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Government offers 4,799 nurses jobs

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nurseThe Ministry of Health has recruited and posted 4,799 nurses who graduated in 2014 and 2015 to various health facilities in Ghana.

The number includes psychiatry nurses, enrolled nurses, community nurses and midwives, a statement issued by the Ministry of Health and copied to the Ghana News Agency on Monday said.

Statistics from the Nursing and Midwifery Council gave the breakdown as follows: 1,268 registered midwives; 56 registered community nurses, 507 registered general nurses (Psychiatry); 321health assistants clinical; 2,389 registered general nurses; and 258 community health nurses.

The statement said Mr Alex Segbefia, the Minister of Health, gave the statistics when he attended a Public Sensitisation Forum in Ho to help upgrade the Regional Hospital into a Teaching Hospital.

He, however, directed all facilities to ensure that staff to be engaged had their documents processed on time.

“All facilities are to ensure that staffs to be engaged have their documents processed early and placed on the Mechanised Payroll to enable the Controller and Accountant General to effect payment of their salaries on time. This will reduce the incidence of arrears paid to staff,” he said.

The Ministry, he said, was in talks with the Ministry of Finance to secure additional financial clearance which would help engage nurses from private training institutions and other graduate nurses across the country.

Mr Segbefia assured trained nurses and those in school of employment by the Ministry of Health as government had initiated numerous health projects throughout the country.

He mentioned the construction of the seven district hospitals under the NMS Built to Care programme, eight district hospitals project by Euroget, the Ridge Hospital expansion project, and the Legon Teaching Hospital project.

Other on-going projects are the Upper West and East regional hospital projects, the Military Hospital project in Kumasi and the 1,000 Community Health and Planning Services (CHPS) compounds.

Mr Segbefia said as from 2017 all nurses undergoing training would be employed in those facilities to deliver quality healthcare to the people.

He said due to the increased numbers of new trainees and incentives, many nurses were willing to be employed by the Ministry of Health and be posted to any health facility nationwide.

He said government, with the support of its development partners, had constructed and inaugurated many CHPS compounds throughout Ghana.

CHPS compounds are the basic unit of health care delivery systems in Ghana. Nurses are expected to be posted to these facilities to take care of the health needs of communities to address the Sustainable Development Goals.

Source GNA

Electricity overbilling: MP suspects ‘unscrupulous ECG officials’

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ECGMember of Parliament for Asawase, Alhaji Mubarak Mohammed Muntaka, says some unscrupulous people within the Electricity Company of Ghana [ECG] may be behind the recent overbilling of consumers.

He told the House on Tuesday that he believes there may be administrative lapses at the ECG which some unscrupulous officials have taken advantage of to overbill consumers of electricity in the country,TV3’s Evelyn Tengmaa reports.

There have been increasing complaints of overbilling across the country, while hundreds of consumers have complained about the speed with which credits on their prepaid electricity metres run out.

Some businesses have resolved to relocate to neighbouring Ivory Coast due largely to high cost of electricity which they say is crippling their businesses.

An Italian Restaurant – Bread & Wine – based in Accra issued a closure notice to its customers and clients early this year over what the company believed to be overbilling to the tune of about GHC 60,000.

Although the PURC in December 2015 announced a 59.2 per cent increment in electricity, many consumers believe they are paying higher than the approved percentage. Notwithstanding assurances from both the ECG and the Power Ministry, the situation continue unabated.

Making a statement in Parliament Tuesday, Alhaji Muntaka observed how the situation is bringing undue hardship to ordinary Ghanaians, and expressed worry the situation could undermine the President’s effort at solving the country’s power crisis.

He thus suggested to the House to invite the Power Minister to brief the MPs on what the real issues are and what his ministry and the ECG are doing to rectify whatever the issues may be.

Other MPs including Major [Retd.] Derek Oduro of Nkoranza North, and Alhaji Amadu Sorogho of Madina expressed their displeasure at the situation.

Alhaji Sorogho who is the Chairman of Energy Committee said electricity bills have been increased by over 300 per cent and believes some individuals are tempering with the ECG prepaid metres.

He said the Committee is in discussion with the Power Minister over the issue of overbilling, noting the Minister is scheduled to appear before the Committee on Thursday to explain steps being taken to address the issue.

The Speaker of Parliment Edward Doe Adjaho asked the Committee to continue to engage the Minister on the issue and report back to the House accordingly.

By Stephen Kwabena Effah|3news.com|Ghana

Twitter @steviekgh

Stop the use of children in political activities – parties warned

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Girls guide

Chief Commissioner for the Ghana Girl Guides Association, Mrs Juliana Ofori-Kissi, has warned politicians against the use of children, especially those below 18 years, in political activities.

She observed the vulnerability of such children expose them to ‘cohesive exploitation’ and patronage by politicians who use them for their selfish interests.

Mrs Ofori-Kissi gave the warning Monday when she announced the selection of Ghana as the host of a Regional Seminar by the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS) in Accra next month.

