Mahama lauds TOR & BOST workers for a stellar performance

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President John Mahama
President John Mahama
President John Mahama has lauded workers of the Tema Oil Refinery for what he described as their “stellar performance” that has led to the revival of the company from collapse.
He also commended the workers of Bulk Oil Storage and Transportation Company Limited for their support in making TOR fully functional. “Workers of TOR and BOST have demonstrated that the positive working partnership between labour and government is capable of producing results that can make all of Ghana proud,” President Mahama said. TOR had until February this year been dormant following the numerous challenges that caused it to cease production of various types of fuels. Currently, it processes 45,000 barrels per day. In October 2015, workers of the company agreed to forgo their November salaries to help revamp the fortunes of the company; a move that saved the company about GHȼ 3.8 million and contributed to the revamping of processes. President Mahama in his May Day address to organised labour on Sunday in Wa in the Upper West Region commended the workers for their sacrifices, which has significantly helped in saving the refinery. “We have seen workers sacrifice and work at the highest international standards and not only have these combine efforts brought back the crippled national asset from the brink but have also restored national fuel security. “Today, our storage tanks; all the way from Tema to Bolgatanga are full and indeed for the first time in many years, TOR has operated nonstop since February this year,” President Mahama said. Mr Mahama said he was happy the company is back with full swing and working efficiently to recapture its glory days, indicating that staff morale is high. TOR currently produces more than one third of the country’s consumption. The company is seeking to expand its daily production to 60,000 barrels to account for 65 per cent of national consumption. President Mahama said the revival of TOR not only consolidates Ghana’s fuel security but also the creation of high skilled and high paying jobs for the people of Ghana. “The example of these two state enterprises has disproved the widely held notion that state enterprises cannot run efficiently. I call on other SOEs that are gripped by lethargy and demoralisation to learn from these two organisations,” he urged. President Mahama said the feat achieved by the TOR and BOST puts Ghana closer to the realisation of his vision in making the country the petroleum hub in the West African sub region He said this vision will ultimately create more jobs, “consolidate our gains in the energy sector and strengthen our currency”. Earlier workers of TOR through the Trades Union Congress’ Secretary General, Kof Asamoah, expressed their appreciation to President Mahama for his resisting all attempts at shutting the refinery down. By Stephen Kwabena Effah|3news .com|Ghana

Vote for candidates with sound policies – workers told

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workers The Trades Union Congress has urged Ghanaian workers to vote for a presidential candidate who with policies and issues that will ultimately turnaround the current challenges facing the country.
Eastern Regional Secretary of the TUC, Phyllis Agyeman asked workers not to allow themselves to be influenced by politicians in the November 7 general elections. She gave the advise Sunday when thousands of the workers marched through some principal street of Koforidua to mark this year’s May Day celebration which is themed “Election 2016: The Role of Workers in Securing Peaceful Elections for National Development”. Workers in the region summed up their grievances on placards, which they held in the 30-minute march that ended at the Jacksons Park where their leaders addressed them. Ms. Agyeman encouraged workers to vote for a candidate who will create more jobs, improve the economy to better the living conditions of the people and tackle sanitation issues among others. “We urge the workers to vote for candidates who will tackle issues,” she said. She also kicked against ECG’s privatisation and asked for more political will from governments to help State enterprises and agencies survive as against their privatisation. Touching on the rights of workers, she expressed regrets that some foreign private firms were abusing their workers. She thus called for a swift action to be taken to protect the rights of workers while urging them to be productive. “The companies who are abusing workers should desist from it. They must respect the laws governing workers,” she warned. Eastern Regional Minister, Mavis Ama Frempong, congratulated workers for their hard work over the years that have contributed to the nation’s development process. She urged them not to be influenced unnecessary to initiate demonstrations, especially in this election year, but rather dialogue with government to settle whatever differences they may have. “I wish to see the day workers of the Eastern Region will march for productivity. To whom more is given, more is expected, ” Ms Frempong said, adding “Do not allow yourself to be influence by anybody to go on demonstrations, we will dialogue with you. Your hard work over the years has brought us this far. ” Commenting on the upcoming elections, she noted the exercise is a shared responsibility of government, workers and the clergy among other stakeholders, and cautioned against violence in the on-going limited voters registration exercise. “I urge the political parties not to use violence but rather support the Electoral Commission to have a successfully exercise,” she said. By Yvonne Neequaye|3news.com|Ghana

