Tag: Ghana

  • Eagles, Ghana tango in London

    Eagles, Ghana tango in London

    Nigeria’s Super Eagles have proposed a friendly against perennial rivals Ghana in London next month, AfricanFootball.com has specially gathered.

    The Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) wish to make the most of next month’s FIFA friendly window which will allow them to play another match outside the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifier in Tanzania between September 4 and 6.

    World football governing body FIFA cancelled a similar proposal earlier this year because it contravened a new rule which said a team could not play international friendlies within three days in two confederations.

    A top source informed AfricanFootball.com: “There is a proposal for Nigeria to play against arch-rivals Ghana in London after they would have played the AFCON qualifier in Tanzania. Discussions are on-going and we will just have to wait and see if this comes through.”

    Both West African rivals have clashed several times in London with their last such clash being in October 2011, when they played out a goalless draw,

    Earlier this year, a home-based Super Eagles team pipped Ghana Olympic team courtesy of an Emem Eduok goal to open the Akwa Ibom International Stadium in Uyo.

  • MTN Project Fame auditions for Ibadan, Ghana

    The second phase of the MTN Project Fame auditions will hold on July 27, in Ibadan and Ghana.

    The first leg of the auditions held in Abuja and Port-Harcourt, attracting a host of some of the country’s most talented music enthusiasts, all seeking an opportunity to be selected for the live auditions in Lagos.

    While the Abuja leg of the Audition featured a special performance by Goeffry, winner of last year’s edition of Project fame, the Port Harcourt audition was no less exciting as the hopefuls put in superlative performances all in a bid to impress the judges.

    The Judges for this year’s MTN Project Fame auditions are Matilda Duncan, Gang and Gospel On Da Beatz in the Abuja leg while the trio of Mary Ann Okon, Ada Onwusiribe and Chuks Robert ran the Port-Harcourt leg.

    At both auditions, it was an admixture of emotions. For some of the contestants, it was a sad end to their quest for the fame. Others  yeses from the judges which earned them a passage to Lagos for the Live Auditions. A number of the contestants who got ‘maybe from the judges were pitched against each other to decide who would join the others to the Lagos auditions.

    “I think the Abuja auditions have been quite an experience given the array of talents that we have seen so far,” said GospelOnDebeatz, one of the judges at the Abuja auditions, expressing optimism that the eventual winner will emerge from Abuja.

    “It’s nice to see that some of them have been very consistent in coming back to try their luck year even when they didn’t make it in the previous years. With what Abuja has produced, I am sure that one of these guys will go all the way to emerge the winner.”

    The winner of the competition will win a grand prize of N5m, a brand new SUV and a multi-million naira recording deal while the first runner-up will get a saloon car and N3m in cash. The second runner-up will recieve a brand new saloon car along with N1m while the third runner-up will receive a cash prize of N1m.

  • Chemstar expands to Turkey, Ghana

    PAINT manufacturers, Chemstar Paint Industry, said it has extended its operations to Ghana and Turkey.

    Its Group Managing Director, Remi Awode, made this known during the firm’s yearly GMD/CE Annual Merit Awards at its premises in Alagbado, a Lagos suburb.

    He also said the firm would take its products to other parts of Africa and become a pan-African brand.

    He said the quality of the products of the firm has made it the choice of both corporate and individual customers in the country and abroad.

    He noted that the company started 20 years ago from a room and parlour with just two workers, adding that the company has grown, producing over 27 brands of paints with over 1,000 workers.

    “We have taken the business to Ghana and Turkey. We are not resting on our oars as we intend to become a preferred pan-African brand.

    “I have passion for the industry. I studied Industrial Chemistry and I worked with a paints company for about two years, where I developed interest in paints production. I love what I’m doing here. The company is also blessed with well-qualified and motivated staff. So we work as one big family,” he said.

    He lauded the workers for their commitment, hard work and dedication to duty, adding that without these qualities, the firm would not have gone this far.

    Awode said some workers  excelled in the last financial year. The awards came in categories: Category One was for staff members who served  for 10 years.

    Fifteen staff smiled home with  LED TV sets, chest-sized refrigerator and cash prizes.

