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JusticeGhana is a Non-Governmental [and-not-for- profit] Organization (NGO) with a strong belief in Justice, Security and Progress....” More Details

Castle stirs controversy over Coat of Arms

politics

At the top right-hand quarter of the Coat of Arms, which is composed of a shield, divided into four quarters by a green St. George’s Cross, with gold at its edge is the heraldic castle on a heraldic sea with a light background which represents a presideCastle stirs controversy over Coat of Arms

The use of a castle in Ghana’s national emblem - the Coat of Arms, may no longer be tenable, due to the fact that the Osu Castle is no longer the seat of Government.

Czech woman has SIX STONE tumour removed from her stomach after it left her bedridden

health

A Czech woman had a six stone tumour removed from her stomach. It caused her stomach to swell to almost 20 times its normal size. It had been allowed to become enormous as she was too scared to see a doctor  Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2539790/Czech-woman-SIX-STONE-tumour-removed-stomach-left-bedridden.html#ixzz2qYe64GVk Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on FacebookCzech woman has SIX STONE tumour removed from her stomach after it left her bedridden

The tumour was huge as the woman had been too scared to see a doctor It caused the 47-year-old's stomach to swell to 20 times its normal size The malignant tumour was so heavy the woman was left bed-ridden She also had 4st 7lbs of surrounding tissue removed so during the operation her weight dropped from 18st 4lbs to eight stone It's not yet known if she will make a full recovery after last month's operation

Home for some, e-waste dump for the world

environment

Photo Reporting: Ghanai Environmental PollutionHome for some, e-waste dump for the world

The e-waste dump Agbogbloshie exemplifies the downside of globalization: It's the bitter end of a supply chain where children, instead of going to school, wander barefoot gathering bits of salvaged metal for pennies.

Black, poisonous smoke darkens the sky above Agbogbloshie, the final destination for electronic waste shipped from all over the globe. Some 50,000 people, including many children, live here - at one of the world's largest e-waste dumping grounds.

Literally tons of old electronics burn in countless open fires, making my skin burn and itch as I walk through the grounds. There's a metallic taste in my mouth, and my head throbs. Meter-high, dazzling, green flames release huge wafts of black, poisonous fumes. It's like an apocalyptic painting come to life.

People burn the cables and circuit boards to get the poor man's gold within: copper, aluminium, lead - valued raw materials for industry.

Sacrificing their health

Badugu is 25 years old. He can't say how long he's been getting copper coils and metal plates out of old radios. He only knows that he has no choice - this is his livelihood.

"I want money, that's why I come do this work," he says. "Today is very bad," he added. He describes himself as having a "problem inside" due to all the toxic smoke.

Next to Badugu, several children are busy breaking apart old televisions. Some kids drag speaker magnets strung on cords behind them, wandering the grounds for hours so bits of metal stick to the magnets. They then sell their catch - bits of circuit board, screws, aluminium, copper - to metal traders next door. Their income amounts to just a few euro cents.

Wearing plastic sandals and a torn T-shirt, Peter stands on a mountain of glass shards, old freezers, copy machines and car batteries; at his feet, pink ink from printer cartridges coat the black ground. He shows me his arms and legs, which are covered in cuts from broken glass and sharp slivers of metal.

"I'm sick in my head," he says, describing his constant headaches. Many children here have breathing problems, and cough up blood. Some, Peter says, also have problems with their eyes. His siblings work here as well. Peter's mother sells sweets on the street. He doesn't know where his father is.

"I want to get money, take my money and go to school. That's why I am here," Peter says forcefully.

Photo Reporting: Ghana Environmental Pollution

E-waste from Europe

The grounds are full of heavy metals from televisions and computers. Toxic brominated flame retardants, which inhibit the ignition of combustible organic materials, are all around.

The children who live and work here have a wide range of ailments - from kidney disease, to liver malfunction, to problems with other organs. Ghanaian environmental activist Mike Anane, who's been coming to Agbogbloshie for years, can attest to the toxic effect on the kids.

The children's illnesses are "a result of their exposure to e-waste from the industrialized countries," Anane says.

Anane has been gathering evidence on how the rich Western world is dumping its electronic waste in Africa. "From Germany, from Denmark, China - the world's computers, television sets, e-waste. They all come here to die!" he says. This waste is destroying the environment - and making people sick, he adds.

"Will this ever stop?" he wonders.

