the couple in February 2019 revealed their relationship was official.

    See netizens reactions below:

    _pattyliciouz wrote: “Na why Burna dey vex anyhow last night”

    agirlnamed_esther wrote; “She’s burna’s ex so she can’t chill again? Orishirishi”

    hadefunke wrote: “E be lyk say na why ODOGWU dae para for everybody”

    _blakkout00 wrote: “I see y burna boy Dey vex for hin fans yesterday”

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) recalls that in 2018, Stefflon missed her flight, she watched Burna Boy perform at an event in Ghana, and they fall in love.

    Asake and Stefflon Don spotted partying at club in Ghana

    “I met him in Ghana. I was in Africa for a show then I missed my flight, he had a show where he performed and I went to the show and the rest is history baby. He told me I was going to be his wife and you know how boys always talk s***, but I didn’t remember he said that but he told me and I was like wow,” she said.

    Burna even spoke about having kids with Steff “It’s not the business part of us, it’s our life. I’m trying to make it right because I don’t want to bring a kid into this life and everyone is disturbing the kid, wondering what Stefflon Don and Burna Boy’s kids are doing. I want to raise a kid the way I was raised.”

  • AFROCHELLA: How Ayra Starr fell on her back while performing in Ghana (VIDEO)

    AFROCHELLA: How Ayra Starr fell on her back while performing in Ghana (VIDEO)

    Mavin Records singer, Oyinkansola Sarah Aderibigbe, known professionally as Ayra Starr, has reacted after falling on her back while performing at the Afrochella Festival in Ghana.

    The Afrochella Experience celebrates Africa’s diverse culture and the vibrant work of African creatives & entrepreneurs; this year’s edition was themed “Afrofuturism.”

    While performing at the festival, Ayra Starr slipped and fell on her back while trying to give her fans an energetic show.
    AFROCHELLA: How Ayra Starr fell on her back while performing in Ghana (VIDEO)
    She, however, stood on her feet almost immediately and continued the show as if nothing happened.

    Taken to Twitter to express the painful experience, the self-acclaimed celestial being encouraged the organizers to take the cleaning of the stage more seriously.

    “Afrochella next time y’all should clean your stage after every artist performance, that fall was very unnecessary and painful,” she wrote.

    Watch the video below

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that Ayra Starr was born in Cotonou, Benin and began a fashion career at the age of 16 with Quove Model Management before deciding to pursue her musical career properly.

    After covering several songs by popular artists on Instagram, she posted her first original song on her page in December 2019. This brought her to the attention of record executive Don Jazzy and led to her signing to Mavin Records.
    AFROCHELLA: How Ayra Starr fell on her back while performing in Ghana (VIDEO)
    In early 2021, Ayra Starr achieved mainstream recognition with her eponymous debut extended play and its hit track “Away” which spent two consecutive weeks at number four on Nigeria’s TurnTable Top 50 and went to number 17 on US Billboard Top Triller Global, paving the way for the release of her first full-length mixtape, 19 & Dangerous in August 2021.

    Categorized mainly as Afropop and R’nB, the album has been met with favorable critical reception. It spawned two top forty hits in Nigeria. The lead single “Bloody Samaritan” peaked atop the Top 50 chart, becoming the first solo song by a female artist to reach the number-one position.

    Ayra Starr debuted on Pandora Predictions chart, and on 28 August 2021, she ranked number two on Billboard’s Next Big Sound.

    Watch video of Ayra Starr’s falling
    https://twitter.com/i/status/1608357385067794434

  • BAN: Ghana Police says no going back on sanction on alarmist new year prophecies

    BAN: Ghana Police says no going back on sanction on alarmist new year prophecies

    The Ghana Police Service has restated the ban on alarmist new year prophecies.

    The West African country’s police which banned what it described as “misleading” new year prophecies in churches which it said could cause panic and are likely to endanger lives in 2021, said in a statement released today, December 27, that the ban is still in place.

    Ghana police spokesperson Grace Ansah-Akrofi said in a statement;

    “A year ago today, December 27, 2021, the Ghana police service drew the attention of the general public, especially members of the religious community to the law regarding the communication of prophecies, and urged compliance to the law to ensure continuous security and law and order in the country.

    “We wish to commend the public, particularly religious groups, for their cooperation over the period by being circumspect and conscious of the law and adopting legally acceptable means of communicating prophecies to those affected.

    “This has contributed greatly to creating an environment where people are able to freely profess their faith without unnecessary anxiety and fear of impending harm or death.

    “Ghana is indeed grateful to the religious leaders in particular and the religious community as a whole for their patriotic understanding of the situation.

    “As the year 2022 draws to a close, we wish to once again entreat the general public, especially faith-based groups, to ensure continuous compliance with the law as it relates to the communication of prophecies.

    “Let us continue to remember that whereas we have the right to practise our faith in religion, freedom of worship and speech, this right must not be exercised in violation of the rights of others and the public interest.”