The week-long event is expected to be attended by some 100 delegates drawn from the 146 member states of the world association.

The seminar, dubbed the Juliette Low Seminar (JLS 2016) is WAGGS’s flagship leadership development programme for young women aged between 20 and 30 years, providing them the opportunity to develop their leadership skills in a creative, supportive and inspirational environment.

The prestigious seminar is named after Juliette Gordon Low who introduced Girls Scouting to the United States of America with the very first seminar taking place in 1932 in the USA.

Mrs Ofori-Kissi said Ghana was chosen to host the event because of the association’s tremendous achievements which have geared towards the development and advancement of the girl-child.

“Aside sharing and learning best international practices, the seminar will also market Ghana to the entire world as well as build on the high reputation of Ghana on the international platform in terms of tourism, social development and as an adherent to child protection treaties, laws and protocols”, she told journalists.

She commended government for support towards the successful hosting of the international seminar but urged more assistance.

The Chief Commissioner of Girl Guides also commended the Ghana Police and the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection for recent efforts to rescue children from the streets.

She was however worried that despite numerous interventions, the issues of child labour, child trafficking, child prostitution and children hawking remain a worry to all stakeholders.

“As a child-centered organisation, we wish to call on government to make a conscious decision to see to the full implementation of both the Children’s Act of 1998 and the Free Compulsory Universal Basic Education (FCUBE). That way, we will be safeguarding the future of this country”, she said.

The association has been in Ghana since 1921 and currently has over 20,000 members in schools and communities across the 10 regions.

The JLS 2016 takes place from May 30 to June 6 at the Girls Guide National Training Center at Achimota in Accra.

By 3news.com|Ghana

PURC orders ECG to suspend faulty billing software

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ECG

The Public Utility Regulatory Commission (PURC) has ordered the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG ) to suspend the implementation of its ‘faulty’ new billing software until further notice.

The commission has also ordered the ECG to appoint an independent billing software expert to audit the new billing system and present a report to the commission within 10 working days.

These were amongst other orders issued by the PURC to the ECG following several complaints of overbilling by consumers of electricity.

According to the commission, the decision was reached after a thorough investigation into the matter through its Monitoring exercise which culminated into visits to specific areas and also interrogation of bills presented to consumers by the ECG and it concluded that “there was an anomaly in the initial implementation of the new billing software.”

A statement from the commission said “ECG is billing Customers over irregular Periods from 18 days – 43days which are in contravention of the 28-day billing cycle for the Customer.

“Some Customers are billed above the PURC approved Service Charge and the Approved Tariff by the PURC in December 2015

“ECG is billing Customers who have been disconnected over a period of six months with the accumulated debt figure instead of their monthly actual consumption

“More than 62% of Complaints received by the PURC in the first quarter of 2016 were on overbilling as compared to the previous year (18%). Customer Billing Data shows clearly that the ECG has challenges with migrating customer information from the old Billing System to the new Billing System (Software)

“Investigations also revealed that District Frontline Staff who are entrusted to issue customer Bills do not have the adequate technical capacity to accurately use the new Billing software, hence, the billing anomalies customers are experiencing.

“With the new Billing Software, the Billing Cycle of some customers is over a period of four years (2015-2019).”

The PURC in conclusion said “failure to comply with these orders will result in sanctions against the ECG. The PURC is urging all consumers who are experiencing any issues to do with overbilling to report to the PURC.”

By Martin Asiedu-Dartey|3news.com|Ghana
Twitter: @NewsyMartin

Four climbers dead on Everest, ‘mountain of extremes’

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Mountaineer Ralf Dujmovits took this image of a long line of climbers heading up Everest in May 2012
Mountaineer Ralf Dujmovits took this image of a long line of climbers heading up Everest in May 2012

Danger has long been part of the allure of climbing the world’s highest peak.

Avalanches killed 35 climbers on Mount Everest the past two years — including 16 in one devastating day in 2014. At least one person has died climbing the mountain in Nepal every year since 1900.
And now the 2016 climbing season has claimed its first victims.
Since last Thursday four people have died on the 29,035-foot peak, including a Sherpa. Rescue efforts are ongoing for two other missing climbers.
“Everest is a mountain of extremes,” said Jon Kedrowski, a geographer and climber who summited Mount Everest in 2012, when 10 climbers died. “At altitude, the body deteriorates on a certain level.
The recent deaths — coming so quickly on the heels of one another — have rattled climbers who are beginning their descent as the Everest climbing season nears its end. April and May are the most common months to attempt a climb because there tends to be less wind. Regardless, the climate on the mountain is brutal. Temperatures range from -31 to -4 Fahrenheit.
April was the first month of climbing since all ascent was halted after the catastrophic earthquake that struck Nepal in 2015 and a deadly avalanche that killed 16 Sherpas in one day in 2014. More than 200 climbers have died since Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary made the first official ascent in 1953.
And yet the hopefuls keep coming. More than 400 people have attempted the Everest climb this season, including 288 foreigners and more than 100 Sherpas and guides, said Sudarshan Dhakal, director of the Nepal Tourism Department. That’s more than the average for previous seasons, he said.
Here’s a closer look at the recent fatalities.

