Category: World News Headline

  • GHANA WILL BE A WITNESS

    GHANA WILL BE A WITNESS

    GHANA WILL BE A WITNESS BUT NOT A VICTIM OF CORONAVIRUS-PUBLIC VIEW

    CORONAVIRUS-PUBLIC VIEW
    CORONAVIRUS-PUBLIC VIEW

    CORONAVIRUS-PUBLIC VIEW Some Ghanaians have claimed that Ghana will only hear of the menace of Coronavirus in other countries but will never become victims of the deadly sickness.

    The advent of the deadly sickness, coronavirus has gone viral at a small pace of time, affecting more than 10 countries including African and European nations.

    Base on these recent happenings, some Ghanaians have attested to the fact that coronavirus is a deadly and communicable sickness but said Ghana is a blessed nation so there would be no such experience nor records of coronavirus in Ghana just like the previous advent of Ebola some years ago.

    CORONAVIRUS-PUBLIC VIEW
    CORONAVIRUS-PUBLIC VIEW

    SEE ALSO: SONA21: Ghana to host AFCON 2023

    CORONAVIRUS-PUBLIC VIEW Some noted in an interview with Mavis Davor Dfm News, that they are only scared because of the rate at which it kills and the widespread of coronavirus which might affect Ghana if care is not taken.

    Whilst others are the view that they are not scared at all because coronavirus can not get into Ghana.

    Story by Mavis Davor || DFM || DIKODER.COM|

  • 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|

  • FOUR GHANAIAN STUDENTS DEPORTED

    4 Ghanaian students deported
    banned from UK over forged scholarship papers.
    Registrar of the Ghana Scholarship Secretariat, Kingsley Agyeman.

    The Registrar of the Ghana Scholarship Secretariat, Kingsley Agyeman, has cautioned persons who forge documents to show scholarships from the Scholarship Secretariat to desist from the act or risk facing the laws.

    His statement comes in the wake of four Ghanaian students who were deported and banned for ten years by the United Kingdom over fake scholarship documents.

    Following investigations, it was discovered that four Ghanaians, Andy Kwesi Enos (University of Reading), Esther Tieku (University of Kent), Priscilla Omari Konadu (University of East Anglia) and Gifty Appoh (University of Greenwich) had presented fake documents to their Universities leading to the school’s withdrawal of their tier 4 visas and deportation.

    The four are currently in Ghana and assisting the security agencies with investigations.

    He added that the Ghana Scholarship Secretariat is able to fish out persons who are engaged in the act through their tight system and alerting the Universities where they have been enrolled in. The tuition and cost of living of such students are not paid.

    Mr Agyeman, stated that the “illegal” practice goes a long way to affect the image of the country and its president.

    He also added that unscrupulous persons who attempted to lure people in believing that they can help them acquire scholarships have been arrested and are with the BNI, CID and National Security.

    “To mention, the UK alone for the 2019/2020 Academic Year, we had complaints of people issuing out fake scholarship award letters to suspecting applicants. They were able to get away through the visa and went to UK. But, because of the system we’ve put in place, no outlay of cash was paid to them”, he stated.

    In September 2019, the British government announced that international students at British universities will be allowed to stay in the country for two years after graduating. The visa allows eligible students to work, or look for work, in any career or position of their choice, for two years after completing their studies.

    Story by: Faustina Agyemang

  • Congo’s former health minister detained over the mismanagement of $4.3 million in Ebola funds

    Congo’s former health minister detained over the mismanagement of $4.3 million in Ebola funds

    Former Democratic Republic of Congo health minister Oly Ilunga has been detained over allegations of mismanaging public funds worth $4.3 million that were allocated to fighting the Ebola outbreak in the country, one of his lawyers told CNN on Monday.

    Ilunga  quit his position as health minister in July after he was stripped of his responsibility as head of Congo’s Ebola response team. He has denied any wrongdoing, said his lawyer, Guy Bayeka.

    In a statement on Monday, his attorneys said $1.9 million of the money was spent after Ilunga resigned from office and he cannot be held responsible for its management.

    OLY ILUNGA

    “He reaffirms firmly his innocence in this case and promises to vigorously defend his honor,” his attorney’s said in the statement.

    Bayeka denied claims that Ilunga was fleeing the country when he was taken into police custody on Saturday and called for his immediate release from detention.

