Top Stories

Top Stories

Would Akuapem Polo have gone to jail if she had been the daughter of a minister of state?- Manasseh Azure

Freelance Investigative Journalist Manasseh Azure has send message to people who think Ghanaians chanting for the release of Akuapem Poloo are against the enforcement of the law.

He wrote: Ghanaians are not against the enforcement of laws. They are against the selective application of laws.

They are against the fact that Akuapem Polo has been sentenced, but the MP and Minister who took responsibility for the shooting and the burning of motorbikes at a voters registration centre has been rewarded with a substantive ministerial position. And the police have released the thugs who were with her and actually fired the guns, according to eyewitnesses.

They are against the justice system that puts Abuga Pele on trial while Clement Kofi Humado testified against him. Abuga Pele is in jail but Mr. Humado is free from prosecution.

They are against the imprisonment of Philip Assibit of the Goodwill International Group for 12 years, while the likes of Zoomlion and rLG are free.  These companies and their managers could not account for hundreds of millions of cedis dolled out to them through shady GYEEDA deals supervised by Clement Kofi Humado.

So, before you vent your frustration and accuse those complaining of double standards, pause and reflect:

Would Akuapem Polo have gone to jail if she had been the daughter of a minister of state?

We want our laws to be enforced, but if the laws are enforced against only the weak and vulnerable, then it amounts to selective justice.

And selective justice is injustice.

 

Akuapem Poloo’s Sentence Too Harsh- Sammy Gyamfi

Lawyer Sammy Gyamfi has waded into the controversy surrounding the three months jail sentence given to Ghanaian actress Rosemond Brown best known as Akuapem Poloo over nudity picture with son.

The NDC communication officer in a tweet said the sentence given by the Accra Circuit Court is very harsh and high-handed.

He wrote ” The sentence given to Akuapem Poloo is very harsh and high-handed. Given the fact she is a first offender, pleaded guilty and showed remorse, non-custodia sentence would have been appropriate. Sad! I pray@NAkuffoAddo remits her sentence or pardon her. #FreeAkuapemPoloo.

Appealing 3 Months Jail Term an Option-Akuapem Poloo’s Lawyer

Rosemond Brown’s lawyer has said though his client has been sentence to 90 days jail for posting a nude photo of herself and her seven-year-old son on social media, appealing is an option.

Speaking to the media after the sentencing on Friday, April 16, 2021, her lead counsel, Andrew Vortia said appealing the ruling “is an option for us…For me, I want to go for an appeal.”

He said he was waiting for the full judgment of the case before proceeding with the next line of action.

“I have written for the judgment. If I have it by the close of the day, by 9 am on Monday April 19, I will file an appeal,” he said

Akuapem Poloo was on Wednesday convicted on her own plea by the Circuit Court in Accra after pleading guilty to three charges.

She was charged with the publication of nude pictures with her seven-year-old son. She changed her not guilty plea to guilty before being convicted.

The court presided over by Her Honour Christina court deferred her sentencing today, April 16, 2021,  to undergo a pregnancy test to ensure she was not pregnant before her sentencing is passed.

Before her sentencing, the presiding judge confirmed that Poloo  was not pregnant after her test came out negative.

 

US Customs seize snails, prekese, turkey berry at JFK Airport

US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) seized 22 highly invasive Giant African Snails from the baggage of an American who arrived from Ghana at the John F. Kennedy International Airport on Sunday (April 4, 2021).

Additionally, CBP agriculture specialists also discovered about 24 pounds collectively of prohibited oxtail, dried beef, turkey berry, carrot, medicinal leaves and prekese, a traditional African spice and medicinal plant product.

The CBP in a statement said the Giant African Snail is one of the most damaging snails in the world because it consumes at least 500 types of plants.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) the snails also threatens U.S. agricultural resources and causes extensive damage to tropical and sub-tropical environments. It also causes structural damage to plaster and stucco structures. GAS reproduce quickly, producing about 1,200 eggs in a single year.

The statement added that the “highly invasive Giant African Snail also poses a serious health risk to humans because it carries a parasitic nematode that can lead to meningitis”.

“Customs and Border Protection agriculture specialists are our nation’s frontline defenders against invasive plant and animal pests that threaten our agricultural resources, and they face this complex and challenging mission with extraordinary commitment and vigilance,” said Marty C. Raybon, Acting Director of Field Operations for CBP’s New York Field Office.

