Category: Features & Opinions

  • GUTA replies Nigerian govt on trade harassment- president of GUTA, Dr. Joseph Obeng.

    GUTA replies Nigerian govt on trade harassment- president of GUTA, Dr. Joseph Obeng.

    The Ghana Union of Traders Association (GUTA) has said the Nigerian Union of Association Ghana (NUTAG) has over the months fed their government with lies pertaining engagements in retail businesses in Ghana.

    According to the President of the Association, Dr Joseph Obeng, Ghana has never targeted any ECOWAS citizen who deals in goods and services produced in a member state.

    It only enforces the laws to deal with people who operate illegally in the country, Dr Obeng stated.

    “No particular country is a target in the enforcement of the law. However, it should be noted that Nigerians form about 80% of those who engage in the illegal retail trade.”

    He explained that the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) law is only to “discourage dumping of goods from countries outside the ECOWAS community, so as to boost local production and better the lot for the local manufacturer as well as grow and develop our local economy.”

    The Nigerian government has over the week said it can no longer tolerate the incessant harassment of its citizens in Ghana.
    This comes after several shops engaged in retail businesses without the necessary documents were closed down by the Trades Ministry’s Inter-Ministerial Task force in Accra, Kumasi and Koforidua.
    In Kumasi, over 90 shops suspected to be for Nigerians were closed down after the inspection by the Trades Task force. The Government of Ghana on the other hand has rejected the accusations made by Nigeria of intimidation and maltreatment of national in Ghana.

    Story by : Anita

                                   
  • Drop in the purchase of nose masks and face shield

    Drop in the purchase of nose masks and face shield

    The use of nose masks and face shield was one of the safety measure laid for the preventive towards the spread of covid 19. Patronage of it seems not attractive as compared to the previous state.

    During the covid 19 pandemic,face masks have been employed as a public and personal health control measures against the spread of the virus. It serve as personal protection to limit transmission of the virus in a community or healthcare setting.

    As of early may 2020, 88% of the world population lived in countries that recommend or mandated the use of masks in public; more than 75 countries had mandated the use of mask.

    Ghana is one of the countries that mandated the use of the masks during the corona virus pandemic in the country. And also the selling of the masks created employment for many people in Ghana.

    Today, the situation has changed, in a way that people no longer adhere to the wearing of nose masks and the face shield again, as the wearing of the masks ceases their breath, the nose masks is not being purchase as previously.

    ” we have to learn to a accept the virus as it is here to stay with as” said the Health Minister at a Press Conference in Accra.

    Now Ghanaians seems not to be scared of the virus which also has lowerd the purchase of nose mask and face shield in the country.

    Story by: Anita

  • Development of a healthy fashion industry in Africa.

    Development of a healthy fashion industry in Africa.

    The disruption of corona virus on global value chains and it impact on African business is already evident.

    As factories close their door, border closures and travel restrictions interrupt supply chains, the workers, the most vulnerable and lowest paid people in the fashion supply chain have been left to feel the worst effects.

    Building more spring value chains through modern business models that will keep garment in use longer, using renewable material and recycling old clothes into new product was the focus of discussions during the 2nd webinar event organized Thursday 3 september, by the African Development Bank's Fashionomics, Africans maiden in collaboration with the United Nation Environment programme. 88 attendees joined the event.
    
      The panel was compose of industry proficient from persons school of Design in New-York, the UK- base charity Ellen Arthur Foundation and the creative minds behinds, Orange Culture, Mariana Fashion Production and Qaaldesign.
    
       "My dream is to develop a healthy fashion industry in African. We need to be able to rely and build ourselves from our own system. At the end of the day, we have so much that needs to be done and we can't do it alone, " Orange culture Adebayo Okelawal,said.
    
    

    “Corona virus forced our world to rethink our system. We can absolutely do this in an excellent way. It’s a question of interconnection and understandable. My waste could be someone else’s resources. What is needed is collaboration and breaking down the typical silos Fashionpreneurs face in the industry”, said Brendan McCarthy of the person school of Design.