Yatsuhashi pumped up for first taste of Ghana’s Super Clash

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Kenichi Yatsuhashi Accra Hearts of Oak coach Kenichi Yatsuhashi claims Kumasi Asante Kotoko is in crisis but has warned his players that makes them extremely dangerous opponents.
The Japanese will take charge of his first game against Hearts’ biggest rivals on Monday and told 3FM 92.7 that he is excited about the prospect of playing in the game. Hearts of Oak’s form has been much better than Kotoko’s this season. The Phobians are second in the league standings, one point behind Wa All Stars. Given their struggles this season and the general prediction of doom, the Phobians have exceeded early season expectations. But Yatsuhashi knows he is a game or two away from a crisis and has watched Kotoko hit the wrong notes throughout the season. The Porcupine Warriors have lost three of their four games on the road and suffered a set back in the last game at home to New Edubiase in Kumasi. You would think the uncertainty in the camp of the Porcupine Warriors makes this the perfect time to face them but Yatsuhashie does not see it that way. He said: “In my professional opinion, I think you may agree that Kotoko is in crisis. When a team is in crisis they can go either way. They can keep falling or they will rise for the moment. I think Kotoko will rise for the moment so this will be an extremely difficult match for Hearts of Oak. We could be playing the best Kotoko that anyone has seen this season.” Yatsuhashi himself will understand how a sense of crisis and chaos can inspire great performancces. When he arrived at Hearts of Oak, there were not many people willing to bet on his tenure as a potential success. He had no previous track record in coaching apart from stints with various American colleges and the feeling was that Hearts of Oak needed something more than that. He has proved that to be wrong so far but even more crucial he says is the fact that he is perpetually on trial. “I think every moment that my team is on the pitch, I have to prove something to the critics”, he told 3FM 92.7. “The critics have been with me from the first day I arrived in Ghana . I always have to prove myself. I had to prove myself last week in Obuasi and this week I have to prove myself too.” These days the Hearts fans adore him. When there were suggestions he could be sacked for an explosive facebook post that exposed months of unpaid wages of players, the powerful supporters group Chapter O threatened chaos. The club’s managers backed then. It was something of a moral victory for the Japanese but he is eager to move on from that episode. Instead, Yatsuhahie talks about the overall strength of his team, the spread of goals in the squad and why he is convinced they will grow from strength to strength. “I am partucularly happy with the strikers because everyone can come in and score. Even Foovi who has not scored this season can come and deliver for us but our strongest department is goalkeeping because we have so many quality names there.” That said, the Japanese knows a lot of that will come to nothing unless he wins against Kotoko. “Everyone told me since I arrived here that it is the biggest rivalry. I have been told about everyone that it is a really big deal. As players and officials these are the games we live for so we are all excited.” The fans are excited too. Monday should provide us with a fascinating contest. By 3news.com|Ghana