According to the USDA, the Giant African Snail (Lissachatina fulica) was first found in southern Florida in the 1960s, and it took 10 years and $1 million to eradicate it. It was reintroduced in Miami in September 2011. The USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, in partnership with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, is conducting a regulatory program to eradicate this invasive species

 

 

 

Source: Graphic

E/R: Five perish in Accra-Kumasi accident

Five people died in a fatal accident at Obretema near Suhum on the Accra-Kumasi Highway in the Eastern Region Sunday.

The driver identified as Eric Ohemang, 35, with his Mercedes Sprinter bus with registration number GW 7444-21 with passengers on board according to sources was heading to Accra from Kumasi.

However on reaching Obretema the offside rear Tyre of the vehicle suddenly burst while the vehicle was speeding.

The driver lost control of the steering wheel causing the vehicle to summersault.

Unfortunately, three male and two female adults who were on board the bus died on the spot.

The injured victims were rushed to Suhum Government Hospital for treatment while the bodies were deposited in the same hospital mortuary for preservation, identification and autopsy.

Yaw TOG Named BET Amplified Artist Of The Month

The time they say put everything in places when its right. The young Ghanaian rapper Yaw Tog has Won BET international amplified Artist of the Month of April 2021.

Born Thorsten Owusu Gyimah rose to fame in the last quarter of 2020 when the Kumerica movement was at its peak. He won the hearts of many Ghanaians when he released his hit song Sore which introduced the world to Asaka, Kumericans take on drill music.

The young art has millions of people across the globe loving his style of music which has earned him this award.

BET made the announcement via its Twitter handle, asking music lovers across the globe to stay tuned for more works of the Kumerican artiste.“BET International is proud to announce @YAWTOG_  as our April “BET Amplified International” Artist of The Month! BET Amplified is our seal of approval on the next big thing in music! #BETAmplifiedInternational #YawTog

Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, dies aged 99

The Duke of Edinburgh, the Queen’s “strength and stay” for 73 years, has died aged 99.

Flags on landmark buildings in Britain were being lowered to half-mast as a period of mourning was announced.

Prince Philip’s health had been slowly deteriorating for some time. He announced he was stepping down from royal engagements in May 2017, joking that he could no longer stand up. He made a final official public appearance later that year during a Royal Marines parade on the forecourt of Buckingham Palace.

Since then, he was rarely seen in public, spending most of his time on the Queen’s Sandringham estate in Norfolk, though moving to be with her at Windsor Castle during the lockdown periods throughout the Covid-19 pandemic and where the couple quietly celebrated their 73rd wedding anniversary in November 2020. He also celebrated his 99th birthday in lockdown at Windsor Castle.

The duke spent four nights at King Edward VII hospital in London before Christmas 2019 for observation and treatment in relation to a “pre-existing condition”.

Despite having hip surgery in April 2018, he attended the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle a month later and was seen sitting beside the Queen at a polo match at Windsor Great Park in June. He and the Queen missed Prince Louis of Cambridge’s christening in July 2018, but he was seen attending Crathie Kirk near Balmoral in August, and driving his Land Rover in the surrounding Scottish countryside in September.

Despite living quietly out of the public eye, he made headlines when involved in a car crash in January 2019. Two women needed hospital treatment after he was apparently dazzled by the low sun as he pulled out of a driveway on the Sandringham estate. A nine-month-old baby boy in the other vehicle was unhurt. The Crown Prosecution Service decided it was not in the public interest to prosecute the duke after he later voluntarily surrendered his driving license.

Born on the island of Corfu, Prince Philip, who once described himself as “a discredited Balkan prince of no particular merit or distinction”, played a key role in the development of the modern monarchy in Britain.

The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh wave to crowds in 2005 as they leave a show marking the end of the second world war.

The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh wave to crowds in 2005 as they leave a show marking the end of the second world war. Photograph: Anwar Hussein Collection

Though never officially given the title of prince consort, he lived a life of relentless royal duty, relinquishing his promising naval career, which some believed could have seen him rise to become First Sea Lord, for a role requiring him to walk several feet behind his wife.

Having made this choice, he immersed himself wholeheartedly in national life, carving out a unique public role. He was the most energetic member of the royal family with, for many decades, the busiest engagements diary.

The Duke of Edinburgh greets a young wellwisher in Canberra at the start of a five-day visit to Australia in 2006.