    Category Two has two staff members who served for 15 years. They went home with a DVD home-theatre system, an LED TV set, a refrigerator and cash prizes.

  • Mr Ibu hangs out with top African footballers in Ghana

    Mr Ibu hangs out with top African footballers in Ghana

    Top Nollywood comedian and actor, Mr. Ibu, who was in Ghana last week to shoot a new movie, took out time to hang out with some famous African footballers at a high profile nightclub in Accra.

    Mr Ibu was spotted in the company of Togo and Tottenham Hotspur of England striker, Emmanuel Adebayor and Ghana National team captain, Asamoah Gyan.

    According to sources, the footballers were delighted to the Nigerian actor at the night club and subsequently took pictures with him before returning back to the dance floor to continue partying till the next day.

    Mr Ibu who recently buried his mum in Amurri, Enugu State, left for Ghana the following day to shoot a new movie there. He was in Ghana for over three weeks before returning back to Nigeria.

     

  • Nigeria, Ghana set for Abidjan chess tourney

    Nigeria, Ghana set for Abidjan chess tourney

    The Nigeria chess team are set to depart for Abidjan on Wednesday to feature in the Ivory Coast National Chess Championship holding from June 26 to 28.

    The championship will feature Ghana and two teams representing the hosts.

    Nigeria Chess Federation President, Lekan Adeyemi, said the event is expected to be a nine-round Scheveningen Swiss tournament among the four teams

    “Ivory Coast presently have only four FIDE-rated players and the idea behind this format is to assist more players from there to achieve FIDE ratings,” Adeyemi said.

    “Nigeria and Ghana are expected to present a team with players above 1600 and below 2200.”

    Immediately after the Abidjan tournament, both the Nigeria and Ghana teams are expected to feature in the training and simultaneous matches with Grand Master Nigel Short in Accra.

    Adeyemi said the two events would further boost the ratings on Nigeria players on the international stage.

    Team Nigeria are made up of Dr. Adeyinka Adesina (2174), Boyo Kehinde (1929), Daniel Anwuli (2179), Osunfuyi Abimbola (2147), Efemuai Odafe (1692), and Iluono Ikenna (1826).

  • Ghanaian coach Jones Attuquayefio dies at 70

    Ghanaian coach Jones Attuquayefio dies at 70

    Ghanaian coach Cecil Jones Attuquayefio, former trainer of two national football teams and a number of clubs, is dead, the local media reported on Tuesday.

    The Accra-based radio station, Joy FM, reported on its website that a family source confirmed the death of the coach on Tuesday. He was 70 and had been battling throat cancer for some time.

    Popularly called Sir Cecil Jones Attuquayefio, he played for a number of Ghanaian clubs before plunging into his coaching career.

    He coached Accra Great Olympics, Accra Hearts of Oak, with whom he won the African Champions League in 2000, and Liberty Professionals.

    He also coached the Benin national team to the 2004 African Nations Cup and briefly managed the Ghanaian national team, the Black Stars.

    Attuquayefio was named African Coach of the Year in 2000 after Accra Hearts of Oak won the African Champions league with only one loss throughout the entire tournament.

    He also guided the club to Super Cup success with a 2-0 win over Zamalek.

  • Ghana joins ‘no-power-always’ league

    Ghana joins ‘no-power-always’ league

    Just back from a brief visit to Ghana, Folu Olamiti extols the beauty and organisation of the small West African country, but lamented the ugly epileptic power situation fast creeping in on it.

    When the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) and Federal Ministry of Aviation (FMA) signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on December 9, 2014, to cleanse our international airports of all forms of corrupt practices, little did I know that the MOU will, so soon, become a vital instrument in fighting the cancer of corruption.

    Having travelled out of the country twice in the last three months after the signing of the MOU, first to the United States of America and, recently, to Ghana, I can boldly say the MOU is working. But it needs to be sustained and fine-tuned for 100% success. Like I wrote about my trip to the United States, a travelogue that was published in some national newspapers, sharing my Ghana experience may be helpful to my countrymen.