    CNN has reached out to the police in Congo for comment and is yet to get a response.

    Ilunga resigned in protest after Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi removed him as the head of the country’s Ebola response team and assigned the leadership of the unit to a committee that will report directly to the president’s office.

    The Democratic Republic of Congo is facing the second deadliest Ebola outbreak on record.

    With more than 3,000 cases and 2,000 deaths recorded since the outbreak was declared last summer in Congo, the Ebola outbreak has reached another troubling milestone, according to the World Health Organization.

    Though the vast majority of infections remain in the nation’s North Kivu province, the virus has spread to neighboring South Kivu province and the transit hub of Goma, on the border of Rwanda.

    In July, the WHO declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern as responders continue to combat the spread of the disease.

    The region’s political instability, sporadic violence, limited infrastructure and mistrust in vaccines are obstacles to address in ending the outbreak.

  • Liberia CALLS UPON ICC to advise on war crimes court

    Liberia CALLS UPON ICC to advise on war crimes court

    Liberia’s President George Weah has invited the president of the International Criminal Court (ICC) to the country to discuss the idea of setting up a war and economic crimes court.

    The tribunal is intended to address crimes committed during two bouts of brutal fighting in 1989-1996 and 1999-2003 in which some 250,000 people were killed.

    Thousands more were mutilated and raped, often by armies of drugged child soldiers led by ruthless warlords. Regional peacekeepers intervened twice to end the fighting.

    Smith Toby, Liberia’s deputy presidential press secretary, told the BBC that President Weah had recently met ICC President Chile Eboe-Osuji in Nigeria to briefly discuss the matter.

    “We are awaiting a response [from the judge],” Mr Toby said.

    PRESIDENT GEORGE WEAH

    There is growing pressure to set up a court from key players in the West African nation, including traditional chiefs and elders at a recent gathering.

    President Weah has also written to the House of Representatives seeking their advice on the matter.

    Senator Abraham Darius Dillon, from the opposition Liberty Party, has welcomed the move, saying recently on a radio programme that it was “time to end the culture of impunity in our country”.

    But others have criticised Mr Weah for seeking advice instead of presenting a bill to set up a court. The president is suspected of using stalling tactics as some believe his administration is not keen on the court’s establishment.

    “This man is playing a game,” prominent talk-show host Henry Costa said.

  • South Africa apologizes to Nigeria over xenophobic attacks

    South Africa apologizes to Nigeria over xenophobic attacks

    South Africa has apologized to Nigeria over a spate of xenophobic attacks which led to a spike in tensions between the two countries.

    Twelve people were killed earlier this month when mobs attacked foreign-owned businesses, mainly in Johannesburg.

    A special envoy from South Africa presented an apology to Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday.

    The envoy, Jeff Radebe, expressed the country’s “sincerest apologies” at a meeting in the Nigerian capital, Abuja.

    “The incident does not represent what we stand for,” he said, adding that South African police would “leave no stone unturned” in bringing those involved to justice.

    Mr Radebe also told President Buhari that the South African government condemned the violence and was taking decisive action.

    Mr Buhari thanked Mr Radebe for “coming to explain to us what happened in South Africa recently, leading to [the] killing and displacement of foreigners”.

    President Ramaphosa and President Muhammadu Buhari


    ‘Ramaphosa’s shame’

    “President Buhari responded to profuse apologies from the South African president, pledging that the relationship between the two countries will be solidified,” a statement from his office said.

    At the end of last week, South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa told the BBC that he felt ashamed by the recent violence.

    “We are very concerned and of course as a nation we [are] ashamed because this goes against the ethos of what South Africa stands for,” he said.

    No Nigerians were killed in the violence in South Africa, but Nigerian-owned shops and businesses are believed to have been targeted by the mobs.

    Of the 12 people who were killed, 10 are reported to have been South African nationals and two were from Zimbabwe.

    Nigeria has been outspoken in its condemnation of the violence. A fortnight ago, it withdrew a delegation from a major international conference taking place in South Africa.

    Tensions were inflamed after videos and images were shared on social media purporting to show Nigerians being attacked and killed. The Nigerian government said there was no evidence that this had taken place.

    But it did say that Nigerian-owned businesses had been targeted.