Don’t be deceived; form matters in Hearts-Kotoko games

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Hearts Kotoko The narrative that Hearts-Kotoko games do not depend on form has been consistent. Often in the build up to games between the two sides, it has been the side reeling from a poor run that has sang that tune the most.
It is no surprise then that, that has been the mantra of most Kotoko fans, officials and ex-players in the build up to their crunch meeting with Hearts of Oak on Monday. It is easy to see why. This season has been a tale of two completely different fortunes. Hearts have played with verve, energy and belief. Kotoko has stuttered, looked unsure and poor for large parts. They seem to take two steps forward, one back. Their eternal rivals meanwhile seem to waltz through one controversy after the other without ever allowing it to remotely affect them on the field of play. So last weekend, Hearts went to AshantiGold and won for the first time in nine years. The game was set in the background of reports that Kenichi Yatsuhashi was about to lose his job. He was called childish by the club’s chief executive Vincent Odotei for publicly scolding them over attempting to pay his salary while they owed the players. Kenichi used his post match press conference against WAFA to insist he stood by every word he had posted on facebook. And amidst all the chaos, he still took his side to a venue they normally lose and delivered a masterclass. That same weekend, Kotoko were in Kumasi with the firm conviction that their season had finally taken off. The Porcupine Warriors had won a first away game of the season away at Dreams FC, their second straight in the league and their third if you add the FA Cup win in Tumu. They had momentum, they had drive but they came crushing against New Edubiase. The seven-point gap that the contrasting result has created speaks of a gulf in form between the two sides and for Kotoko fans it doesn’t make for great reading. Hearts have faced and triumphed over adversity this season. They went to Inter Allies and recovered from a 2-0 reverse. They travelled to Tarkwa and beat Medeama when everyone expected them to lose. Wa Al Stars came to Accra and deservedly won. It caused a blip with draws against WAFA and Techiman City suggesting a club that was struggling to hold it’s own together. Then came that blistering win in Obuasi. When you measure that against Kotoko’s form, there is no denying who goes into Monday’s game with the right kind of momentum.  Kotoko have lost four times this season including three on the road. In a sense, a Kotoko fixture away from home has become bonus for this who bet on games. Kotoko proved that they can find some form as they did against Dreams FC but that was as much about experience triumphing as anything. The club was reeling from too many punches and like the old experienced boxer, they found the strength to land one deadly knockout. The small opening that most Kotoko fans have been happy to exploit is this thinking that in games against Wa All Stars and WAFA, Hearts have showed a great deal of vulnerability. That is true but All Stars are the form team of the league and on a good pitch, the WAFA side that beat Kotoko on the opening day can get a result. If there is anything that this season has showed us, it is that the Hearts of Oak side that escaped relegation narrowly last season is a vastly improved entity. It is also a stronger entity in the mind. And those are the two fronts on which Monday’s fascinatingcontest will be fought. It will be a game played purely along the lines of form. And granted that may not be enough, this is a Hearts side with mental strength to spare too. In fact Hearts have both in abundance. Recent history too at least suggest FORM does matter. One of the greatest Hearts of Oak sides we have seen was the one that we nicknamed 64 Infantry Batallion. They were the masters of their craft by a mile. Ishmael Addo, Osei Kuffour, Charles Taylor supported by the Jacob Nettey and Sammy Adjei at the back.  They beat Kotoko 4-0. That was form talking. On that painful, wrecthed night of May 9 2001, the events on the pitch was form talking too. Is it by coincidence that Kotoko have dominated recent games between the two sides in the last five years in a period when they have also been the best side in Ghana football on account of their three league titles in the league? The good old, wise voice of football in Ghana, Kwabena Yeboah tells the story of how Hearts struggled against Kotoko between 1980-1985 when the likes of Opoku Nti and Kwasi Appiah had helped make Kotoko a strong unit in Africa. He also tells of how during the era of the Fearsome Fivesome, Hearts bossed those games. Form has not mattered in Hearts-Kotoko games when the gulf between the two sides has not been anything profound. You could argue the gulf now is nothing profound. And by extension you could argue it will not necessarily play a part on Monday. But this is still a game between one side that has looked sure, composed, well drilled and won this season against another that has seemed unsure of itself, stutters too often and can’t seem to put a run together. It is also a game between two sides separated by SEVEN points. Strip away the emotions. Who will you put your money on if there was a jackpot at stake? Logic says Hearts of Oak. By 3news.com|Ghana

Workers step up campaign against ECG privatisation

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ECG campaign Workers of the Electricity Company of Ghana [ECG] in the Central Region have initiated a new campaign strategy against the move by government to privatised of the company.
The workers on Friday night mounted banners with the message – Leave ECG Alone- MIDA Stop ECG Privatisation – at all the company’s offices in the region; an indication of the workers’ zeal to stop the move which has been widely criticised. Per the second compact of the Millennium Challenge Account signed by the Government in August 2014, the ECG is set to be leased to a private company for up to 30 years. Among other things, the move seeks to ensure reliable power supply for domestic and industrial use, improved transparency and independence in the setting of regulated tariffs by the PURC, and improve ECG’s creditworthiness to enable it acquire additional generation capacity from IPPs without, or with limited, recourse to government guarantees. However, the decision has been widely criticised by many experts and individuals including the workers of the company who are under the Public Utility Workers Union of the Trades Union Congress. Speaking to TV3 on the latest move by the workers in the Central Region, the Deputy General Secretary of the Public Utility Workers Union, Michael Adumatta Nyantakyi, said has been prompted by the government’s insistence to go ahead with the deal despite the protest. “It seems all the talking we have done government and MiDA have ignored and we think the time is now for government to understand that the workers are key stakeholders in ECG,” he said. He said the privatisation of the ECG is not right and would not be in the interest of the country, noting that although the ECG has challenges the best way to handle it is not the trajectory the government is taking. That, he said, is not only an imposition by the Millennium Development Authority but also an affront to the people of Ghana. By Kwame Kakraba|3news.com|Ghana