    The goal of the Bank’s Fashionomic African platforms is to enable African enterpreneurs operation in the textile, and Apparel to grow their business, with a focus on women and youth.

    Story by: Anita

  • How To Win A Girl’s Heart In 3 Days

    How To Win A Girl’s Heart In 3 Days

    How To Win A Girl’s Heart In 3 Days

    So many guys think it is impossible after many failed attempts to woo a woman and get her to say ‘yes, but I tell you, it is very possible. The simple truth is women are emotional and are mostly not driven by what they see but by what they hear. If you are that guy who thinks you are not good enough and that is why you are getting a lot of rejections from women, I want you to eliminate that feeling because it is absolutely wrong.

    There are some simple principles and things to follow that you neglect that has given you a lot of rejections but you don’t know.

    If you want to woo a girl and make her fall for you in 3 days, follow this simple principles and see the result

    SEE ALSO: DATE RUSH: Ignatius And Free love Spark Dating Rumors (+Photo)

    So many guys think it is impossible

    1. Be confident

    This is where most guys fail from. When you see a girl you like, you can examine one or two things but don’t even waste time approaching her before you give yourself reasons that you are not good enough, who told you that? When you want to approach a girl, be confident and act as though you will get her and not trying out your luck. Confidence is one bad boy trait all girls like and desire. More so, that is the first impression you are giving her. Girls don’t like guys who are not confident.

    2. Do not praise her

    She has heard a thousand ‘you are beautiful’ and she knows it so in this second stage, don’t make that mistake of starting your conversation with that phrase. Many people have done that and when you do the same, you join those ordinary people trying to waste her time. At this point, you want to do something that will make you unique. Just introduce yourself and possibly ask for her name. If she is beautiful, ignore that and compliment something that she is wearing like her dress or shoes. When you do that, you make her emotionally attached to you as she will wonder “ why is this guy not praising my beauty as most people do? “.

    3. Get her contact

    If there is enough time, ask her some few things like where she lives, where she studies so that you can find a common point of interest and strike a conversation. Tell her you would like to have her number so that you can talk to her again. From your confidence, she will submit to you if you can give her that real first impression. And if you are a smart guy, you can give her your own number and ask her to contact you later, and if she does, you on already on your way to win her heart.

    4. Don’t be needy, learn to wait

    Once she gives you her number, don’t make yourself look desperate by calling her that day. She knows all the people she gave her number to that day and when you do this, you make yourself cheap. Make her emotionally attached to you by waiting for like a day or two and don’t fear she will forget. By doing this, you raise different questions in her mind like” why is he not contacting me like other guys?” making her more attached to you.

    5. Setup a date

    You will give her option and don’t show your weakness by asking her “ when will we go for a date?” or “ when will you be free for a date?” You will just have to tell her about the date and give her time you will go for it.

    STORY by: Mavis Davor || DFM ||

  • Who is Anna Rykova?

    Who is Anna Rykova?

    Anna Rykova is an international fashion editor,  stylist and consultant. Former Fashion Director of Marie Claire Russia and Fashion Director of Cosmopolitan Russia with 17 years of global experience in Fashion. 

    Being trained as a shoe designer and having worked as one in the early years of her career, Anna not only knows the industry from the inside, she is also editorially and commercially minded.

     Anna has worked with fashion icons like Linda Evangelista, Daria Werbowy, Ashley Graham, Lydia Hearst, Lea Seydoux, Elisa Sednaoui, and Rita Ora; collaborated with Internationally renowned photographers as Pamela Hanson, Chris Nicholls, Mathieu Cesar, Thomas Lavelle, Jack Waterlot, Yu Tsai, late Matt Irwin; as well as global beauty gurus like Peter Slavic, Franchesca Talot, Sir John, Olivier Lebrun, Mike Desir, Allan Milroy, Andre Cueto Saavedra, Sasha Nesterchuk, Hung Vanngo and many others in New York, Berlin, Milan, Paris, London, Dubai, Cape Town, and Moscow. 