    The attacks started after lorry drivers staged a strike to protest against the employment of foreigners.

    South Africa has become a magnet for migrants from other parts of Africa as it has one of the continent’s biggest and most developed economies.

    Evacuation of Nigerians

    But there is also high unemployment in the country and some people feel foreigners are taking their jobs.

    While the diplomatic mission is taking place, Nigeria has continued to evacuate its citizens from the country.

    Last week, Nigeria’s Consul General Godwin Adama said only those who were under distress as a result of the attacks would leave South Africa.

    More than 300 Nigerians are expected to arrive in Lagos on Tuesday. Last week, 188 evacuees arrived back.

  • Alisson to Miss Another 7 Games for Liverpool

    Alisson to Miss Another 7 Games for Liverpool

    Alisson is set to sit out at least seven more games for Liverpool, with manager Jurgen Klopp not expecting him back until after the next international break.

    The Brazil international goalkeeper has been sidelined since picking up an unfortunate injury on the opening day of the 2019-20 campaign.

    He broke down against Norwich at Anfield and has not been seen since.

    Initial fears that a serious problem had been picked up were eased, but Alisson is no closer to making a return to action.

    He has already missed three Premier League games and the UEFA Super Cup, with summer signing Adrian taking his place in the Reds side.

    Klopp admits that he is likely to require cover between the sticks for several more weeks, with Liverpool eager to avoid rushing Alisson’s recovery.

    With a cautious approach being favored, the 26-year-old will remain out of contention until mid-October.

    Filled by: Theresah Mensah.

  • The Forgotten First Ghanaian Wife Of Robert Mugabe “Sarah Sally” Whose Painful Death Changed Zimbabwe Forever

    The Forgotten First Ghanaian Wife Of Robert Mugabe “Sarah Sally” Whose Painful Death Changed Zimbabwe Forever

    On September 6, Robert Gabriel Mugabe passed away aged 95 after being ousted from power by his own party men.

    On November 19, 2017, ZANU-PF removed Mugabe as party leader, replacing him with Mnangagwa and issuing a deadline on November 20 for Mugabe to resign the presidency or face impeachment.Mugabe, tough as nails as always, was ready to ride the storm till a joint session of parliament met ahead of his impeachment and sent his resignation letter on November 21, 2017.

    Being advanced in age, Mugabe had been in and out of hospitals in South Africa and Singapore, eventually dying on a hospital bed in Singapore.

    As expected of a man who riled the British by redistributing land and farms appropriated by white owners back to black locals in the year 2000 onwards, Mugabe is vilely portrayed in the western media.

    He could have also handed over the reins of government given his advanced age, and better managed the economy, as well as, build more critical infrastructure, nevertheless, the man who spoke eloquently and dressed sharply, as well as, abstained from liquor, coffee and largely vegetarian, is praised for increased school enrollment and expanded health care for citizens.

    But how did it all begin for Robert Gabriel Mugabe – career, love and politics wise?

    Mugabe hailed from Kutama village and set out to be a teacher. In 1958, he went to work in Ghana then the Gold Coast at the Takoradi Teacher Training College where he taught and initiated a love union with Sally Francesca Hayfron.

    She was then also teaching at the school, having attained her teaching certificate from the St Mary’s Trainer Coaching Faculty in Takoradi. The pair shared a fondness for Kwame Nkrumah’s speeches, having led Ghana to independence in 1957.

    Sarah would follow Mugabe to Southern Rhodesia (as Zimbabwe was then known) where the pair married in April 1961 in Salisbury. Two years after their marriage, the pair birthed Nhamodzenyika (Shona for The Troubles of my Country) but their joy was short-lived when he died of a cerebral malaria attack in Ghana aged 3.

    Sarah, also called Sally, was born on June 6, 1931. She was a product of Achimota Secondary School, emerging the first wife of Robert Mugabe and the First Lady of Zimbabwe from 1987 until her death in 1992 aged 60. She was popularly known as Amai (Mother) in Zimbabwe.

    Although Sarah Francesca (Hayfron) Mugabe was a trained teacher, she was also a political activist and campaigner, putting her activism to deadly effect against the white minority rule when she mobilised African women to challenge the Southern Rhodesian constitution in 1962.

    The Ian Smith government charged her with sedition and sentenced her to five years imprisonment although part of the sentence was suspended.