Thursday

Crew member Phurba Sherpa (no relation to the journalist of the same name) fell to his death. The 25-year-old had been working to fix a route about 150 meters near the summit when he fell, according to Mingma Sherpa, the Nepal rescue team leader who was at the Everest Base Camp.
The Sherpa people are an ethnic group from Nepal who have lived in the high altitudes of the Himalayas for generations. They have long served as guides whose local expertise has been invaluable for foreigners attempting Everest climbs.

Friday

Eric Arnold, 36, of the Netherlands, died at night while heading back after a successful summit on Everest, according to Tashi Lakpa Sherpa, the owner of Seven Summit Treks. A heart attack was suspected, he said.

Eric Arnold on a climb.

Arnold was a triathlete based in Rotterdam, according to his Twitter bio.
While it’s unknown what might have caused Arnold’s apparent heart attack, one of the first steps for anyone considering an Everest trek is to consult a doctor for a full evaluation to screen for any pre-existing conditions, experts say.
If Kedrowski is leading a peak expedition, he screens his clients and designs training programs to help them prepare for the journey. When altitude is a consideration, cardio is the emphasis, rather than strength, Kedrowski said.
The elevation at Everest Base Camp is 17,590 feet, an altitude that decreases oxygen by about 50%. Before attempting a May summit, Kedrowski recommends arriving at base camp toward the beginning of April to acclimatize for a few weeks.
Well aware of the hazards of climbing Everest, Dr. Luanne Freer founded the Everest Base Camp Medical Clinic in 2003. Physicians with mountaineering medical expertise and volunteers staff a medical tent during each climbing season.

Saturday

An Australian woman, Maria Strydom, who was also traveling with the Seven Summit Treks, started suffering altitude sickness. She had reached Camp IV, the final camp before the summit.

A rescue attempt failed to reach Maria Strydom.

Strydom, 34, could not climb any higher and a rescue attempt to reach her failed, according to Tashi Sherpa. The finance professor at Monash Business School in Australia died Saturday before she could come back down to Camp III.
High-altitude cough and acute mountain sickness, which can mean headaches and shortness of breath, are common among Everest climbers, Kedrowski said.
Strydom gave an interview with the school in March detailing her ambition to climb the highest summit on each of the seven continents. She had already climbed Denali in Alaska, Aconcagua in Argentina, Mount Ararat in eastern Turkey and Kilimanjaro in Africa. She had planned to climb Everest with her husband, inspired in part by questions the couple received about their vegan diet.
Her mother, Maritha Strydom, who had been posting updates about her daughter and son-in-law’s expedition, said on Facebook: “I’m just too devastated to communicate, sorry.”
She posted hours later that she was “praying” for her son-in-law, who the Australian media reported was battling “against congestive heart failure.”

Sunday

Subash Paul, 44, died at Base Camp II from altitude sickness, according to Wangchu Sherpa, Managing Director of Trekking Camp Nepal.
Paul was part of a team (consisting of four Indian climbers and four Sherpas) that also saw two members — Paresh Chandra Nath and Goutam Ghosh — go missing Saturday night.
“It is not clear what happened. We believe the weather suddenly deteriorated at some point, and the team lost direction,” Wanchu Sherpa said.
An official at Nepal Tourism Department, Gyanendra Shrestha, said a helicopter search was not possible because the climbers were too high up the mountain.
“We are trying to communicate with other expedition teams around that level to locate the missing climbers,” Shresthra said.
The fourth climber from the team, Sunita Hazra, was rescued and is undergoing treatment at base camp.

Nepal quake shifted Mount Everest three centimeters

Nepal quake shifted Mount Everest three centimeters 02:51
Meanwhile, an Indian woman suffered severe frostbite injuries near Camp IV after climbing Everest from the Nepal side.
Seema Goswami was undergoing treatment at a hospital after being airlifted from the Everest region, said Pemba Sherpa, the Seven Summit Treks manager.
Since the 2016 climbing season opened on Everest, about 300 people have scaled, according to data from Everest Base Camp as of Saturday.
Source: CNN

Syria conflict: IS ‘destroyed helicopters’ at T4 base

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ISNew satellite imagery appears to reveal extensive damage to a strategically significant airbase in central Syria used by Russian forces after an attack by so-called Islamic State (IS).

Four helicopters and 20 lorries were destroyed in a series of fires inside the T4 base last week, the images from intelligence company Stratfor suggest.

The cause of the fires is unconfirmed.

A pro-Kremlin website said the helicopters had been used by “used by both Russian and Syrian air forces”.

Russia has not officially commented on the incident.

A Russian opposition website quoted Syrian sources as saying “a large fire in the Syrian part of the T4 airbase spread to the fleet of vehicles, and after a fuel tank exploded four Russian helicopters nearby went up in flames”.