    In 2014 and 2015 Anna was the only Fashion Director chosen to serve on the jury for the prestigious Prix d’Excellence De La Mode Marie Claire, alongside Chief Editors of the international Marie Claire editions.

    In 2011 and 2012 Anna was one of the judges of Russian Next Top Model reality show season 2 and 3.  As a local independent consultant Anna worked with such international brands and companies as Marcolin Eyewear, Max Mara Group, Laurel, Igedo Company, CPD and CPM, Michael Michael Kors, as well as such Russian brands like Ekonika Footwear, No One boutiques, MEGA shopping centers among many others

    Story by Wonder Magis||DFM|| DIKODER.COM|

  • A SHORT STORY

    A SHORT STORY

    There was an aged artist who lived in a small village. The man used to design beautiful artistic works to be sold at an attractive price.

    One day, a poor man among the villagers challenged the old man saying: “You earn a lot of money from your handiwork but why don’t you assist poor people in the village?

    Can’t you see that the butcher is not as rich as you are, but he still shares free meat to the poor people in the village?

    Also, look at the village baker. He is a poor man with a large family. Yet he gives the poor people free loaves of bread”.

    The artist did not respond angrily to the accusations. He only smiled.

    The poor man was confused about the reaction of the artist so he left him and went out spreading rumors that the artist was so rich, but he was a selfish person who only accumulated wealth and refused to help the poor.

    The villagers hated the old artist and they all forsook him.

    The old artist became sick and could not do anything for himself but nobody among the villagers cared to visit him or helped him so he died a lonely old man.

    The days passed by and the villagers observed that the butcher stopped the free distribution of meat and the baker could not give the poor people free loaves of bread anymore.

    When the butcher and the baker were asked why they stopped helping the villagers, they said that: “the old artist used to donate money every month to pay for the free meat and bread to the poor people in the village. Now that he was dead, there was nobody to pay for the free food anymore”

    Actually, many people may have wrong impressions and different opinions about you.

    But do not allow any of them to influence or destroy who you are.

    Do not pass judgment on anyone based on his physical appearance or what people say about him.

    There are things about his personal life you do not know.

    If you were privileged to know about them, your judgment would surely be different.

     A man died in a drinking- spot/dance hall.

     Another person died in the Church.

     If we are to judge them, we would say that the 1st man died a sinner and the 2nd man died a righteous man.

    But the 1st man entered the drinking spot to preach against sin and the 2nd man entered the Church to steal from the church.

    For this reason, you and I cannot decide who goes to heaven or who goes to hell.

    Fear God in your privacy and fear God in the open.

    Human physical appearance is just a deception, therefore, forgive people and ignore their shortcomings.

    Pray for one another.

    Be good to everybody. And don’t cut off your relationship with a person just because he does not please you.

    Establish unity and harmony with all.

    For the LORD Who created all souls, knows what each soul conceals.

    May God Bless You.

  • Minister Raphael to Host  Senior Prayer Conference

    Minister Raphael to Host Senior Prayer Conference

    Raphael Gbemu as affectionately called and known in showbiz as Senior Raphael, Young talented gospel artist married with one child. He doubles as a songwriter, composer, and messenger of the Good News.

    Speaking to this portal, Raphael seems to be religiously inclined with proclaiming the word of God and believes in co-operate prayers, hence the need for him to gather the people of God to worship and pray under one umbrella (house of God).

    According to him, he sees this gathering as an opportunity for the children of God to come together praying and how to win the battle war against the wicked one called the devil and to fulfill the destinies given to us as human beings and children of God. The program will also give children God the opportunity to present their warfare cases to the most high God .

    The programs come off every last Saturday of every month from 4pm to 8pm which will feature a couple of gospel artists from Musiga Gospel Department and other ministers. The maiden edition will come off on the last Saturday of this month. Minister Raphael wants to take the opportunity to invite everyone to join hands in a time of praying and worshipping.