Pres. Mahama addresses Ghanaian workers

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Mahama TUC Thousands of public and private sector workers have gathered across the country to join the world to mark this year’s labour day.
A national event, to be addressed by President John Dramani Mahama is being held at the Jubilee Park in Wa in the Upper West Region where the leadership of organised labour have converged. Themed “Election 2016: The Role of Workers in Securing Peaceful Elections for National Development”, similar events are taking place in the 10 regions across country. And typical of May Day celebrations over the years, the event will see workers voice out their grievances. Issues of workers remuneration, better conditions of service, unemployment and elections are set to feature prominently as the concerns of workers at this year’s events at the various regions. President Mahama’s address is expected to applaud the workers for their sacrifices over the years, appreciate their contributions to the socio-economic development of the country. He will also talk about the need to ensure violence-free election, assure the workers of a free and fair elections come November 7 as well as the various interventions and policies being or already put in place to better the welfare of workers. Secretary General of the Trades Union Congress, Dr. Yaw Baah told TV3’s Daniel Opoku on News 360Saturday night that the theme was carefully chosen considering the fact that Ghana goes to the polls in November. He explained the theme is a reminder to the Ghanaian workers of their role in ensuring a violence free election, adding it seeks to sensitise our members to be alert against violence and also to vote and be part of the process. Dr Baah said all the concerns raised so far on the elections and the Electoral Commission demonstrates how important the election is to the ordinary Ghanaian. “The concerns, for me, reflect the importance Ghanaians attach to the election,” he said and noted that organised labour is fully satisfied with the EC’s preparation towards the November 7 polls. He said until last week when they met with officials of the EC, they thought the preparation by the EC was not up to scratch. “Before we met them, we thought the preparation was inadequate but after our meeting with the chairman of the EC and the Deputy we are satisfied that we are going to have peaceful elections,” he said. Labour and Employment Minister, Haruna Iddrisu, described the theme for the celebration as apt, noting that the conduct of election is a shared and collective responsibility. By Stephen Kwabena Effah|3news.com|Ghana

Dilapidated classroom block given facelift by Airtel Ghana

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school building Dubila Primary School in the Bolgatanga East constituency in the Upper East Region which used to be a death trap has been reconstructed into a modern school infrastructure.
The school was also provided with school uniforms and bags, furniture, and mathematical sets among others. The gesture was made possible through the influence of the Member of Parliament for Bolgatanga East constituency and Deputy Attorney General, Dominic Ayine who wrote to season three of Airtel Touching Lives TV series for assistance. The mud school building which was near collapse was therefore pulled down and replaced with the new structure. Hitherto, academic work at the school was seriously affected as both pupils and teachers were discouraged from attending school for fear of their lives. At a ceremony to hand over the facility to the community, the Legal and Corporate Affairs Director of Airtel Ghana, Hannah Agbozo said education is a cardinal pillar in Airtel corporate social responsibility strategy. She noted that life touched through education will leave a long lasting impact from the individual level through families and communities to the national level. She therefore, urged pupils and the entire community of Dubila to cultivate the habit of maintaining the infrastructure for generation yet unborn to also benefit from it. The Member of Parliament for Bolgatanga East, Dr. Dominic Ayine was grateful to Airtel Ghana for the support. He remarked that government alone cannot meet the needs of every constituency even though several projects including school blocks, CHPS compounds, feeder roads and others have been provided in the constituency. The headteacher of the school, Daniel Aniah Asembono, expressing his gratitude for the project was confident it will increase school enrollment. The school was also provided with a water reservoir.   Story by Tanko Mohammed Rabiu | tv3network.com

Ghanaians should brace up for more tribal politics – Dr. Jinapor

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tribal politics A political analyst, Dr. Abu Jinapor says Ghanaians should brace themselves up for more tribal politics during the elections campaign period.
According to him, issues of tribalism will dominate the political landscape if the citizenry is not economically empowered. Speaking on the Saturday edition of TV3 and 3FM’s New Day programme, Dr. Jinapor maintained that some people vote along tribal lines rather than on issues. He said the role of tribalism still holds a place in Ghana’s politics. He made reference to recent comments by former Transport Minister Dzifa Attivor supposedly pitching the Ewes against the NPP, which have been condemned by many. “Dzifa Attivor’s statement was not good and it’s something that must be condemned. And I am not surprised because, we are going to hear more of those. You remember Osafo Marfo’s issue? It will not only be on political platforms but even academia. Even though we inter marry, these issues will continue until we have an economic empowerment’’. He also added that, “The reality on the ground is that people vote on issues and competence…I do not subscribe to tribalism.”   Story by Sarah Apenkroh | 3FM | tv3network.com