Photo Reporting: Ghana Environmental Pollution

Trade brings consequences

Despite months of inquiries, phone calls and emails, as well as personal visits to municipal offices, Ghana's officials wouldn't agree to be interviewed. Only Mike Anane seems able to provide information on the dump.

"In the past, a lot of dumping used to go on in Nigeria as well. E-waste seems to go where the economy is booming, where trade seems to be increasing," Anane says. With Ghana's international trade also came e-waste. "It is very easy for the organized crime involved in this activity to slip these containers into our ports," he points out.

The Basel Convention, which some 170 nations have signed, forbids the export of technological waste from Europe. Despite this, about 500 containers full of old electronic devices land in Agbogbloshie every month. They are declared as used items, and are therefore fully legal. Some exporters even believe that they are helping Africans, Anane says.

"But there is no way that we can properly recycle or properly dispose of this toxic electronic waste," he states.

Photo Reporting: Ghana Environmental PollutionVending old electronics

In neighborhoods around the dump, shops have taken over entire lanes to sell the electronics.

Rockson is one vendor who sells everything: old air-conditioning parts, car batteries, microwaves. The apparent bestsellers are flat-screen displays, the merchant says, which sell for 200 cedi - about 100 euros.

He gets most of his wares from Italy. The rear section of the shop is stuffed with old Italian newspapers, insulation from the transport container.

"It's a good business - we have a lot of customers," Rockson says. Ghanaians trust original brands, not cheaper Chinese copies, he adds.

I discover some items from Germany - much to Rockson's delight. A small battery-powered vacuum cleaner has made its way across oceans to this store. "Yeah, very, very good quality, they like it," Rockson says.

Rockson admits that not all of the items actually work. "We buy in bulk, we buy quantities or we buy untested," he says. Many of the items appear to be 10 to 20 years old.

E-waste trading has been going on in Accra for about a decade. From every container, perhaps 15 or 20 percent of the devices work - the rest is sold to scrap dealers for the boys to pick through.

Photo Reporting: Ghana Environmental Pollution

No more 'playing ostrich'

Back at the dump, 18-year-old Maxwell is tending a big fire. Along with some friends, he's burning up old heaters and auto parts. His eyes are frighteningly yellow - a sign of liver stress. Maxwell, too, has come to Accra from a poor village in northern Ghana.

"My mother and father, we don't have anything," he says. "That's why I am here, to work," Maxwell says. He sends his earnings to his family.

Maxwell pokes a metal pole into a burning air conditioner. With his bare hands, he pulls apart the red-hot metal pieces roasting in the flames. Next to us, young women stand in the biting smoke, selling small bags of water - to cool down the hot wires and copper coils. A small girl, perhaps two years old, without sandals and without a diaper, stumbles toward me, looking for her mother.

Anane wants European countries to stop dumping their e-waste in Africa and address the problems they cause.

"The industrialized countries, the European Union, cannot continue to play ostrich," Anane says. They know the electronic waste is shipped here, and should do something about it, he thinks.

Consumers need to be more aware of where their waste ends up. And recyclers should be held responsible for making sure the work is done in conditions safe for people and the environment, Anane says.

As the sun sets, we come across Joshua, a five-year-old with a vacant face. He's on his way to work at the dump, carrying a metal bin on his head. And he's in complete despair - some of the bigger boys have taken away his work tool: the speaker magnet. He can't collect magnetic metals now, and he doesn't know what to do.

Then I find the remains of a copy machine from Cologne, Germany. A sticker on the side of the old machine says: "This copy machine is suitable for use with recycled paper."

It's an ironic farewell from one of the worst e-waste dumps in the world.

Date 07.01.2014

Author Alexander Göbel, Agbogbloshie, Ghana / sad

Editor Louisa Schaefer

Source: Deutsche Welle

BAWUMIA PUSHES MAHAMA INTO ACTION -As Gov’t abrogates ‘chop-chop’ GYEEDA contracts with service providers

politics

Photo Reporting: GYEEDA CommitteeBAWUMIA PUSHES MAHAMA INTO ACTION -As Gov’t abrogates ‘chop-chop’ GYEEDA contracts with service providers

fter demonstrating what many have described as lukewarm attitude towards dealing with the massive financial rot that was uncovered in respect of the administration of the Ghana Youth Employment and Entrepreneurial Agency, the John Mahama-led National Democratic Congress government has been forced by the mounting pressure from many well-meaning Ghanaians to take some action against some organisations implicated in the rot.