    To be part of this program just call the organizers on 0547619825. For sponsor or to donate and help a good course.

    Story: Jeffrey

  • Will Nana Addo run in 2020?

    Will Nana Addo run in 2020?

    News bulletins on radio these past few months have become a litany of woes filled with cacophonous voices of protest.

    Measuring the level of passion, I wish I can pretend that all of them are voices of the Opposition. But I know they are not.

    In the Atta Mills and Mahama eras, I could almost swear that the Ghana Centre for Democratic Development (CDD), Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT), University Teachers Association of Ghana ( UTAG) , Ghana Union of Traders Associations (GUTA) etc. had all been infiltrated or were being fingered by the New Patriotic Party (NPP). Today, these same voices are sonorous in their protests and ultimatums to an NPP government.

    That tells me something, and I write this piece this day as a reminder to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo that a sizeable portion of the over 1,000,000 Ghanaians who voted him to power were non-partisan voters, most of whom are in the CDD, GNAT, UTAG, GUTA and universities. These people vote purely on issues, and key on their list of issues is corruption.

    And why not? Corruption stinks. On October 3, 2018, the Deputy Commisioner of Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) , Mr Richard Quayson, announced that Ghana loses GH¢13.5 billion every year through corruption.

    If you are NPP, do you not often find yourself tending to believe that when it comes to corruption, the culprits are enjoying too much impunity?

    Can every NPP sympathiser strike his/her chest and swear that in the 2018 “Cash for seat” scandal and the revelations gathered by the bi-partisan parliamentary fact-finding committee, it was not true that the Ministry of Trade and Industry did not collude with the Millennium Excellence Foundation to charge between $25,000 and $100,000 to enable expatriates to sit close to the President?

    As a Ghanaian whose monthly salary does not take you home, do you not – even if you are NPP – feel the urge to advise the President to cut down on the number of his appointees, especially when it has become very evident that 110 ministers are not the solution?

    Even as a member of NPP, were you not scandalised by the thought that the Director-General of the Ghana Maritime Authority renovated a two-bedroom house at a cost of $1 million? Eiii!

    Eleven air-conditioners in one house belonging to one man may make sense to the person in government who is used to luxury, but the average voter does not know even comfort.

    The words of praise for the President had barely escaped our lips for relieving the DG of his post when, bam! came the announcement that the man was now board chair of Ghana Revenue Authrority (GRA). The President did well withdrawing the appointment, but right-thinking persons in society question how the very thought of such an appointment dropped into his head in the first place.

    There are many, especially in the Judiciary, who will never forget that eight members of the NPP’s Delta Force released from lawful custody their members who were standing trial. I, who write this piece, am one of those who disagree with the Attorney General’s conclusion that there was insufficient evidence against the accused persons.

    Honestly, listening to the voices on radio, contemplating the near tragic errors of judgment and feeling of impunity by some of NPP’s functionaries and government appointees, I wonder if Nana Addo has his eyes on 2020.

    To the President, I recommend the words of the late Ghanaian diplomat and poet, Paa Kayper, who counselled thus: “Walk. You don’t run to the funeral of one who died running.”

    It is not the number of projects . Consider Mahama. He took fat loans to undertake many infrastructural projects; indeed, even today, as he seeks a comeback, “massive infrastructural development” remains his mantra. It is not that Ghanaians did not see or feel those projects; it is that Ghanaians hate people who take them for granted. If you ask me, I think many in Nana Addo’s government are taking Ghanaians for granted.

    The voice of the people is the voice of God. In 2016, the voice of God told the people of Volta Region to stay away from the polls. Why does Nana Addo think that God cannot say the same to people of the Eastern and Ashanti regions in 2020?

    One of the direct consequences of Nana Addo’s slips and impunity by his appointees is that John Mahama suddenly begins to look like an angel.

    There are many things the people of Ghana remember, and with pain. One of them is the bus rebranding saga.