“The cause of the fire is being established,” it added.


A serious loss, by Frank Gardner, BBC security correspondent

Regardless of what triggered the fire that destroyed four Russian attack helicopters at their central Syrian base, this is the most serious loss for the Russians so far in their engagement against IS.

When the Kremlin deployed forces to Syria last September it was initially cautious about getting drawn into a ground war, wary of taking the mounting casualties that became a feature of its exhausting 10-year campaign in Afghanistan.

But after announcing a strategic withdrawal earlier this year Russia now seems to be getting ever more involved in supporting the forces of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad.

The destruction of so much Russian hardware at the T4 airbase, 40 miles (60km) from Palmyra, has revealed some of the extent of that involvement.

Palmyra is deep inside the Syrian desert, far from the coastal and border battlefields of north-west Syria, where the Russian air force has been most active.

The question now is whether Russia will react to this loss by replacing, increasing or scaling back its presence in Palmyra.


‘Grad rockets’

Speculation that the fire was accidental was fuelled by the first report of the incident, which came from Amaq, a news agency linked to IS, says BBC Arabic’s Syria correspondent Rami Ruhayem.

“Burning of four Russian attack helicopters and 20 trucks loaded with missiles inside T4 airport in eastern Homs [province] as a result of a nearby fire,” the report said, without identifying the cause.

On the same day, IS released an image it said showed one of its fighters firing Grad rockets at T4, also known as Tiyas.

“What the imagery tells us is that first of all this was not an accidental explosion, as some of the rumours kept saying,” Stratfor military analyst Sim Tak said.

“It shows very clearly that there are several different sources of explosions across the airport, and it shows that the Russians took a quite a bad hit.

Map showing location of T4 base in Syria

“An entire combat helicopter unit was wiped out – four helicopters in total – as well as some damage to some of the Syrian planes on the airport, and also very notably a logistic depot, likely one that was being used to supply those specific combat helicopters.”

Mr Tak described Amaq’s account as “very accurate”, and suggested the helicopters and depot were destroyed by IS attacks.

He said it was unclear why IS had not officially said it had caused the destruction.

“In the past IS has claimed similar attacks, they have even videotaped the attacks themselves.

“In this case, we haven’t seen any of those materials come out yet. One possibility is that by making the statement they were intending to claim it while not necessarily phrasing it that way.”

Mr Tak said it “would really be a marginal, almost non-existent chance for this to be accidental”.

Supply lines

In addition to the Russian losses, the area where it happened is strategically significant, Rami Ruhayem says.

The province of Homs stretches out into the Syrian desert towards Raqqa, the capital of the “caliphate” proclaimed by IS in 2014, and Deir al-Zour, on the way to the border with Iraq, he notes.

As it tries to shake the government’s grip on Homs, IS is facing a diverse range of factions on the ground.

The Iranian Al-Alam news website carried reports on 16 May that “Syrian allied forces” had cut off IS supply lines between Raqqa and Homs by taking over four hills overlooking the Shaer gas fields held by IS.

But Mr Tak counters that IS supply lines to Raqqa are holding.

“The regime and the Russians are facing notable challenges in trying to disconnect those two.

“Right now though, the emphasis seems to be more on moving towards Deir al-Zour rather than messing with Raqqa.”

 

 

Source: BBC

How technology is shaping the next leisure travel revolution

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Aircraft phone

 

In the 1970s Boeing’s now-iconic 747 Jumbo Jet revolutionised travel, making mass international air travel affordable. Now trends indicate a second revolution is underway as technology changes the way we holiday.

“Just as the economies of the Jumbo Jet made the dream of an overseas holiday attainable for many more people nearly 50 years ago, today technology is shaping the way we decide where to go, what to do and the experience we have,” says Kevin Leung, British Airways’ commercial manager for Ghana and Kenya.

The airline, which flies to some 200 destinations in nearly 90 countries, has identified four technology influenced trends which are increasingly shaping the way its customers are holidaying.

  1. Always-on: While the unrelenting pressure of constantly being available means some people expressly seek destinations with no connectivity, many more are choosing holidays that add to their mental or physical well-being. Examples include spa-breaks, yoga retreats and cycling or walking trips.

Bleisure, an awful contraction to describe adding a leisure component to a business trip, is an associated trend. British Airways has responded by making loyalty programmes such as the Executive Club and On Business more flexible, allowing busy executives more opportunity to extend business trip to include some ‘me time’.

  1. Enhanced experience: The comfortable familiarity of being recognised and having your needs anticipated is one reason your parents’ generation might have returned to the same resort or hotel year after year. Now your digital profile means airlines, hotels, even restaurants can provide more intuitive customer service.

Five years ago British Airways began using technology to enhance service when it provided iPads to cabin crew. Initially this helped crew resolve issues, such as helping customers with tight connections, but it has since evolved to allow them to deliver a more personalised service.