JusticeGhana Looks at the Ups and Downs of 2013

year review

Photo ReportingThe Ups and Downs of the Year 2013

Hello, Many Thanks and Welcome to JusticeGhana- and to have time and insight into what in our humble opinion, we saw as the major ups and downs of the year 2013. We begin as follows:

JANUARY

POLITICS (07 Jan)-John Mahama sworn in as President amid Legal Protest- The incumbent President of Ghana and the leader of the ruling National Democratic Congress John Dramani Mahama; was sworn in as President in line with the presidential election result of 07 and 08 December 2012 polls in which on 9 December 2012, the Chairman of the Ghana Electoral Commission- Dr Kwadwo Afari-Gyan declared him as winner and president-elect of Ghana. The declaration was gazetted by the Declaration of President-elect Instrument 2012 (CI 80) on 11 December 2012. Notwithstanding this, the main opposition leader of New Patriotic Party (NPP)- Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo; his running mate- Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, and the NPP Chairman- Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey, on 28 December 2012, lodged at the Supreme Court, a petition challenging the validity of the outcome of the presidential result. The reason being that there were evidential proofs suggesting irregularities tallied during the elections that favoured the NDC. And that 24,000 of the pink sheets results from some polling stations showed that those anomalies were enough to affect the results. At this inauguration attended by the Chief Justice Georgina Theodora Wood, Ex-Presidents Rawlings and Kufuor, foreign heads of state, diplomats and people of all walks of life, the all-white-dressed John Mamaha paid a glowing tribute to such forefathers and foremothers as Nana Yaa Asantewaa; Naa Gbewa, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah; Dr. J.B. Danquah; Efua Sutherland, Dr. James Kwegyir Aggrey; Drs. Esther Afua Ocloo and Ephraim Koku Amu, whom the new leader said are firmly etched in the world’s memory. JusticeGhana might have misconstrued this citation as a hung on the founding-father’s debate.

Images of the monkey being prepared for lift-off were shown on Iranian televisionSCIENCE(BBC, 28 January):Iran 'successfully sends monkey into space'- Iranian state TV showed images of the monkey, which was strapped into a harness, being taken to the rocket. According to the BBC report, Western nations have expressed concern that Iran's space programme is being used to develop long-range missiles. The primate, in the words of the Iranian defence ministry travelled in a Pishgam rocket, which reached an altitude of some 120km (75 miles) for a sub-orbital flight before "returning its shipment intact". “In 2010, Iran successfully sent a rat, turtle and worms into space. But an attempt to send a monkey up in a rocket failed in 2011. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced in 2010 that the country planned to send a man into space by 2019. A domestically-made satellite was sent into orbit for the first time in 2009.”

FEBRUARY

Photo ReportingRELIGION: Benedict delivers last Sunday papal blessing- Pope Benedict XVI delivered his last Sunday address to crowds in St. Peter's Square before his abdication. Police estimated that 100,000 people packed the Vatican City's public plaza to hear the leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics deliver his final noon Sunday Angelus blessing in various languages from his Vatican apartment window. Flags in the crowd represented many nations, with a large number from Brazil. The 85-year-old pontiff told Sunday's crowd that he would continue to serve the church "in a way that is more commensurate to my age and my strength". "But this does not mean abandoning the Church, on the contrary," Benedict added. "The Lord is calling me to climb onto the mountain, to dedicate myself even more to prayer and meditation," he said to cheers of "Long Live the Pope." Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone - who occupies a post known as the "Camerlengo Cardinal" (Chamberlain Cardinal) - will take over... (ipj/slk (AFP, AP, Reuters, dpa) Date 24.02.2013)

Photo ReportingINTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: UN Security Council condemns North Korean nuclear test- All 15 members of the United Nations Security Council approved a press statement criticizing a North Korean nuclear test as "a clear threat to international peace and security " and violation of existing UN resolutions. "The members of the Security Council strongly condemned this test, which is a grave violation of Security Council resolutions," South Korean Foreign Minister Kim Sung-hwan, whose country chairs the council, told reporters after the meeting in New York. The written document called the test "a clear threat to international peace and security," and also alluded to a January meeting, convened to discuss a successful satellite launch by North Korea that much of the international community considered to be a disguised ballistic missile test. Then, the council said it would take "significant action" in the event of a third North Korean nuclear test. "In line with this commitment the SC said it will begin work immediately on appropriate measures in a SC resolution," Tuesday's statement said. North Korea's official KCNA news agency "confirmed that the nuclear test was carried out at a high level in a safe and perfect manner using a miniaturized and lighter nuclear device with greater explosive force than previously, and did not pose any negative impact on the surrounding ecological environment," KCNA said. (msh/jlw, AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters, 12 February)