  • Qatar 2022: Ghana shoot down South Korea 3-2 to revive qualification hopes

    Qatar 2022: Ghana shoot down South Korea 3-2 to revive qualification hopes

    Ghana’s chances of making it to the second round of the Mundial received a major boost after the Black Stars defeated South Korea in a thrilling encounter in group H.

    The Blacks stars led 2-0 in the first half but found a way to conspire to concede two goals to put scores at 2-2 later on in the game.

    The luck soon smiled on the Ghanaians after regained the lead after a second-half fightback from South Korea.

    The 2010 quarterfinalists impressed in an opening 3-2 defeat against Portugal and went in front in the 24th minute when defender Mohammed Salisu swept home Jordan Ayew’s curling free-kick.

    Ghana had another 10 minutes later after

    Ayew whipped in another superb delivery from the left and Ajax man, Kudus connected to it and headed in  Ghana’s second goal of the encounter.

    South Korea began an onslaught against the Ghanaians shortly after the break, and it soon paid off with quick goals from Cho Gue-sung.

    However, Ghana regained the lead in the 68th minute when Kudus side-footed home his second after a mis-kick from Inaki Williams saw Gideon Mensah’s cross reach him inside 68th minute.

    Gideon Mensah cuts it back from the left flank, Inaki Williams mis-kicks in the middle and the ball falls to Mohammed Kudus, who side-foots it home with his left foot for his second goal of the game.

    Recall that Ghana lost to Portugal in the first game against of the group by 3-2.

    Ghana has cored five goals so far in the competition.

    The Black Stars will face South American side Uruguay in the last group H game next week.

     

  • Queen Nanny: Ghanaian woman who led liberation army in Jamaica – By Owei Lakemfa

    Queen Nanny: Ghanaian woman who led liberation army in Jamaica – By Owei Lakemfa

    NANNY, a young Akan woman from present day Ghana, born about 1686 was captured with her four brothers and sold into slavery. They were taken on ‘The Journey of No Return’ across the Atlantic Ocean, becoming part of the 12.5 million Africans forced on this journey by Europeans and Americans who wanted free labour to exploit for profit.

    Unlike the 1.8 million others who perished during this journey and had their bodies fed to the roaring ocean waves, Nanny, who was to become known as “Nanny of the Maroons,” and her brothers, survived the ordeal and arrived in Jamaica.

    They later  escaped from the slave plantations and fled into the mountains and jungles of Jamaica to become Maroons. This was the name for escaped slaves who banded together and fought for freedom, initially for themselves and eventually for various Latin American and  Caribbean countries, including Jamaica.

    The names of slaves, in almost all cases, were lost. This was part of the depersonalization and dehumanisation of the slave, who was forced to forget the past and live entirely at the pleasure of the slave owner, who exercised the power of life or death on his “property. So it is not unlikely that her original name was not Nanny. This was most likely a corruption of the name Maame, which means mother in Twi. This would have been preferred to the names given her by the slave masters.

    By the mid-1550s, there were already escaped slaves in the Caribbean, who, with no way of finding their way back home to their loved ones, banded together to fight the slave owners and establish their own communities. In Jamaica, as in some other countries, these freedom fighters were called Maroons.

    The word, “maroon” was derived from the Spanish word “Cimarron,” which was originally used for runaway cattle. Since African slaves were valued and treated no better than cattle, it came to be used  for escaped African slaves. Maroon communities were typically located among mountains and swamps, making slave owners and European countries’ raids difficult.

    They also provided safe bases for the Maroons to conduct raids on white plantations and organise guerrilla armies. They linked up with local Native Americans to defend the terrain. Today, Maroon communities still exist  in various North and South America countries like Venezuela, Brazil, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Suriname, Ecuador and the United States especially in the Carolina’s, Alabama, Florida and New Orleans areas. They also exist on islands in the Indian Ocean.

    After escaping from the plantations, Nanny and her brothers joined the Maroons. She later founded a Maroon village with one of her brothers, Quao, in the Blue Mountains in eastern Jamaica in 1720.  British Captain Stoddart said Nanny Town, was “situated on one of the highest mountains on the island” and found the only path leading to it, to be: “steep, rocky, and difficult, and not wide enough to admit the passage of two persons abreast.”

    This forced the invading army into a single file and an easy target for the Nanny fighters. This part of Jamaica was described as “Windward” and the inhabitants were known as “Windward Maroons.” The village became known as Nanny Town. The Maroons evolved their own traditional religious practices with West African influences.

    It was called Obeah. Nanny was a priestess, leader, and commander-in-chief of the rebel army who trained her soldiers in guerrilla warfare. She was so fierce in battle that the Europeans tried to pass her off as a myth created to rally the forces of the Maroons. But despite strenuous efforts, the Europeans could not force her off the history books.

    This is primarily because a ghost could not have been recorded by European writers; could not have been declared wanted with a bounty on her by the colonialists, nor could a myth had physically established two separate towns. Also, she organised and supervised the escape of about 1,000 slaves over a three-decade period and resettled them.