Knowing a customer’s Executive Club status and having other useful information at their fingertips enables the crew to provide onboard service that’s more akin to a leading hotel than an airline.

  1. Constant evolution: Much has been made, rightly so, of how disruptive innovations such as Uber and Airbnb have given consumers more options and flexibility at better prices. These disruptors are likely to face increased regulatory pressure as traditional business fight to regain market share. They will also have to contend with second-generation disruptors looking for ways improve or undercut their offerings or split off niche markets.

It’s an environment where standing still isn’t an option and the evolution of the British Airways app is a case in point.

In 2008 it was the first airline to launch an iPhone app. The same year it became the first UK carrier to offer mobile check-in. In 2011 it extended mobile check-in to Windows phones. Two years later Passbook boarding passes were made available for iPhone users. In 2014 the mobile app was relaunched, with functionality that enabled customers to make and change bookings. The same year it become the top-rated airline app.In 2015 it was the first airline to develop an app for the Apple watch. It now also allows customers to save multiple boarding passes to their phones.

Other useful benefits include iBeacon technology, which gives iPhone customers a welcome pop-up message and the WifFi password when entering the Terminal 5 lounge. It also gives customers in Terminals 3 and 5 ‘push notifications’ on their smartphones informing them when the gate is open and when the aircraft is boarding.

  1. Less sightseeing more experience: If the Boeing 747 shrunk the world for holidaymakers in the 1970s the internet has put it at millennials’ fingertips. Perhaps this is why the global-village generation is shifting from its parents’ dip-in, dip-out sightseeing holidays to total-immersion experiential travel. Typically this may involve community volunteer work or participating in conservation projects.

“There’s no doubt about the fact that technology is having a major influence on travel trends,” says Leung. “Just 20 years ago when we launched ba.com it was little more than a handful of pages, showing basic timetable, product and contact information. In the past decade the number of flights bought on the website has increased by 300 per cent and nearly 60 per cent of customers now check in on desktop or mobile.”
By: 3news.com|Ghana

Joint project to help reduce menstruation-related school absenteeism launched

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5ad4ccdc-4b91-400b-9275-7695558d30f6

 

Lack of access to sanitary supplies during menstruation drastically increases school absenteeism, whilst inadequate reproductive health education can have even more devastating consequences.

In Ghana, girls and young women in parts of the country face obstacles of caring for themselves during menstruation – girls fall behind or drop out of school completely.

To provide support for underprivileged girls in Ghana to pursue their education, a joint partnership project has been announced in Kumasi to provide sanitary supplies and health-related educational materials to 1,000 junior school girls over the next 6 months.

The three partners for the project include Procter & Gamble SSA (Sub-Saharan Africa Markets), World of Children Award and EPF Educational Empowerment Initiative, a Ghanaian organization founded by Winnifred Selby, 2015 World of Children Youth Honoree.

32866ea6 5571 4bb6 9eaa 5269e94856b1This is P&G’s first corporate citizenship initiative in Ghana, in line with its new Commitment to Action announced at the Clinton Global Initiative Annual Meeting in September 2015, to help girls and women around the globe build confidence.

“Empowering the female child is multifaceted and one of the most powerful platforms to positively change our society,” said Khululiwe Mabaso, P&G’s Director of Communications for Sub-Saharan Africa. “Beyond the powerful impact this initiative will have on the lives of vulnerable Ghanaian females, we are optimistic that this will transverse all over Africa enabling an environment that positively embraces and uplifts the female African child.”

It is broadly estimated that as many as 30 million girls globally lack access to proper sanitation during menstruation.

Through P&G’s ‘Always School Programme’, over 1.2 million girls receive puberty and hygiene education from professional nurses annually.

Selby is thrilled with the joint project and its potential to expand the scope of her current programs.

“Girls can face so many problems in Ghana today. Winning the World of Children Award and entering into this relationship with P&G shows that EPF’s work – and these girls – are truly important to the world. I cannot wait to share the news with them,” she said.

P&G has already made significant impact with campaigns like the Always #LikeAGirl campaign, which elicited an incredibly positive global response.

Harry Leibowitz, Co-Founder of World of Children Award, describes the reasoning behind the three-way project as an opportunity “to bring a largely taboo subject out of the shadows”.

He said “with P&G’s new commitment and past work, Selby’s work with girls in her native Ghana, and World of Children Award in a position to connect the two, the project just makes sense. We’re honored to be an integral part of this incredibly important program designed to help girls remain in school.”

 

Story by Kofi Adu Domfeh | 3news.com | Ghana

CSSPS: successes, challenges and the way forward

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SHSIntroduction

Ghana’s education sector and stakeholders have a responsibility to equip school-age children with requisite attitudes, skills and aptitudes for social integration and economic transformation. They are to ensure that children are provided with the necessary structures and resources for a smooth transition through education.