MARCH

Photo Reporting: Kenyan Election HearingKENYAN ELECTIONS: Kenyan election results 'doctored', say Raila Odinga supporters. The political coalition led by Prime Minister, Raila Odinga, said on Thursday that the vote-tallying process now under way to determine the winner of the country's presidential election "lacks integrity" and should be stopped, and alleged that some vote results had been doctored. Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta had a substantial lead over Odinga by Thursday evening. Kenyatta had more than 3.1m votes while Odinga had almost 2.6m, although fewer than half of the polling stations had been tabulated. The election commission chairman, Isaak Hassan, said he had not seen any case where the total valid votes exceeded the number of registered voters. (The Guardian /AP, 07/3/13)

Photo ReportingOBITUARY/TRIBUTES: African literary giant Chinua Achebe dies- Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe was reported dead in the United States at the age of 82. He is widely regarded as the grandfather of modern African literature. The career of famed Nigerian author Chinua Achebe spanned more than half a century. The announcement of his death at the age of 82 prompted an immediate flood of tributes from Africa and beyond. “Achebe's first novel "Things Fall Apart", which was published in 1958, was translated into dozens of languages and sold more than 10 million copies worldwide,” the report adds. (Deutsche Welle, 22/03/2013)

Photo ReportingCHARITY/DIPLOMACY (Mar 26): Prez Mahama Receives Bill Gates At Flagstaff House- Bill Gates of the Microsoft fame arrived in Ghana for a two-day working visit to familairise himself with his Foundation’s projects and to participate in the immunization tour. According to GNA report, President John Mahama said that the support from the Bill Gates’ Foundation had helped to boost the nutritional needs of children and increase school enrolment, making Ghana reach the universal enrolment level. On malaria, President Mahama was quoted as stating that his ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) government was using new methods of tackling the malaria parasite by the use of Bio Lavaesite to supplement the existing methods. Bill Gates was reported to have said he was in the country to observe Ghana's healthcare system and the need to replicate it elsewhere and promised to partner with Ghana to ensure that the health needs of the people are met in the coming years.

Photo ReportingTERRORISM: Cleric linked to 9/11 dodges deportation in Britain- Britain's Court of Appeal thwarted the government's efforts to deport Abu Qatada, a radical Islamist cleric who is wanted on terrorism charges in Jordan. The court argued that his right to a fair trial in Jordan is in jeopardy. The announcement from the three judges of the Court on Wednesday stated that while they consider Qatada to be dangerous, his right to a fair trial under the European Convention on Human Rights could not be guaranteed. "The court recognizes that [Qatada] is regarded as a very dangerous person but emphasizes that this is not a relevant consideration under the applicable Convention law," the court said. The decision cemented the previous ruling from the Special Immigration Appeals Commission, which blocked Qatada's deportation in November. Home Secretary Theresa May has been actively pushing for Qatada's deportation and had received assurances from Jordan that he would receive a fair trial if he was deported. "This is not the end of the road, and the government remains determined to deport Abu Qatada," the Home Office said in a statement. Qatada is believed to be linked to the September 11, 2001, terror attacks against the United States. It is also believed he had ties to former al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. Qatada has been in and out of prison in Britain since 2002, and was jailed earlier this month for allegedly violating the terms of his house arrest (Reuters, AP and AFP,- 27/03/13)

APRIL

Photo ReportingINTERNATIONAL JUSTICE: Human rights court backs Tymoshenko- The European Court of Human Rights says that the pre-trial detention of the former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko was "arbitrary" but couldn't find evidence of maltreatment in prison. The court found that "Tymoshenko's pre-trial detention had been arbitrary, that the lawfulness of her detention had not been properly reviewed and that she had no possibility to seek compensation for her unlawful deprivation of liberty." Ukraine had broken Articles 5 and 18 of the Convention, including the rights to liberty and security. According to the report, Tymoshenko's lawyer Serhij Vlasenko expressed his satisfaction stating that "The highest legal authority in Europe has for the first time issued a legal assessment of the Tymoshenko trial. He added that the court had found that Tymoshenko's arrest was "illegal and arbitrary," and had made out "political motives for the prosecution." Vlasenko. “Tymoshenko was arrested on 05 August 2011 and two-and-a-half months later, a court in the capital Kyiv sentenced her to a fine and seven years in prison. It was found that she had overstepped her authority as head of government when she signed a gas contract with Russia in 2009. The trial and the verdict led to a storm of international criticism,” the report said. (Reuters, AP and AFP/DW, 30/04/13)

