Dumsor: On March 2, 2018, I read a piece of news item with the caption: ELECTRICITY TARIFFS TO DROP BELOW GOVT'S PROPOSED 14%. As a Ghanaian, I should be excited by this piece of news.
“Is sanitation management not another euphemism for corruption in Ghana?â€That’s a question a man who works with one of the big donor countries quietly asked me after I moderated an EU sponsored event last year.
Lately, legal education in Ghana has been subjected to intense public scrutiny stemming from the release of the results of the Bar examinations. The failure rate has been described as unacceptable, disappointing and unprecedented.
It is inescapable that the unruly GLC has failed! It is clear that the School of Law, as we have come to know it, has outlived its usefulness! It is against the law for IEB to be administering exams!
Nigerians, I shall attempt, in the coming weeks, to guide our minds on a path we should travel and a mission we must channel our collective energies, to at least make a significant contribution to bring about the change we so desire for our country Nigeria and indeed the entire African continent.
The right to criticize a fellow citizen, however vigorous, cannot be defamatory of that citizen or even in contempt of court when it is kept within the limits of reasonable courtesy and good faith.
6th February marks 100 years women got the right to vote. This right was given to women who owned property or women who were married to men who owned property.
It is becoming obvious that these reckless and mostly charlatanic prophets are in a most bizarre unbiblical and almost satanic competition. They prophesy tragedy, doom and seek publicity for it.
A Scottish woman who inadvertently invented the law of negligence is to have a bronze statue erected in her honour. Yes, that’s right: May Donoghue of Donoghue v Stevenson fame is finally getting the recognition she undoubtedly deserves.
A few days ago, the President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in fulfilment of Article 67 of the 1992 Constitution, delivered the State of the Nation Address, SONA to Parliament.
My dear child, mummy greets you. I know you are not yet here but I deem it important to let you know the recent happenings in your parents’ country Ghana.
London: Our elders have taught us that a toad does not run in broad daylight unless something is after its precious life. But a 68-year old man competed with airplanes on a tarmac in a hot afternoon when nobody was pursuing him.
One is not a millimetre away from the truth to call it fire and fury. But this is not the fury of a temperamental child in the most powerful “white†building in the world, whose childish deeds are compiled in a controversial book. It is the fury of students, led by their representative council. They are demanding an apology from an outspoken member of Occupy Ghana, Sydney Casely-Hayford.