    Read this, dear reader: “On July 28, 2015, some two months AFTER Smarttys had completed the branding of the buses, the chief director of the Ministry of Transport, signing on behalf of the minister, then wrote to the Public Procurement Agency (PPA) for approval to sole-source the branding contract to Smarttys,” – under Mahama’s government.

    Was the allegation true or not that about 58 per cent of Ghana’s bauxite reserves were sold to Ibrahim Mahama, brother of former President John Mahama? According to the news story, the then NDC government, acting through the Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, on December 29, 2016 entered into an agreement and granted Exton Cubic Group Limited mining leases to mine bauxite in different concessions. This was a few days after Mahama had lost at the polls and a few days before he was to hand over.


  • Addressing challenges facing the new regions

    Addressing challenges facing the new regions

    The challenges facing the six new regions in the country are numerous, ranging from the building of roads to the development of other forms of infrastructure such as extension of water and electricity, as well as hospitals and other health centres.

    Addressing these challenges is very necessary because of its implication for peace, unity, progress and better life. Undoubtedly, the new regions are yearning for various forms of infrastructure development all aimed at improving upon the socio-economic status of residents in the affected areas.

    These challenges and concerns are known to the government, as well as the commission that was instituted to go through the process of creating the six new regions in various parts of the country.

    Having gone through the process successfully and legally brought the regions into being, we need to do all we can to ensure that each of the regions is formidably equipped in terms of capacity building to address the challenges ahead, hence the recent capacity building workshop organised for assembly members in these areas.

    Similarly, the visit by the President to the new regions and the donation of a number of vehicles to them, as well as construction works for Regional Coordinating Council buildings and other infrastructure show that things are on course to bring the new regions up to the level of expectation as far as development is concerned.

    The battle has just begun and must continue unabated to its logical conclusion. If the world today is moving towards much integration, then within the context of nationhood, Ghana will also have to move towards greater integration of its people.

    One notable issue that came to light during and after the creation of the new regions was the siting of regional capitals. Some opinion leaders vigorously fought for the siting of the regional capitals in their hometowns or areas.

    This did not come as a surprise, seeing that everyone would want his or her hometown to emerge as a regional capital so as to be able to attract and accumulate more development programmes.

    The clamour for the regional capitals was based on the old paradigm of development which tends to focus on the siting of all development projects in the capital, leading to the neglect of substantial portions of remote areas within the same region.

    The lesson learnt from the development of previous regional capitals, where all development projects were concentrated in the capital, is an outmoded paradigm that calls for immediate revision with regard to developing the new regional capitals In line with the new paradigm of development, a regional capital will no longer be made to possess all the good things that befit a regional capital but will ensure that all other development projects are consciously and equitably spread to all parts of the new regions that have just been created.

    This way, there will be fairness and equity for all people residing in other parts of the region. For example, extension of ministries may be located in the regional capital but regional hospitals and the construction of flats for workers may also be located in other areas.

    Similarly, all parts of the region will be endowed with good lighting and water systems, educational institutions as well as good and dependable roads, among others.

    This is what will make everybody proud irrespective of whether your area or town is made the capital or not.

    One notable fact is that the issue of decentralisation, which is a crucial tool for the enhancement of the socio-economic development of the country, appears forgotten even by people who are expected to remind central and regional authorities to pay attention to the concept and apply it in their developmental agenda.

    The formation of the new regions, having gone through various stages in line with Article 5 (2) of the constitution, should, therefore, be seen as a way of deepening decentralisation in the country and thereby ensuring that people are brought into the mainstream of economic democratisation and the ultimate purpose and realisation of the much-needed comprehensive national development.

    This way, we will be able to construct the needed roads in all parts of the new regions and also can extend water and electricity to other areas within each of the regions. Similarly, health centres, educational and other facilities can also be equitably and fairly distributed to all parts.

    At the end of it all, when things are carried out in this fair manner – and they surely will – there will be substantial improvement in the socio-economic status for all those residing in the new regions.

    The writer is Director of Corporate Communications, Ghana Standards Authority.