MAY

Photo ReportingLAW & JUSTICE: The Supreme Court overrules objection by petitioners- The Supreme Court overruled an objection raised by Philip Addison- lead Counsel for the 2012 election petitioners that Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, the second petitioner should not be made to identify a document that did not emanate from the petitioners. Tsikata had argued that Addison was trying to set up an entirely new case when the respondents have argued right from the start of the trial that there was no over-voting as claimed by the petitioners. Addison submitted among others that he finds it surprising that Tsikata would be bringing an entirely different pink sheet outside the 11,000 pink sheets the petitioners submitted and seek to question the witness on it. After some 30 minutes of deliberation, the Presiding Judge- Justice William Atuguba, who read the ruling, said that so far as the question objected to seek to portray that there were other pinks sheets with malpractices of the kind in respect of which the witness had testified that they should be annulled, the objection is over ruled. Justice Atuguba added however that beyond such composite question, the questioning cannot be allowed as much as the third respondent’s turn to testify along the line is yet to come. Earlier, the court also overruled a similar objection raised by Addison when Tsikata sought to ask the witness to identify a document. These arguments oscillated around 24,000 polling station results and the 26,000 stations (GNA, 07/05)

JUNE

Photo ReportingELECTORAL CONFLICT (09 June): Pink Sheets Are Not Sensitive Materials- Dr Kwadwo Afari Gyan- the Chairman of the Electoral Commission of Ghana, stated that pink sheets unlike ballot sheets are not considered as sensitive materials. “Ballot papers are not just critical but also sensitive materials. Sensitive in the sense that if they fall into the wrong hands, they will corrupt the outcome of the election; so according to our classifications, ballot papers and pink sheets are not in the same category,” he said. He conceded however, that some special voting centers had codes whilst others did not. “If it is a center which is not ordinarily a polling station, it will have a code or designation… some will have codes, others will not… if it is a temporary indication of where the voting will take place, it will not have a code in the same sense as the polling station,” he added.


JULY

Photo Reporting- Egypt's Mohamed Morsi centrePOLITICAL CONFLICT (03/07): Mohamed Morsi ousted in Egypt's second revolution in two years- Patrick Kingsley and Martin Chulov in Cairo reported the overthrow of Muslim Brotherhood's political leader and president of Egypt- Mohamed Morsi. The chief of the armed forces, General Abdel-Fatah al-Sisi, was quoted to have announced that he had suspended the constitution and would nominate the head of the constitutional court, Adli Mansour, as interim president on Thursday. Both presidential and parliamentary elections would follow shortly afterwards and a transitional cabinet would be named. Islamists saw Morsi's removal as a betrayal of democracy. According to the Guardian UK report, on Wednesday evening Barack Obama urged Egypt's military to hand back control to a democratic, civilian government without delay, but stopped short of calling Morsi's ouster a coup. “In a carefully worded statement, Obama said he was "deeply concerned" by the military's move to topple Morsi's government and suspend Egypt's constitution. He said he was ordering the US government to assess what the military's actions meant for US foreign aid to Egypt $1.5bn a year in military and economic assistance.”