    The flight from Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, to Kotoka International Airport (KIA), Accra, took exactly one hour, 45 minutes. Not altogether a smooth flight, the small but strong bird cruised into the clouds producing fits of jerks. Some passengers were so visibly frightened; and I heard a woman shout ‘Jesus’! It was thus a huge relief when I heard the screeching of the tyres at terrific ground speed, as the plane touched down.

    As the aircraft taxied to a stop, a bus was already waiting. It drove us to the local terminal. Time in Accra was about 7.30 pm. There were few airport officials around at this hour. Those that I saw buried themselves in their jobs. Altogether, it took about ten minutes to clear at the Ebola Screening Gate to Immigration, to baggage claim. This is in contradistinction to what I experienced at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport Abuja, a few hours before, where hordes of immigration and customs officers were milling around, doing almost nothing.

    I believe security clearance of passengers could be done with fewer hands. A situation where majority of more than 100 immigration and customs officers just loaf around, doing next to nothing, befuddled my imagination. I saw many of them idling away, chatting, while those attending to passengers wasted valuable time asking unintelligent questions. This is another reason I applaud the directive by the Minister of Aviation, few weeks ago, that all activities at the nation’s international airports should be automated within a month. To me, this will help stop the national embarrassment that unruly officers perpetrate every day. However, three things gladdened my heart at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja. Firstly, touting has been drastically reduced. Secondly, order has been fully restored outside the airport with uniform officials attending to passengers; and thirdly, there is no open demand for bribe.

    At the Kotoka International Airport, Accra, there was order. I was not accosted by touts, either within or outside the airport. There is a designated park for airport taxis, while those in private vehicles equally use this park to wait for their families and friends. I saw how two taxi drivers that strayed to the out-of-bound area, had their cabs impounded and towed away. Thanks to my brother, Shola Oshunkeye, the Managing Director/Editor-in-Chief of The Sun Publishing Ghana Limited, who had been waiting and drove me promptly to his residence.

    I had a better view of Accra the next day, courtesy Mr. Oshunkeye, who drove me round the Accra business district, and several posh districts of the capital city. It is amazing how Accra has transformed in two short decades into such an alluring city. This transformation, I understood, came with the Jerry John Rawlings dictatorship, and later, Presidency. Here is a country which, before Rawlings, was battered by poor leadership and only relied on gold for export. And that never gave enough revenue for Ghana to cater for the wellbeing of her people.

    But the country had a major turn-around for good in the early 1990s, when she liberalised her economy and enticed multinational companies to flourish with generous land and tax reforms. The country’s economy got buoyant with foreign donors, as these nations became sympathetic to Ghana’s transformation agenda.

    Today, Accra is a model city, where discipline and order are firmly entrenched in the citizenry. If you take a panoramic view of Accra, you will discover that the city’s planners never compromised the city planning edict, as the town is neatly compartmentalised into sections  Residential and Commercial. Of interest is an area named SPINTEX, which sits megastores of different shapes  electronic firms, automobile factories/showrooms and furniture and textile factories.

    One place you would like to visit while in Ghana is TRASSACO VALLEY ESTATE, a haven for the rich.  It is an equivalent of our own Victoria Garden City (VGC) in Lagos. The difference is, while VGC has compromised all known standards and laid down building rules, TRASSACO strictly sticks to building plans. All the structures have exquisite taste of elegance. The drive way into the estate is lined with Palm groove trees beautified with enamored buildings. TRASSACO is home to Ghana’s noveau riche and I understand that some Nigerian big boys are giving Ghanaians the run for their money in terms of home ownership in the exquisite estate.

    On Sunday, March 15, 2015, Oshunkeye and I went to worship at the Royal House Chapel, one of the biggest Pentecostal churches in Accra. It is led by the enigmatic and charismatic Reverend Sam Korankye Ankrah. I met Nana Richmond Kojo Aggrey, one of the most influential persons not only in Ghana but also here in Nigeria. The billionaire philanthropist and entrepreneur, a friend of Shola Oshunkeye, is reputed to have pioneered mobile telephony in Ghana, and Nigeria. He has the singular honour of being the man who introduced Mobile Telephony System (MTS) to the then Nigerian Military President, General Ibrahim Babangida in 1980.