By the end of basic education, pupils would have sat for the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE), which is conducted by the West African Examinations Council (WAEC). This examination allows candidates to transit to the second cycle of education, where they spend three years to qualify for the West Africa Senior High School Certificate Examinations (WASSCE).

Prior to the introduction of the Computerised School Selection and Placement System (CSSPS), placement of graduates in senior high schools (SHSs) was done manually. Heads of SHSs would gather at regional conferences to go through the records of individual candidates, as presented by WAEC and their basic schools, and hand pick student-performance cards and communicate feedback to parents usually through school notice boards.

The manual system had its own stories to tell. A parent, for instance, whose child chose Adisadel College in Cape Coast, Ghana Secondary School in Koforidua and Kumasi Academy in that order of preference would have to travel all the way to these schools just to find out which of them had selected the child. Of course, it was much of a drudgery and costly!

Manual selection of students’ performance cards was, in fact, a herculean task to heads of schools, parents and students. It was observed to have some weaknesses, including school heads taking too long a time to select pupils by performance, difficulty of school heads giving equal attention to all candidates at the same time, rising cases of favouritism on the grounds of old “boyism” and “girlism”, among others rather than on performance merit.

The CSSPS
The CSSPS, a computer programme designed for placing candidates in SHSs, was introduced in 2005 after two years of piloting to replace the manual system. The overall objective of this computerised system has been to fully automate school placement process in order to reduce human errors and to promote efficiency and fairness in the selection and placement of students in SHSs in the country.

The CSSPS process
The CSSPS has established a procedure for candidates to follow in selecting their schools. WAEC marks the scripts of candidates and gradesthem by subjects after which candidates’ results are off loaded to the CSSPS. The CSSPS then reviews all results of pupils using its inherent procedures for quality assurance.

The process of quality checks of CSSPS, includes ensuring that pupils are identified by their index numbers and gender, and to ensure that schools match with the categories or options selected by pupils for placement.

The CSSPS uses raw scores of candidates for the selection process. Generally, for any BECE candidate to qualify for placement, the candidate will have to satisfy the total raw score of not less than 200.
Pattern of Placement
Every year,the CSSPS Secretariat under the Secondary Education Division of Ghana Education Service (GES), processes the results of candidates after they have been classified. The 2015 pattern of placement had qualified candidates in the 2015 BECE, re-entry candidates from 2012-2014 BECE, foreign students and private BECE candidates.

Challenges of CSSPS
Inequity in the distribution of school resources is a challenge. Analysis of the SHSs, as captured by the appraisal document of theSecondary Education Improvement Project, shows that schools do not have the same endowment in educational resources.

If all schools had the same resources, the System would have been highly appreciated by all stakeholders. This implies that efforts to address the inequity in school resources will, to a large extent, make things much more effective than they are now.

It has been observed that the issue of inequity often makes parents and students choose schools described as Category “A” schools to the neglect of other ones. These ‘A’ schoolsare generally perceived to be wellendowed and popular and for which reason most parents would like their wardsto attend.

A review of the choice pattern of some Category “A” and “C” schools has shown that high information asymmetry on schools and/or preference for well-endowed SHSs at the expense of the so-called less-endowed ones.

Inadequate publication of school information to the public has been identified to have posed some challenges to the selection and placement exercise.Due to the poise of most people to have their children in Category “A” schools, there have been series of direct request for admission from major stakeholders, including religious organisations, traditional rulers and old student groups.

Inadequate and inaccurate data provided by candidates during registration for BECE have also been posing challenges. Sample cases have shown that male students whose forms bear “females”usually end up being placed in girls’ schools and vice versa.

Other problems include choice of schools without reference to their residential status and programmes on offer, lack of participation of parents in the registration of their wards resulting in rejection of placements by some parents and choice of schools without reference to the level of financial preparedness on the part of parents.

Bridging equity gap in schools
The Ministry of Education (MoE) and GES, since the inception of CSSPS, have been implementing programmes that enhance equity in the distribution of resources and facilities to SHSs across the country.

Government, from 2006 to 2008, introduced the Model Schools Upgrade programme that witnessed an improvement in the facilities of 56 less-endowed schools, such as Odorgonno SHS, West Africa SHS, Kadjebi SHS, Adidome SHSs, Bolgatanga SHS and Bawku SHS in order to increase their enrollments.

In 2013, Government, through the MoE, approved the proposal for constructing 200 new Community Day SHSs of which 14 have, so far, been completed with about 109 of them at various stages of completion.
Additionally, 125 low-performing SHSs selected for quality improvement upgrade have been provided with training in mathematics and science as well as in leadership and management in order to help them admit more students.

Fifty low-performing SHSs, outof the 125 identified needy schools, have also been selected and given facility upgrade to help them attract more students and to ease the demand and pressure on the perceived well-endowed schools.Implementation of the Progressively Free SHS programme of Government and the provision of scholarship to brilliant-but-needy students are also being pursued vigorously.

The MoE, in collaboration with GES, has designed and now operating a website dubbed, “Ghanaschoolsinfo.org”to increase access to information on our SHSs and to aid parents, students and the general public in making informed decisions on school selection.

