Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Antrak Air Flight EU-KUL, on board to Tamale

I have had times to complain about the kind of customer service that our airlines offer us. Sometimes it either leaves you wondering whether it is a privilege to be using their airline or that you entered their plane by mistake.
An Antrak Air plane

On one of my journeys on (name withheld) airline, a tall and slim male flight attendant was so disrespectful to another passenger that I felt very bad. The passenger, a man younger than I, was seated next to me. We were the first from the back, as there was no one on the back row.

He had served us the usual packed light meal, turned and served those on the opposite side and just when he was about moving away, my seating mate tapped him on his arm in an attempt to draw his attention to himself. Apparently, he had just realised he needed some water.

Surprisingly, the host ignored him and went pass. I was so sad because I could see that the guy was embarrassed and uncomfortable. When the flight host returned and finished serving tea to one of the passengers, I excused him and asked why he had ignored the gentleman. In response, he asked me, arrogantly, whether it was right for the guy to touch him.

Monday, November 4, 2013

Who swallowed who - the sun or the moon?

Viewing an eclipse brings much excitement to children
It certainly wasn’t very exciting to me, since it was not the first time. For the kids, however, it was one of excitement. They had asked several questions about this so-called eclipse that was to happen and they checked outside several times to see any signs of the coming eclipse.

“Uncle Deen, would the place be dark,” my nephew asked. After answering him, another question followed: “would there be heat.”

Question after question until it finally happened and he and other kids in the house jumped and yelled as they took turns to watch it with the single pair of eclipse shades in the house.
 
I had managed to store that pair of shades since I bought it in 2006 in Accra to watch my first solar eclipse.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Where did SADA go wrong?

AS I wrote this piece my heart was bleeding. Angry voices blurred from my little radio set. I could hear a gentleman from a civil society group in Tamale swearing fire and brimstone should President John Mahama not axe Dr Charles Jebuni, who has been asked to act as Chief Executive Officer for the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority (SADA) following the exit of Alhaji Gilbert Iddi.
 
In 2010, the enthusiasm was at a crescendo as the SADA Law (Act 805, 2010) was passed and subsequently inaugurated to begin work. There had been so much rhetoric about the need for the establishment of a body to spearhead an agenda to quicken the pace of development in the north.
 
So the goose to lay the golden eggs was finally hatched and it became a popular refrain, particularly from politicians, that SADA would offer a quick fix to the problems of the north, such as unemployment, poor road networks, ailing agriculture, environmental degradation, high illiteracy, name them.
 
So what went wrong? What has happened to all the expectations and promises? How could a beautiful initiative suddenly go bad?

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Women in shea nut trade back to business

Mma Azara and her sister drying shea nuts
WOMEN who collect and sell shea nuts in Tamaligu, a farming village in the Savelugu-Nanton district of the Northern Region, are back to active business.
Their business slowed down drastically for several years when the road they use to transport the nuts to market centres deteriorated and virtually became impassable during the rains.
That particular stretch of road is a 4.5km feeder road that links the community to Kukuobila, another town in the district that is located off the Tamale-Bolgatanga highway.
Luckily for the women and the entire village, the Northern Rural Growth Programme (NRGP) intervened and awarded the road on contract for rehabilitation.

Northern Rural Growth Programme transforms agriculture in Northern Ghana

A dry season maize farmer in Jirapa
AGRICULTURE has over the years been noted as the backbone of Ghana’s economy.
More than 50 per cent of the country’s labour force was estimated to be in the agricultural sector, as indicated by the 2000 Population and Housing Census.
In spite of this, many farmers in Ghana remain poor, especially in Northern Ghana, which boasts of boundless agricultural potentials.
It was to address this problem that the Northern Rural Growth Programme (NRGP), an eight-year agricultural initiative, was formulated.

Savelugu School for the Deaf - saddled by poor infrastructure

THE Savelugu School for the Deaf is one of the country’s special schools that provide education to hearing-impaired children.
Some of the kids in class
 Established in March, 1978, the school was initially set up as a unit under the Nyohini Rehabilitation Centre in Tamale, but was subsequently moved to the Savelugu Middle Boarding School located in the outskirts of Savelugu.
Since then, the school has provided formal education to many hearing-impaired children, particularly from the three regions of the north.
During a visit to the school, the Daily Graphic observed that poor infrastructure and the delays in the release of subvention, among others, continue to impact negatively on academic work and the general wellbeing of the children.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