    Also READ: White folks jubilate over Mugabe’s death

    In 1967, Sally went into exile in London and resided in Ealing Broadway, West London. Her stay in Britain was partly financed by the British Ariel Foundation; a charity founded in 1960. It had close links to the British government which saw higher education in Britain as a means of influencing the next generation of African leaders.

    With her husband behind bars and son dead, Sally sought exile where she worked for the Africa Centre until her visa expired in 1970. The British Home Office had intended to deport Sally, but multiple letters from Mugabe to British Prime Minister, Harold Wilson and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, as well as, a petition signed by at least 400 MPs, eventually persuaded the authorities to allow her to stay.

    She spent the next eight years agitating and campaigning for the release of political detainees in Rhodesia, including her husband who had been arrested in 1964 and was to remain incarcerated for ten years.

    Mugabe had been sent to prison in 1964 for calling for Zimbabwe’s independence, taking nearly 11 years before being released in 1974. With time on his hand, Mugabe continued with his education, earning two law degrees from the University of London External Programme.

    With Mugabe’s release in 1975 and subsequent departure for Mozambique with Edgar Tekere, Sally rejoined her husband in Maputo. Here, she cast herself in the new role of a mother figure to the thousands of refugees created by the Rhodesian Bush War. This earned her the popular title Amai (Mother).

    In 1978, she was elected ZANU-PF Deputy Secretary for the Women’s League. In 1980, she had to make a quick adjustment to a new and national role of the wife of Zimbabwe’s first black Prime Minister as Zimbabwe had gained independence in the year.

    She officially became the First Lady of Zimbabwe in 1987 when her husband became the second president of Zimbabwe. She was elected Secretary-General of the ZANU-PF Women’s League at the party’s Congress of 1989.

    She also founded the Zimbabwe Child Survival Movement. Sally launched the Zimbabwe Women’s Cooperative in the UK in 1986 and supported Akina Mama wa Afrika, a London-based African women’s organisation focusing on development and women’s issues in Africa and the United Kingdom.

    Sally died on January 27, 1992, from kidney failure. Upon her death, she was interred at the National Heroes Acre in Harare, Zimbabwe. In 2002, to mark the 10th anniversary of her death, Zimbabwe issued a set of five postage stamps, of a common design, using two different photographs, each photograph appearing on two of the denominations.

    She is remembered fondly with love and affection, as she is still considered the founding mother of the nation of Zimbabwe. Perhaps it is her modest living, her efforts to bring some comfort to the deprived or better still her ability to point out other options her husband might have neglected to see which endeared her to so many Zimbabwe citizens.

    Although Sally didn’t hail from Zimbabwe, she is respected and loved by Zimbabweans unlike Grace Mugabe, Mugabe’s secretary turned lover and second wife. Grace is described by some as a gold digger and one who turned Mugabe from the calm, reasonable and well-intentioned gentleman and leader he was till she came into the picture.

    Reports suggest that Sally’s marriage to Mugabe began to falter when they found out they could not have any more children. Mugabe insisted Sally was aware of his relationship with Grace citing a need to have children, having lost a boy Sally gave him and a need to give his mother grandchildren.

    Many Zimbabweans trace the reversal of Mugabe and the nation’s fortunes to his 1996 wedding of Grace Marufu, 41 years his junior, following the death of his widely respected first wife, Sally, in 1992.

    If ever in doubt about Sally’s calming effect on the prime minister and president, this quote might make things clearer.

    “He changed the moment Sally died when he married a young gold-digger,” said Wilf Mbanga, editor of The Zimbabwean newspaper and one-time personal friends with Mr Mugabe.

    Source: Face2Face Africa

  • Robert Mugabe Zimbabwe’s ex-president dies in Singapore

    Robert Mugabe Zimbabwe’s ex-president dies in Singapore

    It is with the utmost sadness that I announce the passing on of Zimbabwe’s founding father and former President, Cde Robert Mugabe,” a post on Mnangagwa’s official presidential Twitter account said.

    Zimbabwe’s former president Robert Mugabe has died aged 95, the country’s President Emmerson Mnangagwa said on his official Twitter account.