    An entrepreneur of uncommon hue, Nana Richmond Aggrey’s businesses traverse the whole world. He is into oil and gas, telecommunications, hospitality, just to mention a few. Richmond-Aggrey has a palatial mansion at Trassaco Valley. He invited Oshunkeye and I to dinner at his four-star Granada Hotel, and spoke glowingly about his Nigerian friends including my dear brother and friend, Senator David Mark, President of the Nigerian Senate.

    With the announcement by Ghana, a few years ago, that she has joined the oil-producing countries of the world, its economy transformed. Donor countries, I was told, started withdrawing their donations, thereby reducing the revenues that should, otherwise, accrue into the nation’s purse. Invariably, the donor countries had to shrink their funding of key social and political services.

    The first blow started manifesting, months ago, when Ghanaians started experiencing power outages. What they thought was a rare occurrence has, sadly, become a reality. Generators that were alien to the people are now like second nature to homes and business concerns. This is a big blow to Ghana, a country that once celebrated 10 years of uninterrupted power supply.

    Now, both Ghanaians and foreign entrepreneurs are not comfortable with this development. They are afraid that Ghana may be losing her gain of rapid development if she fails to fix this power problem urgently.

  • Ghana has gone

    Ghana has gone

    • Nigeria’s neighbour demonstrates superior ability in WASSCE

    Given the nature of Nigeria’s fierce rivalry with Ghana, it must have been particularly galling for Nigerians to hear that Ghanaian students once again swept the honours at the West African Examinations Council’s (WAEC) International Excellence Awards that took place in Lagos recently.

    The awards are given annually to the top three performers in the West African Senior School Certificate Examination in WAEC’s member-states of Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone, Liberia and The Gambia. Ghanaian students took the three highest positions out of the 2,016,497 students who sat the examination in 2014.

    Hasan Mickail, Kenyah Blaykyi and Archibaid Enninful Henry each recorded eight A1s in the subjects they sat for, scoring 682.0933 points, 680.4287 points and 676.9348 points respectively. Ghana had 397,275 candidates, representing 16.21 per cent of the total, compared to Nigeria’s 80 per cent representation. Ghana has completely dominated the WAEC awards since 2008. The last time Nigeria got a look-in was in 2007.

    Such consistency cannot be solely attributed to luck. Ghana is much smaller than Nigeria, and thus has a correspondingly smaller pool of students to draw upon. It is not as rich, either, and so has fewer resources with which to provide the educational facilities and consumables that are so vital to success. The real secret of Ghana’s superiority is a commitment to excellence that has characterised its history despite its ups and downs.

    School fees have been abolished since 2004 as part of the country’s Free Compulsory Universal Basic Education programme, and a Capitation Grant has been instituted to fund public schools. Although the country still faces significant difficulties in financing schools, it appears to have gotten the main issue right, namely that of maintaining the high standards established during the colonial era.

    Nigeria’s tragedy is that it has failed to preserve an environment within which educational accomplishments can flourish. Funding is a major problem; in 2014, it was stated that about N44.9 billion in counterpart funding for the Universal Basic Education Programme (UBEC) was not being utilised by the states, even though schools are in dire need of infrastructure, rehabilitation and expansion. The nation is notorious for the frequency of the strikes launched by teachers in primary and secondary schools, as well as lecturers in polytechnics and universities. Attempts by some states to improve teacher proficiency have been stoutly resisted by teachers’ unions.

    The situation is worsened by negative social attitudes to educational achievement. Sport, music and reality shows appear to be far more attractive to the youth. Intellectual accomplishment is often derided as being irrelevant to socio-economic status. The hard work that is vital to academic success is frequently truncated by widespread examination malpractice. Parental guidance, organised mentorship programmes, scholarships and other forms of assistance are difficult to come by, if they are available at all.

    It is vital that Nigeria takes measures to improve its educational system if it is to produce the knowledge workers which are the bulwark of global pre-eminence. Ghana’s regular triumph in the WAEC International Excellence Awards shows that the implementation of carefully thought-out policies will bear fruit over time, and if Nigeria wishes to achieve similar results, it must do the same.