AUGUST

Photo ReportingTHE VERDICT (Tuesday 29 August 2013) The 9-member panel of Supreme Court judges who sat on the presidential election petition brought by Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo; Dr Mahamudu Bawumia and Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey, handed down its ruling, stating that the “overall effect” of their decisions on the various grounds of irregularities implied that President John Dramani Mahama, was validly elected, and accordingly, dismissed the claims being sought. In reading out the verdict, Presiding Judge- William Atuguba (JSC), stated at paragrah 5 of the judgement as follows: “Atuguba, Adinyira, Dotse, Baffoe-Bonnie, Gbadebge and Akoto Bamfo dismiss the claim relating to voting without biometric verification.” At paragraph 9 of the judgement Justice Atuguba also reads: “Baffoe-Bonnie JSC grants the claim of voting without biometric verification cancels the votes involved and orders a rerun of the areas affected.” The question that arose was: how can Justice Baffoe-Bonnie uphold and dismissed, at the same time, the violation of “No Biometric Verification”? Justice Paul Baffoe-Bonnie was said to have upheld that 705,305 votes in 1,739 polling stations have to be cancelled because those votes were cast without biometric verification. It was also discovered that Ms Justice Rose Constance Owusu’s name was omitted from the front page with the title “CORAM, although she was one of the nine-panel justices. Though with murmurs, both stakeholders accepted their trials and triumphs in a measured faith.

SEPTEMBER

Photo ReportingGOVERNANCE (11/09): J.A. Kufuor Advocates for a Second Chamber of Parliament- Former President John Agyekum Kufuor rekindled the position of his forbearers in the formation of Oman Ghana as a replica of the United Kingdom. “I believe in a second Chamber which is made up of equal representation of regions and also perhaps major identifiable groups – say religious groups, traditional authorities... 'Then off course the Constitution should be arranged in such a way that the house of the people, that’s the lower house, will not be given a free reign, too easily, to impose the majority rule…” This was against the backdrop of a post-election petition verdict lecture on “fostering peace, national cohesion and reconciliation” delivered by Ex-Prez de Klerk on devolution of power to the local government level through regional governments in African countries. “…I don’t like the hybrid idea of ministers sitting in Parliament, no. If you are a Minister, you are [part of the] Executive. Stay on one side. Professionalize the House of the People, that’s Parliament”, XYZ quoted Kufuor as saying.

The Hague: Judges at The Hague have upheld the 50-year jail sentence of former Liberian President Charles Taylor for aiding murderous rebels in Sierra Leone's civil war, Aljazeera news reported. “Taylor, 65, had earlier been found guilty by the Special Court for Sierra Leone on April 26, 2012, of 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity including terrorism, murder, rape and using child soldiers. He was sentenced to 50 years in prison. Judges at the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) on Thursday rejected Taylor's appeal against his earlier conviction.” (aljazeera.com/news/africa/2013/09 The ex-aide to General Samuel Doe of Liberia was a pillar in his overthrow and brutal execution in 1989

OCTOBER

Photo ReportingHEALTH & YOUTH UNEMPLOYMENT: Jobless youth are 'public health time bomb', says WHO (BBC 30/10)- Youth unemployment in the UK is a "public health time bomb waiting to explode", according to a review by the World Health Organisation has warned of the health consequences of high numbers of Neets - people not in employment, education or training (aged 16 to 24) classed as Neet, are more than one million in the UK. The report also said the UK was behind other European countries on female life expectancy, deaths of children under five and child poverty. In the words of James Gallagher- BBC Health and science reporter, the WHO and the University College London Institute of Health Equity analysed the reasons for differences in life expectancy across Europe, stating that being unemployed has immediate health consequences, including an increased risk of depression and suicide and in the longer term increases the risk of chronic diseases such as cancer, heart disease and stroke…(link to youthnews)

NOVEMBER

JusticeGhana receives its certificate of recognition as a duly registered Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) and as a Company Limited by Guarantee (Feb)- and is being regulated by the Department of Social Welfare in Ghana. It has started its operations in the country- focusing on: Health Promotion; Education & Training; Research, Information, Advisory & Advocacy Services.

DECEMBER

Photo ReportingOBITUARY/TRIBUTES (05/12/2013): The World Mourns The Final Passing of Nelson Mandela- The anti-apartheid campaigner and the first Black South African President- Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela, born on 18 July 1918, was reported dead after battling a prolonged illness on Thursday 05 December 2013, at the age of 95. His body was taken by military escort to Pretoria, where it was laid in state at government buildings for three days and finally laid to rest in his ancestral home in Qunu on 15 December 2013. KABC news report quotes President Zuma as saying: "What I liked most about Mandela was his forgiveness, his passion, his diversity, and the impact of what he did." President Obama of the United States of America describes him as “the last great liberator of the 20th century.”

………………………

SLIPS

*The Passing of Professor Kofi Awoonor in faraway Nairobi, Kenya, on 21 September, following a terrorist attack.

*The Passing of Harry Sawyerr on 08 November 2013, Accra, Ghana … you may continue with the compilation.

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