WAEC and GES are in talks to make effective the offloading of BECE results and to promote timeliness in the process of school selection and placement.

Conclusion
The number of BECE candidates that qualified increased from 177,000 in 2005 to 439,000 in 2015 with the number placed also increasing from 151,000 to 439,000 within same period.

If all schools had similar distribution of resources regarding infrastructure, staff and instructional resources, CSSPS would have been appreciated better than it is now. We, therefore, urge stakeholders to get on board for us to see how best we could review and modify the System for the betterment of the child and our nation.
By Ernest Wesley-Otoo & Kwasi Anokye

The writers are with the Ministry of Education and Ghana Education Service

Gyan to miss Ghana friendly, Afcon qualifier

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Asamoah-Gyan
Asamoah-Gyan

Ghana captain Asamoah Gyan has confirmed that he would not be able to play a part in Ghana’s next set of international friendlies because of injury.

Gyan watched Liberty Professionals beat New Edubiase 2-0 in Dansoman on Wednesday and told the media he would be absent from the next two internationals involving Ghana and Guinea and a Nations Cup qualifier against Mauritius.

But he says he still expects the country to win both games.

“The expectations are high and everybody wants us to win so I pray to God that everyone will be fit so we go out and win. So far I’m injured, and I think I’m out of the team so I will wish the players luck so that they make Ghana proud,” Gyan said

Ghana would seal qualification for the 2017 Nations Cup with a point in Mauritius.

By 3news|Ghana

Policy to restrict amount of land acquisition kick-starts

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land not for sale

The Lands Commission has held a stakeholder consultative forum to gather inputs into a policy document that seeks to make the sale of large parcel of land more transparent.

This is to limit the regular occurrence of land grabbing by multinational companies and the multiple sale of land that has taken roots in the country’s land market.

The policy is also expected to boost the agricultural sector and ensure that foreign investment into agriculture are secured.

It seeks to make title holders of parcels of land identifiable.

Most land buyers are duped because they are unable to identify the exact owners of the land at the initial stages of negotiations, thus making them susceptible to fraud.

Prospective land buys sometimes enter into negotiation with people who do not have the legal rights to lease or sell the land to them.

Executive Secretary of the Lands Commission Dr Wilfred Anim-Odame,  told Onua FM that the implementation of the policy will be geared towards directing foreign investment into the agricultural industry.

“One of the most important provisions in the policy will be to regulate the size of land that individuals or institutions can acquire. We have instances where people buy large pieces of land for projects that they needed very little for,” he said.

“People are actually hoarding land and then making it difficult for others to also become property owners, so, as managers of land in the country we (Lands Commission) think this must stop,” he said.

“It is our hope that the policy will bring into place detailed regulation of the land sector and ensure that land is shared equitable and protected for future generations,” he added.

Currently, the policy is in the formulation stage, however, the Lands Commission is positive that a final draft will be submitted to cabinet by the end of July for approval.

Nii Okai Tetteh|Onua 95.1FM|3news.com|Ghana

King Solomon sorry for assault on referee Azumah

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Referee Azumah

 

King Solomon Football Club have urged the police to prosecute those responsible for the attack on referee Samson Azumah that left a cut on his head.

Shocking pictures of the attack on the referee emerged on Monday after the incident at Kwahu Praso following King Solomon’s league defeat at home to Great Olympics.

In a strong worded statement signed by club president King Solomon Amankwah, the club said it is prepared to corporate with the appropriate authorities in order to ensure that those responsible for what it called “barbaric, absurd and irrational” attack are dealt with by the appropriate authorities.

The club also apologised to referee Azumah and said it is committed to his wellbeing.

The statement said it was apologising “with shame and humiliation”.

“What has happened is barbaric, absurd and irrational because the precious life of a human being was at stake,” the statement noted.

“King Solomon FC accepts responsibility for the fans behaviour and would not shield anyone found to be part of this senseless act,” it added.

By 3news.com|Ghana

Street preaching banned in Aboabo after Thursday’s Islamic clashes

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MCE for Asokore Mampong Municipal Assembly is Nurudeen Hamidan
MCE for Asokore Mampong Municipal Assembly is Nurudeen Hamidan

The Asokore Mampong Municipal Security Council has banned street preaching by Islamic clerics in Aboabo Number 2.

The move is to sustain the peace in the area after last Thursday’s clash.

Two Islamic sects – Tijaniyyah and Al-Sunnah – clashed in the Ashanti Region last Thursday over an issue followers say started on Facebook.

According to reports, insults had been traded between the two sects on Facebook before last week’s street brawl.

The resultant fight on Thursday led to the injury of two and the smashing of a sheikh’s car.

Announcing the decisions taken by the Municipal Security Council to TV3 on Monday, May 23, Municipal Chief Executive Nurudeen Hamidan said the Council has deferred to local chiefs, who have assured of resolving the issues. They were part of a meeting held on Sunday.