    Funding options like the UBEC cannot lie fallow while primary and secondary schools are in dire financial straits. Teachers’ bodies cannot continue to oppose efforts to raise standards in their profession. School calendars cannot be continuously disrupted by avoidable strikes. The epidemic of examination malpractices must be confronted with the right mix of preventive and punitive strategies. In essence, Nigeria must do all that it can to restore education to its rightful pride of place.

  • Why Ghana towers over Nigeria in WASSCE Award

    Why Ghana towers over Nigeria in WASSCE Award

    The rivalry between Nigeria and Ghana did not start today. They compete in almost everything, including sports, movies, business and education. In the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE), both countries dominated the best students’ prizes. But Ghana is now having an edge over Nigeria. Why?. KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE examines stakeholders’ reasons for the dominance.

    Last Thursday was a special day for three Ghanaian teenagers who excelled in the May/June 2014 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).  They were rewarded with the WAEC International Excellence Awards during the council’s 63rd yearly meeting at its international office in Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos.

    The awards are presented to candidates with the best Total Scores (T-Score) in eight subjects in the examination.  If they wrote nine subjects, their best eight subjects are chosen for assessment.

    The trio of Hasan Mickail (Ghana Secondary Technical School, Takoradi), Kenya Blaykyi (St Augustine’s College, Cape Coast), and Archibald Enninful (Mfantsipim School, Cape Coast) made A1 in (Mathematics [core], Integrated Science, Biology, Chemistry, English Language, Social Studies, Physics and Mathematics [elective]).  Hasan had a T-Score of 682.0933, compared to Kenyah’s 680.4287, and Archibald’s 676.9348.

    With their performance, they led 2,018,497 candidates who sat for the examination in The Gambia, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone.

    Since the establishment of the WAEC Endowment Fund, which has been sponsored by the Sir Augustus Bandele family in the past 29 years, the contest for the coveted award has been between Nigeria and Ghana.   However, Ghana has dominated.  Since 1984, Nigeria has won the top three prizes eight times (1986, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006), while Ghana has won it nine times (1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013 and 2014).  In the eight years where the prizes were won by candidates from more than one country (1985, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1991, 2001, 2007, and 2011), Ghana has featured more than Nigeria.

    With Nigeria producing the largest share of candidates (and funding) for the examination annually (about 80 per cent of the candidates for 2014 WASSCE were Nigerians, the natural question on the minds of many Nigerians would be why Nigeria cannot produce the winners, if not all, most of the time.

    That question was what the Registrar of WAEC, Dr Iyi Uwadiae, said all stakeholders need to ponder on when asked to give reasons for Nigeria’s lukewarm performance.  Uwadiae, who was head of the WAEC Nigeria National Office before he was appointed Registrar, said that Nigerian parents, students and their teachers have important roles to play in reversing the domination of Ghanaians in the examination.

    He said: “What we should do as Nigerians is that we should go back to the drawing board and ask ourselves that years ago we used to have – at least one – on many occasions, we had two Nigerians out of three. What is happening now that the three positions, none is Nigerian?  And this has happened for about three years now.  So we should ask ourselves what is happening.

    “There are so many factors.  We as parents must play our parts; students must play their parts.  Parents should take the trouble to ask their wards what they did in school, monitor their academic work, that is the first thing we should face.  Education starts from home; we don’t leave everything to the teachers.  The children themselves must be interested.

    And of course those who teach them must impact knowledge.  Facilities are necessary.  But there are times you improvise.  And that is why there are some schools that are not the best but yet are able to bring out students that win our awards. That is to say that if parents play their roles, students play their role, and teachers also play their roles, with or without those facilities, students would perform.”

    A public school teacher, Mrs Juli Orukpe, also thinks parents and pupils must do more.  She said pupils are not focused on their studies because they are easily distracted, and blamed parents for not calling them to order.

    “We have to put in more efforts; and our students have to be counseled.  Our students are not serious.  There is a lot of distractions and parents are not even helping matters because they do not provide materials for their children.  If you tell them to buy textbooks, it is wahala,” she said.