The Duke of Edinburgh greets a young wellwisher in Canberra at the start of a five-day visit to Australia in 2006. Photograph: Torsten Blackwood/AFP/Getty Images

Even when well-advanced in years, he could be seen on walkabouts hoisting small children over security barriers to enable them to present their posies to his wife.

Often he received little public recognition for his endeavors. In part, this was due to his uncomfortable relationship with the press, whom he labeled “bloody reptiles” and whose coverage often focused on his gaffes. He once told the former Conservative MP and biographer Gyles Brandreth: “I have become a caricature. There we are. I’ve just got to accept it.”

The duke could be blunt and outspoken to the point of offensiveness. He claimed to have coined the word “dontopedalogy”: a talent for putting one’s foot in one’s mouth. Prone to bad-tempered outbursts, he never suffered fools gladly. Equally, he could be charming, engaging, and witty – and displayed such genuine curiosity on his official visits that his hosts were flattered.

Queen Elizabeth and the then US president Barack Obama pose with first lady Michelle Obama and Prince Philip at Buckingham Palace before a state banquet in 2011.

While constitutionally excluded from major areas of the Queen’s professional life – he held no constitutional role other than as a privy counselor and saw no state papers – he set about modernizing a monarchy he feared could end up as a museum piece.

It was at his instigation that the practice of presenting debutantes at court was abolished in 1958. He initiated informal palace lunches to which guests from a variety of backgrounds were invited. Garden parties were broadened.

 

Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip meet guests at a Buckingham Palace garden party in 2012. Photograph: David Crump/Getty Images

He chaired the Way Ahead Group – composed of leading royal family members and their advisers – to analyze and avert criticism of the institution.

The Queen, who deferred to him in private, would say: “What does Philip think?” on any major matter concerning the royal household. Big decisions, including her, finally agreeing to pay tax on her private income, the abolition of the royal yacht Britannia, and her letter to Charles and Diana suggesting an early divorce were taken after consultation with the duke, according to insiders.

He set out his views on the monarchy on several occasions, recognizing it could not be all things to all people and therefore would always find itself in a position of compromise – or risk being kicked from both sides. But, he argued: “People still respond more easily to symbolism than to reason.” People instinctively understood the idea of a representative rather than a governing leader, and it was important for national identity, he maintained.

He had a keen interest in religion and conservation, despite dispatching a 2.5-meter (8ft) tiger with a single shot on an official visit to India in 1961, the same year he became president of the World Wildlife Fund UK.

 

Prince Philip (left) with Prince Jagat-Singh (with his foot on the tiger’s head), the Maharajah of Jaipur, Queen Elizabeth and the Maharanee of Jaipur. The tiger was shot by Philip during a hunt on the royal tour of India in 1961. Photograph: Fox Photos/Getty Images

Industry, science, and nature were other passions. One of his most famous speeches was in 1961 when he told leading industrialists: “Gentlemen, I think it is time we pulled our fingers out.” And he loved gadgets.

From the outset he took a keen interest in young people through the Duke of Edinburgh award, which he launched in 1956, inspired by his school days, and organizations such as the National Playing Fields Association and the Outward Bound Trust.

With his youthful good looks and sporting prowess, Philip was a pin-up. He played polo until, in 1971, injury forced him to retire, after which he took up four-in-hand carriage driving – a coach with four horses – which he continued to compete in at international level well into his 80s.

He was a crack shot, a qualified pilot and an accomplished sailor. As the searchlight control officer on the battleship HMS Valiant, he was mentioned in dispatches in 1941 for his role in the Battle of Matapan against the Italian fleet. His wartime service also saw him present at the Japanese surrender in Tokyo Bay in 1945.

His love of the outdoors and physical pursuit was nurtured in childhood at Gordonstoun, the Morayshire school founded by Kurt Hahn, which encouraged self-reliance in pupils. Hahn had a profound influence on the young prince, who rarely saw his parents as a child.

Born at the family home of Mon Repos, apparently on the kitchen table, on Corfu on 10 June 1921, Philip was the youngest child and only son of Prince Andrew of Greece, an officer in the Greek army, and Princess Alice of Battenberg. The family fled when his father was charged with high treason in the aftermath of the heavy defeat of the Greeks by the Turks. They were evacuated in a British warship, with one-year-old Philip being carried in a makeshift cot fashioned from an orange box.