    The Queen Nanny rebels fought the British military for six years from 1728 until the latter, led by Commander Stoddard seized and destroyed Nanny Town in 1734. In fact, the British claimed that one of its mercenaries, Captain William Cuffee alias Captain Sambo, leading the “Black Shots,” killed Nanny in 1733 during the battle for the town.

    However, a year later, the same British reported that she was leading the Windward Maroons in a retreat westward. Eventually, she was reported to have led her troops to take refuge near the Rio Grande, one of the largest rivers in the country. The Maroons were making slavery costly and unsustainable and creating insecurity for the Europeans.

    These, coupled with the European powers’ inability to defeat them after 84 years of insurgency, led the British settlers in 1738 to call for a truce. The first peace treaty was signed with the Leeward or Western Maroons, led by Captain Cudjoe (Kojo), another Maroon of Ghanaian origin, in 1739.

    The other, was with the Windward Maroons on April 20, 1740. The agreement tried to limit Maroon attacks against slavery, and also protect the Maroons. For instance, Article Eight states that “if any White man shall do any manner of injury to Cudjoe, his successors, or any of his or their people, (the Maroon) shall apply to any commanding officer or magistrate in the neighbourhood for justice.

    Article Fourteen provided for  two White men as ambassadors to live with the Maroons: “in order to maintain a friendly correspondence with the inhabitants of this island.” This clearly could be used for espionage. However, the treaty, in  Article Three, gave 1,500 acres of Crown land to the Maroons.

    Nanny took possession of the 500 acres allotted to her and her followers in Portland Parish in 1740. There, she built the New Nanny Town, which still exists today as Moore Town. She died a decade later.  In 1781, the town bought an additional 500 acres of land. Ninety-nine years after the destruction of Nanny Town, slavery was abolished. Jamaica, 212 years after Nanny passed on, gained independence on August 6, 1962.

    The date the treaty was signed is observed as a national holiday. Her grave is regarded as a monument, and Jamaica’s $500 note bears her image. Also, the Jamaican Government in 1975, awarded  Queen Nanny the “Right Excellent” national medal, making her the only woman among the country’s seven National Heroes.

    Perhaps one more step the Jamaican government needs to take is to restore Nanny as the official name of the town. In about 1760 it had been renamed Moore Town after Governor Henry Moore. Nanny of the Maroons deservedly won her place in the pantheon of fighters for human freedom.

  • Qatar 2022: ‘My upbringing doesn’t permit me to disrespect elders’ – Ghana player on copying Ronaldo goal celebration

    Qatar 2022: ‘My upbringing doesn’t permit me to disrespect elders’ – Ghana player on copying Ronaldo goal celebration

    Ghana player Osman Bukari has claimed his celebration against Portugal was not a mark of disrespect.

    When Bukari netted in the latter stages of their World Cup clash to bring the score to 3-2 in Portugal’s favor, he celebrated in iconic fashion.

    Bukari copied the “Siu” celebration of Portugal star Cristiano Ronaldo, who had scored the opener in the game before being substituted.

    Post-game, he posted on Twitter stating: “I have noticed my celebration today has generated comments claiming I was disrespectful towards Ronaldo. This is incorrect.

    “I was overcome by the emotion of the moment of scoring for my country on my World Cup debut leading to my celebration.

    “My upbringing doesn’t permit me to be disrespectful to elders let alone one of my idols.

    “Thanks for your support and we focus on our next game.”

  • JUST IN: Ghana reverses travel advisory warning citizens against travelling to Abuja

    JUST IN: Ghana reverses travel advisory warning citizens against travelling to Abuja

    Ghana has reversed a travel advisory warning its citizens against travelling to Abuja, the federal capital territory (FCT) of Nigeria.

    Ghana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration said an earlier statement it released was unauthorised.

    In a statement reversing the travel advisory, the Ministry said it was not aware of any threat targeted at Ghanaians who continue to live in harmony with their Nigerian brothers and sisters in the FCT.

    The statement reads: “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration wishes to refer to the travel advisory published this evening, Wednesday 16′ November, 2022 advising against non-essential travel to Abuja and wishes to state that the statement was unauthorised.

    “The Ministry is not aware of any threat targeted at Ghanaians who continue to live in harmony with their Nigerian brothers and sisters.

    “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration regrets any inconvenience this may have caused to the travelling public”.

    The earlier statement released by Ghana’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration reads: “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration wishes to inform the travelling public about security developments in Abuja, Nigeria, and the subsequent directive by local authorities to hotels operating in residential buildings to shut down.

    “Accordingly, the public is advised to avoid non-essential travel to Abuja, due to the unpredictable security situation in the city, and the high danger of terrorism, criminality, inter-communal conflict, armed attacks, and kidnappings.

    “Whilst advising travellers who must travel out of necessity to Abuja to take precautionary measures, the Ministry will continue to monitor the situation and provide updates to the public when the situation improves”.

    https://twitter.com/moigovgh/status/1592926021535559680