    However, Principal of King’s College, Lagos, Otunba Dele Olapeju is not quick to conclude that Nigerian candidates are inferior to their Ghanaian counterparts.  He said since the examination scripts from the five-member countries are not inter-changed for grading, Nigeria should not feel bad for losing the prizes to Ghana.  He also said the Ghanaian education system has its own problems.

    “There is nothing that has gone wrong.  You lose some, you win some.  You cannot win all the time.  It does not mean Nigerians are not good.  Ghana also has challenges with its system.  That is why they have increased schooling at senior secondary level to four years.  Their SS3 is the fourth year.

    “Also, the markers of the examination are different.  We do not send scripts to Ghana and Ghana to Nigeria.  Nigeria marks Nigerian scripts and Ghana marks Ghanaian scripts – so there is no issue.  We are not necessarily declining in performance,” he said.

    Nevertheless, for the founding chairman of the Examination Ethics Marshal International (EEMI), Sir Ike Onyechere, Nigeria can learn some lessons from how Ghana runs its education system and has instituted a culture of ethics.

    Onyechere said WAEC Ghana, for instance, named and shamed examination cheats in 2010, which sent strong signals to the citizens that integrity of the examination is important.  However, he said WAEC Nigeria has failed to do so, despite announcing each year that there were cases of examination malpractices.

    “Years ago, I think in 2010, some students were caught perpetrating examination malpractice.  The society condemned it strongly and insisted that they be named and shamed.  Since then, Ghanaian parents and candidates have learnt that the fear of examination malpractice is the beginning of wisdom.

    “But come down to Nigeria.  Every year, WAEC, NECO, NABTEB announce that thousands of candidates were caught in examination malpractices.  But that is where it ends.  They will even go ahead to announce that so-and-so number of invigilators, supervisors, examiners and others were involved.  But when we meet them to give us their names, they say ‘no, we have reported them to their employers.  Most times these employers are the ministries of education and the cases are swept under the carpet,” he said.

    Onyechere also said the politicization of the free education policy practiced by many states has not helped the proper running of the education sector as well because quality is compromised.

    “Free education is politicized.  Quality is not there.  It takes a minimum of four years for the impact of politics in education to show.  If you take a bad decision, you do not see the effect until about four years later, which is dangerous.

    “For the new government coming in, the change or transformation we desire in Nigeria must seriously start from education so that when we say something is black, it is black.  Invigilators, supervisors, others should be made to understand the seriousness of education.  Ethics must be instituted,” he said.

    National President of the Association for Formidable Educational Development (AFED), a group of private school owners, Mrs Ifejola Dada said government must also put the right people in education.

    “The fault has been from our leaders.  The round peg must be put in round holes.  People are not put in the right places.  This is the only sector I discover that professionals are not allowed to work.  By the time we allow the right people to perform, we will recover.  If we are all professionals, we will all sit down and discuss how we can elevate quality above quantity,” she said.

     

  • AYC SEMI FINAL: Flying Eagles to play Ghana

    AYC SEMI FINAL: Flying Eagles to play Ghana

    The age-long rivalry between Nigeria and Ghana will be rekindled on Wednesday when the two countries’ Under-20 squads, the Flying Eagles and the Black Satellites clash in the semi finals of the ongoing CAF U-20 Championsip in Dakar, Senegal.

    The Nigerian lads handled by coach Manu Garba booked their place in the last four of the tournament after their second group win against Congo and ended up on top of Group A despite holding the Junior Elephants of Cote d’Ivoire to a 2-2 draw in thier last group match on Saturday.

    Ghana qualified to face the Flying Eagles in the semi finals by virtue of emerging as runners up in Group B after losing their last group game against Mali by a lone goal.

    Before yesterday’s final round of matches in Group B, Ghana were on top of the log with six points but an 18th minute goal by Mali’s Ichaka Diarra relegated the Satelittes to the second position.

    Coach Garba already knows what to expect from the Ghanains having played the same team in a two-legged friendly before the commencement of this tournament.

    Last month the Flying Eagles played two test matches in Ghana – winning 2-0 in Tema and being forced to a 2-2 draw in Accra by the Black Satellites.