He had an unsettled and peripatetic childhood. His parents separated; his father settling in Monte Carlo where he amassed significant gambling debts, and his mother, who was deaf, going on to found an order of nuns before becoming depressed and being admitted to an asylum. He later said of his family’s break-up: “I just had to get on with it. You do. One does.”

Distantly related to the Queen – they were third cousins – their paths crossed several times before he became a serious suitor in 1946, though she was said to have fallen in love with him when she was 13.

A highly ambitious and complex man, he faced many obstacles in the early days of marriage at the palace. With no money and no title, the establishment thought him a little “below the salt”. George VI was dismayed his daughter wanted to marry the first man she had met and thought her too young. Queen Elizabeth, later the Queen Mother, and never knowingly subtle, mischievously referred to him as “the Hun”, a reference to his mixed Danish, Russian and German heritage. Her brother, David Bowes-Lyon, dismissed him as “a German”.

Courtiers saw him as an outsider – with barely a suit to his name – and a little too Teutonic.

 

Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip enjoy a walk during their honeymoon at Broadlands, Hampshire. Photograph: Topical Press Agency/Getty Images

But he succeeded in overcoming prejudice and set about creating a role in which he would become the linchpin of palace life. Describing her reliance on him, the Queen said in a speech to celebrate their golden wedding in 1997: “He is someone who doesn’t take easily to compliments. But he has, quite simply, been my strength and stay all these years, and I, and his whole family, and this and many other countries, owe him a debt greater than he would ever claim, or we shall ever know.”

 

Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip at Clarence House with Prince Charles, Prince Edward, Princess Anne and Prince Andrew for a dinner to mark the couple’s diamond wedding anniversary in 2007. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

The bishop of London, Richard Chartres, once told the unauthorized biographer Graham Turner: “If one of the standard English aristocrats had married the Queen it would have bored everyone out of their minds.”

The Duke of Edinburgh was many things, but one thing he was not was boring.

Source: The Guardian

 

Kasoa: Murdered 10-year old boy to be buried today

The 10-year old boy murdered by two teenagers for money rituals will be buried today.

The burial of the boy, Ishmael has been delayed due to investigations by the Police who indicated they had not concluded and could not hand the body over to the family until all the necessary investigations are done.

Spokesperson for the family, Samed speaking in an interview this morning on Accra based Adom FM said although they had not received the body from the police as at this morning, they are confident that the police will stay true to their word.

C/R: Man, 30, assaults wife’s sister over sachet water

A 30-year-old Kofi Carpenter has beaten up his 27-year-old wife’s sister Gloria Eshun for taking a sachet of water without his permission at  Ajumako Enyan Essiam District in the Central region.

He allegedly beat her until blood oozed out of her mouth and nose.

The victim speaking to the media said there was a squabble prior to him assaulting her. She, however, offered to replace the water, but he did not heed.

She disclosed that it took the intervention of a neighbor to prevent her from being killed.

According to her, the case has been reported to the Ajumako police but the culprit has since gone into hiding.

Fetish Priest Behind Kasoa Teen Murderers Arrested

The fetish priest accused of being behind the Kasoa teenage murderers have been arrested by the Police.

Angelonline sources in Ghana Police Service have it that the fetish priest was arrested in Amanase near Suhum in the Eastern Region.

The suspect will be handed to the Criminal Investigations Department Headquarters in Accra, the source said.

Killing
It was a holy black Saturday when the nation heard of the gruesome murder of a10 year old boy by the teenagers.

What could make such teenagers kill a 10 year old boy, Ishmael in such a painful way.

Father of one of the teenage suspects narrating the story said, he was in the room when his wife who was fetching water outside broke the news to him.

He said his son told him Nicholas told him to call Ismael and upon arrival he hit his head with a stick and cement blocks.

The teenagers confessing said they were directed by a Mallam whom they consulted for money rituals.

Court

The Ofankor District Court, presided over by her worship, Rosemond Vera Ocloo yesterday, April, 6,2021 remanded the two teenagers accused of killing the 10 year old Ishmael Mensah at Kasoa into police custody.

The two, Felix Nyarko and Nicholas Kini allegedly killed and buried the boy on Saturday, April 3, 2021, for money rituals.

Family and residents converged round the court premises for the first hearing of the case with his mother crying uncontrollably.

The two suspects were charge of murder and are to reappear before the court on April 20, 2021