14,000 farmers benefit from AGRA-DANIDA project


A smallholder farmer in Jirapa
FOURTEEN-THOUSAND farmers in the Northern Region have so far benefited from an agricultural project initiated by the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) with funding from the Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA).
The Agricultural Value Chain Mentorship Project (AVCMP) seeks to transform agriculture in the Northern Region through three main approaches: intensifying the adoption of integrated soil fertility management technologies, enhancing farmers' access to inputs and linking farmers to markets.
It is in line with a broader strategy to contribute to the government's objective of achieving food security and developing the region's agricultural sector into an agro-industrial economy.
The Savannah Agricultural Research Institute (SARI) in Nyankpala is implementing the soil fertility component of the project, whilst the International Centre for Soil Fertility and Agricultural Development (IFDC) and Ghana Agricultural Associations for Business Information Centre (GAABIC) are implementing the two other components.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Dr Susan Herlin, 18 years as Tamale's Chief of Friendship

Dr Herlin sitting in state in 1995
ON July 25, 1995, an American scholar of History, Dr Susan J. Herlin was installed as a chief in Tamale, the Northern Regional capital.
She was given the title 'Zo-Simli Naa', meaning 'Chief of Friendship'. It was a gesture by the people of Tamale to acknowledge the role she and others played in promoting the sister city relationship that was forged between Tamale and Louisville in the United States (US) in 1979.
By so doing, she became a symbol of this friendship, which has been growing ever since the parties shook hands.
It has been 18 years since this significant ceremony and for Dr Susan, life as a chief has been a humbling and learning experience.
"It has been an important part of my life," she told the Daily Graphic in an interview at her palace.

Tamale Government Secretarial School facing infrastructure challenges


THE Government Secretarial School in Tamale is facing a huge infrastructure deficit which is crippling efforts by the school to expand its programmes and admissions.
For over 60 years since the school was established, no additional infrastructure has been constructed for the school.
The entire school is still housed in a single storey block. Whilst the ground floor is used as a hostel to accommodate some of the students, the rooms at the upper floor serve as the lecture halls, administration and other departments of the school.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Maize yields increase...following application of organic 'biochar' fertilizer


Some of the farmers on their maize farms

THE application of a type of organic fertilizer introduced by soil scientists to smallholder farmers in the Northern Region has led to significant increases in the yields of maize.
Maize produced from the use of this organic fertilizer appeared much bigger as compared to those produced on farms where only chemical fertilizer were applied.
An international organisation, the Abokobi Society of Switzerland (ASS) is distributing this organic fertilizer to farmers in the Northern Region to help them improve the soils on their farmlands and consequently increase their yields.
It is produced through a combination of fine-grained charcoal, known as biochar, and organic waste, such as chicken manure, shea butter waste and household organic waste.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Leadership is a calling for me - Hikimat Baba



A TWENTY-THREE year-old graduate of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Ms Hikimat Baba Dua who has been nominated among Africa’s most outstanding emerging women leaders believes that she was born a leader.
“I think it is a calling,” Ms Baba Dua told the Daily Graphic, as if to re-echo Tupac Shakur’s famous controversial words “I think I’m a natural-born leader.”
According to her, throughout her life as a student, she had always had a passion to take up leadership positions and each time she tried, she ended up being successful.
Last week the Moremi Initiative for Women’s Leadership in Africa, after screening over 2000 applications, selected 28 young women from Africa and the Diaspora with outstanding leadership potentials as Fellows of its leadership programme.
Ms Baba Dua and another successful applicant, Ms. Mawuenana Yomekpe were the proud Ghanaians among the 28 young women.
A statement on the website of the Institute indicated that the Fellows were chosen through a highly competitive selection process after demonstrating outstanding leadership promise, community service accomplishments, and commitment to the advancement of women in Africa.

How do we resolve conflicts in the north - Views from Tamale


1.     Jemilatu Musah – National Service Personnel
The image of the north has been soiled by these prolonged conflicts. These conflicts have overshadowed the great culture and traditions of the north and so instead of the world talking about our Damba and Fire festivals, they rather talk about conflicts in the north.
For me, conflicts in the north could be blamed on the level of poverty in the area. Many of the people in deprived villages are very poor and depend largely on farming for their survival.
So they would go great lengths to fight for ownership over their farmlands, especially when they feel threatened.
The government must extend development projects to various parts of the north so as to create equal opportunities for people to be employed and live better lives.
When people are employed and educated, they are less likely to fight each other.