    Mugabe died in Singapore, where he has often received medical treatment in recent years, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

    Robert Mugabe – key dates

    • 1924: Born
    • 1964: Imprisoned by Rhodesian government
    • 1980: Wins first post-independence elections
    • 1996: Marries Grace Marufu after the death of first wife, a Ghanaian
    • 2000: Loses referendum, pro-Mugabe militias invade white-owned farms and attack opposition supporters
    • 2008: Comes second in the first round of elections to Tsvangirai who pulls out of run-off amid nationwide attacks on his supporters
    • 2009: Amid economic collapse, swears in Tsvangirai as prime minister, who served in uneasy government of national unity for four years
    • 2017: Sacks long-time ally Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa, allegedly in favor of his wife Grace, as successor
    • November 2017: Army intervenes and forces him to step down

    Cde Mugabe was an icon of liberation, a pan-Africanist who dedicated his life to the emancipation and empowerment of his people. His contribution to the history of our nation and continent will never be forgotten. May his soul rest in eternal peace (2/2)
    — President of Zimbabwe (@edmnangagwa) September 6, 2019

  • JEREMY CORBYN CALLS OFF GHANA TRIP

    JEREMY CORBYN CALLS OFF GHANA TRIP

    British Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has crossed out his four-day fact-finding trip to Ghana.

    Corbyn has since invited key Tory rebels and party leaders to a meeting on stopping a no-deal Brexit.

    He begave his invitation minutes after Boris Johnson arrived in Berlin for talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel – to shouts of “stop Brexit!”.

    Mr. Johnson ramped up preparations for a no-deal exit on October 31 as talks with Ms. Merkel were expected to end in deadlock.

    But Mr. Corbyn said in his letter: “The chaos and dislocation of Boris Johnson’s No Brexit deal is real and frightening, as the government’s leaked Operation Yellowhammer dossier makes crystal clear.

    “That’s why we must do everything we can to stop it.

    Full text of the letter;

    Further to our correspondence last week, I would like to invite you to a meeting to discuss all the tactics available to prevent No Deal.

    The country is heading into a constitutional and political storm, so it is important we meet urgently before Parliament returns.

    I hope you are able to attend the meeting, which we will hold in my office on Tuesday 27th August at 12 pm.

    Please confirm your attendance by email.

    Yours sincerely,

    Jeremy Corbyn

    BY: Lakeisha Adjei|DIKODER.COM|D FM

  • GOV’T OF SIERRA LEONE REJECT SELLAS TETTEH’S APPOINTMENT

    GOV’T OF SIERRA LEONE REJECT SELLAS TETTEH’S APPOINTMENT

    Sellas Tetteh was born on 12 December 1956 in Adabraka.He began his coaching career in 1995 with kotobabi powerliness before joining liberty professionals a year later. Tetteh became the Assistant Manager of Ghana under 17 team in 2001 taking full control a year later before moving to Ghana under 23 team in 2003 and won under 20 FIFA world cup for Ghana in 2009.

     On Tuesday evening Sellas was appointed by Sierra Leone Football Association [SLFA]. According to them, the 62-year-old tops among shortlisted coaches who went through the interview.

     But unfortunately, Ghanaian Sellas Tetteh’s appointment as head coach of Sierra Leone’s national team has been rejected by the government of Sierra Leone. Claiming that, the selection process did not come to a logical conclusion, and was incomplete.

    BY: Theresah Mensah|DIKODER.COM|D FM

  • FORMER US PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH SNR HAS DIED

    FORMER US PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH SNR HAS DIED

    George H. W. Bush, the 41st president of the United States, has died at the age of 94. George Herbert Walker Bush was a World War II naval aviator, a Texas oil pioneer and the 41st President of the United States. He died on Saturday at the age of 94, and is survived by his five children, 17 grandchildren, eight great grandchildren, and two siblings. In a statement, his son and 43rd President of the United States, George W. Bush said the family were saddened to announce his father’s death. “George H. W. Bush was a man of the highest character and the best dad a son or daughter could ask for. The entire Bush family is deeply grateful for 41’s life and love, for the compassion of those who have cared and prayed for Dad, and for the condolences of our friends and fellow citizens.” Mr. Bush Snr survived being shot down over the Pacific, led the CIA and spent eight years as Vice President to Ronald Reagan. He was elected as President in 1988 and served for the full two terms. His wife, Barbara, died at the age of 92 in April. Source: Newshub