They have up to next week to report back to the Council, Mr Hamidan noted.

Preaching by the Muslim sects has been restricted to mosques and that can only be done on speakers at minimum sound levels.

“We are monitoring all groups,” the MCE disclosed.

Source: 3news.com|Ghana

Gyan bemoans quality of pitches for GPL games

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empty stadium

Ghana captain Asamoah Gyan says the quality of the pitches for Ghana Premier League games is a major concern that needs to be addressed as soon as possible.

The China-based star watched Liberty Professionals beat New Edubiase 2-0 on Wednesday and while he admits the quality of the league has improved, the quality of the pitches remains a major concern for him.

“Three months ago I did an interview that I congratulated the media because the hype was very very good. In the past we weren’t able to follow the premier league from outside but now we are able to follow it and even better now than we are here.

“The only thing I can complain of is the pitches.The condition is very very bad. I am also in the same game that is why I don’t like what I have seen of the pitches so far.”

By TV3 Sports|Ghana

NLC goes to court to compel JUSAG to return to work

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The staff of the Judicial Service have been on strike since Friday. Haruna Iddrisu (R)
The staff of the Judicial Service have been on strike since Friday. Haruna Iddrisu (R)

The National Labour Commission (NLC) is planning to go to court to enforce its decision that enjoins the members of the Judicial Service Staff Association of Ghana (JUSAG) to go back to work, while they continue their negotiations with the government over their labour dispute.

According to the Executive Secretary of NLC, Mr Charles Bawa Duah, the strike was a clear violation of the Labour Act, 2003 (Act 651) because JUSAG and the government had not exhausted the negotiation process and, therefore, there was no need for the association to embark on the strike.

Speaking to the press after a meeting of the Judicial Council in Accra yesterday, Mr Duah described the strike as illegal, unconstitutional and in bad faith.

“Parties are still in a process of negotiation and more so per the Labour Act, JUSAG should have notified the commission at least seven days before embarking on the action,” Mr Duah said.

Strike

JUSAG declared an indefinite strike last Friday, accusing the government of dragging its feet with regard to the implementation of its consolidated salaries as recommended by the Judicial Council.

At the press conference to declare the strike in Accra, JUSAG said the government had refused to fulfil its part of the bargain after it had appealed to JUSAG members to call off an earlier strike on April 1, 2016. Therefore, it resolved not to call off the strike again until its demands were met.

“In view of the failed assurances, the National Executive Council (NEC) of JUSAG hereby directs the withdrawal of services by all staff of the Judicial Service, effective Friday, May 20, 2016 until the government implements the Judicial Council’s approved consolidated salaries,” it stated.

Judicial Council

In view of the effect of the strike by JUSAG on justice delivery in the country, the Judicial Council met yesterday to deliberate on the matter and called on JUSAG to call off the strike.

In a statement issued at the end of the meeting, the council urged JUSAG to go back to work while negotiations continued to resolve the labour dispute.

It said the council was deeply concerned about the time being spent on negotiations to address JUSAG’s grievances.

“The council wishes to assure JUSAG that during the said meeting it met with the Minister of Employment and Labour Relations and impressed upon him the need to expedite the resolution of the matter,’’ the statement added.

The Judicial Council further stated that the strike had disrupted the work of the law courts throughout the country, but assured the public that it was doing everything possible to get the government to play its part in resolving the impasse and bring closure to the matter.

JUSAG reaction

Meanwhile, JUSAG has agreed to meet with the government today to help find a common ground in resolving the impasse.

The President of JUSAG, Mr Alex Nartey, disclosed this in an interview with the Daily Graphic.

According to him, the association had agreed to honour an invitation by the Minister of Employment and Labour Relations, Mr Haruna Iddrisu, for the two sides to meet.

Approved salaries

According to the association, in 2012, the Judicial Council, after reviewing the conditions of service of staff of the Judicial Service, concluded in 2015 that the allowances and salaries of the staff should be consolidated.

It explained that the previous system where most of the allowances were paid on quarterly basis was not the best because the allowances were not paid on time.

After a painstaking period of consideration, it added,  the Judicial Council forwarded the approved salaries to the government for implementation in June 2015, but this delayed and the association issued an ultimatum on March 2, 2016, demanding the implementation of the approved salaries.

Their concerns were not met, leading to the declaration of a strike on April 1, 2016, which was later called off following assurances by the government.

Presidential committee

A presidential committee was set up by the President to address the concerns of the JUSAG members.

Although the Judicial Council was the appropriate body to meet the committee, the union said it agreed to meet the presidential committee and was asked to give it a week to resolve all issues.

“The Judicial Council and the association have fully satisfied the government with all necessary documents regarding the consolidated salaries,” it said

“The association did not hear anything from the government after the meeting. It gave the government up to May 18, 2016 to implement the Judicial Council’s recommendation, but nothing has come out of it so far,’’ it explained.

Source Graphic Online

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