Playgrounds attract children to school



Children playing heartily at the playground
IT has been widely acknowledged that children in many communities are attracted to schools with a feeding programme.
As it is evident, schools benefiting from the Ghana School Feeding Programme (GSFP) have extremely high enrolment figures.
However, for pupils in some rural schools in the Northern Region that do not have a feeding programme, the presence of playgrounds in their schools gives them the urge to attend school each passing day.
One of such schools is the Dakpemyili Primary School in the East Gonja district, which is one of the few rural schools that boast of a playground with these facilities: seesaw, merry-go-round, slide and rope swing.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Dagomba movies have come of age - Jehanfo


A scene in Torbu-Nyango

ONE of the popular movie producers and directors in Tamale, Alhassan Yushawu Jehanfo believes that Dagomba movies have come off age and needs a shot in the arm to reach the next level.
“We have come a long way in spite of the difficulties and I think we deserve some recognition for surpassing numerous hurdles to keep the industry alive,” is what he said when the Graphic Showbiz interviewed him in Tamale.
“It is not easy to finance the production of movies, but we have managed to keep producing more and more movies each year,” Jehanfo, who is the Vice Presdient of the Northern Drama and Film Makers Association (NODRAFIM), stated.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

TaMA to decongest Tamale Central Market


A section of the market

THE Tamale Metropolitan Assembly (TaMA) is to demolish structures that have blocked pathways in the Tamale Central Market as part of efforts to decongest the market.
This is to reduce the congestion in the market and also allow for easy passage of all vehicles, especially a fire tender in the event of a fire.
Over the past few days, there have been announcements on radio warning traders who have impeded on the right of way in the market to evacuate before the end of May.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

United States to increase development assistance to the north


Freshly harvested rice

THE United States (US) government is increasing its development assistance to Northern Ghana over the next five years.
The US Ambassador to Ghana, Mr Gene Cretz, who made this known, said this gesture was part of a broader strategy by the US government to contribute significantly to poverty reduction and to create economic opportunities for communities in the north.
He however cautioned that in the long term, trade, and not aid, was the more sustainable path to economic transformation in the north due to what he termed as the north’s “strategic opportunities for economic growth and investment.”

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Water extended to three communities in Tamale



WATERAID, a non-governmental organisation (NGO) working in the water and sanitation sector, has extended pipe-borne water to three deprived communities in the Tamale, metropolis.

They are Nyohini South-West, Nyohini South-East and Dungu.
For several years, many households in these communities had no access to potable water although situated in an urban area.
In Nyohini South-East, for instance, the residents relied on a dam in the area, which also serves animals in the area.

Zoomlion intensifies cleaning of drains in Gumani...As rains set in


AS part of efforts to prevent the reoccurrence of floods in Gumani, a suburb of Tamale, Zoomlion Ghana Limited, a sanitation company, has intensified efforts to empty choked drains in the area.
Zoomlion and Nasara Youth emptying choked gutters

In the last two years, a number of areas in the Tamale metropolis had consistently been inundated each time there was a heavy downpour, leading to the destruction of property, as well as the loss of lives.
Gumani happens to be one of the areas that mostly got flooded and the cause of this annual disaster has been attributed to the clogging of drains in the area by all manner of debris including plastic waste, sand, tins, cans, and organic waste.

TECH Girls Club celebrate 'Girls in ICT Day'



Some members of the Club busy on the computer

A GROUP of hundred primary school girls, known as the TECH Girls Club, have celebrated this year’s ‘Girls in Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Day’ to reiterate the message that girls are equally good in the use of ICT.
The day, which falls on the last Thursday of April every year, was set aside by the International Telecom Union (ITU) to raise global awareness and prompt action towards encouraging girls and young women to pursue careers in ICTs.

Monday, January 28, 2013

King's Village Nutrition Centre...Where malnourished children find hope



Some mothers and their malnourished kids at the centre
BONTANGA, a tranquil village in the Kumbungu district of the Northern Region, is popular for its irrigation dam, which was established several years ago to irrigate farms within its catchment.
A few kilometres away from this dam is another institution that should equally attract attention, especially from the development community.
It is certainly not a hotel or zoo but a charitable organisation that provides quality education, healthcare, water and sanitation services to the deprived communities in the Tolon and Kumbungu districts. 
Among the services that the King's Village offers, the one that touched me most was the provision of paediatric care and long term rehabilitation for children suffering from severe malnourishment.


Farmers in tears as rice farms razed down



FORTY (40) rice farmers in the Northern Region were thrown into a state of anguish over the weekend as fire razed down their rice farms, totaling over 350 acres.
Each year, farmers lose their farms to bush fires
A spark of fire from the engine of a rickety combine harvester that was being used at a rice farm lighted the rice plants and due to the intensity of the winds, it degenerated into an uncontrollable blaze and spread to other farms.
Attempts to stop the fire proved futile as it continued to raze down farm after farm over a two-day period, until it brought was under control in another community, by which time it had already caused unimaginable damage.
The farms were situated in three communities in the Savelugu-Nanton district of the Northern Region. They are Malgi-Naayili, Nakpanzoo and Nobogu, which are located off the Tamale-Bolgatanga highway.