Posted to the web 21 September 2007
Charles Takyi-Boadu
Though Ghana has in recent times gained notoriety in the drug trade, it is not considered to be among the major drug transit or major illicit drug producing countries in the world.
Latest reports from the Whitehouse, the seat of the United States government provides the list of countries noted to be leading in the transit and production of illicit drugs. Ghana's name did not however pop up in the list of 20 of the worlds major drug trafficking and production countries.
The report which was released on September 17, 2007 identified the likes of Afghanistan, The Bahamas, Bolivia, Brazil, Burma, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Haiti, India, Jamaica, Laos, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, and Venezuela as major drug trafficking and producing countries in the world.
This was contained in a memorandum signed by U.S. President, George W. Bush in which he has authorized and directed the Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice to submit the report to Congress and publish it in the Federal Register.
A country's presence on the Majors List is not necessarily an adverse reflection of its government's counter narcotics efforts or level of cooperation with the United States.
Consistent with the statutory definition of a major drug transit or drug producing country set forth in section 481(e) (2) and (5) of the Foreign Assistance Act (FAA) of 1961, as amended, one of the reasons that major drug transit or illicit drug producing countries are placed on the list is a combination of geographical, commercial, and economic factors that allow drugs to be transited or produced despite the concerned government's most assiduous enforcement measures.
That notwithstanding, the U.S. government has designated Burma and Venezuela as countries that have failed demonstrably during the previous 12 months to adhere to their obligations under international counter narcotics agreements and take the measures set forth in section 489(a)(1) of the FAA.
Attached to this report are justifications for the determinations on Burma and Venezuela, as required by section 706(2) (B).
In accordance with the provisions of section 706(3)(A) of the Foreign Relations Authorization Act (FRAA), President Bush has also determined that support for programs to aid Venezuela's democratic institutions is vital to the national interests of the United States. Below is the unedited report on individual countries:-
NIGERIA
Nigeria has made progress on many narcotics control and anti-money laundering benchmarks. There is reason to be hopeful. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has seized millions in the proceeds of crime, anti-money laundering efforts have been successful, and Nigeria is cooperating with the international community to improve its efforts against money laundering even more. Still necessary are procedural reforms to streamline extradition procedures. For many narcotics criminals no sanction is more effective than the fear that they could face a court and jail time in the countries to which they have trafficked narcotics. Nigeria should also re-double its efforts to use its frequent apprehension of street criminals and couriers to identify and prosecute major drug traffickers.
AFGANISTAN
Although President Karzai has strongly attacked narcotic trafficking as the greatest threat to Afghanistan, one third of the Afghan economy remains opium-based, which contributes to widespread public corruption, damage to elicit economic growth, and the strengthening of the insurgency.
The government at all levels must be held accountable to deter and eradicate poppy cultivation, remove and prosecute corrupt officials, and investigate and prosecute or extradite narcotic traffickers and those financing their activities. We are concerned that failure to act decisively now could undermine security, compromise democratic legitimacy, and imperil international support for vital assistance.
In Afghanistan, one model for success can be drawn by comparing the marked differences in cultivation between the northern and southern provinces. Several Northern provinces contributed to a decline in poppy cultivation resulting from a mixture of political will and incentives and disincentives, such as public information, alternative development, and eradication. Furthermore, several Northern provinces with very low amounts of poppy are well on their way to becoming poppy free.Despite the significant progress made in Afghanistan since 2001, the country continues to face tremendous challenges. Our struggle to win hearts and minds, while confronting the insurgency, continues to directly hinge on our ability to help the Afghan government produce visible results. We need to encourage a firm belief among the Afghan people that their national government is capable of delivering an alternative to the preceding decades of conflict. Our reconstruction assistance is an essential instrument to achieve that goal.
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Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Thursday, August 14, 2008
MY MOST DIFFICULT MOMENT
…choosing between joining the army, journalism
Charles Takyi-Boadu
Posted:Thursday, August 14, 2008
Life presents several opportunities, but the choice of making the right decision has always been a problem for man. This is the very situation in which I found myself after completing secondary education in the year 1999. I was thorn between the decision of joining the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) and pursuing a career in journalism, a profession that has severally been described as ‘noble’.
It took me almost two years to finally weigh the options at my disposal since I had a difficult time trying to decipher the wisdom in the advice of my parents and my personal instincts.
Considering the fact that I did not qualify for the university, my father had given indications of his preparedness to sponsor my education only if heeded to his advice and pursue a course at the polytechnic since it was the easiest way by which I could secure a job.
Apart from the polytechnic, the ‘old boy’ was not prepared to do anything else, let alone talk about journalism.
Though I fairly understood him, taking into consideration, the fact that his earnings was nothing worth writing home about and the fact that he had to equally take care of my other siblings; I defied his advice and went for the broke.
Determined as I was to pursue journalism, I was compelled by prevailing circumstances at the time to start trading in wears.
At a point, I realised most of my colleagues, with whom I completed school were all moving on, so I opted to pursue a course in journalism.
After a short while, I went into discussions with my mother, who bought into the idea of pursuing journalism. However, this, offer came with a conditional clause since ‘there is no free lunch anywhere’.
I was made to pledge that I was going to take my studies serious and stay away from bad company and the influences of peer pressure.
Under the circumstance, I was left with little or virtually no option than to promise to be of good behaviour and take my studies serious.
All this while, I was contemplating whether or not I will be admitted to the traditional journalism training institute, the Ghana Institute of Journalism (GIJ), considering the number of applications received each year.
I thus opted to purchase an admission form at one of the few private institutions which was producing equally good journalists, Manifold Tutorial College (MTC).
Lo and behold, I was offered admission to pursue journalism, with the option of public relations.
Matters got worse, after my first semester, when my father was transferred from the national capital, Accra to Kumasi in the Ashanti region.
Though my father now offered to pay my fees upon seeing the potential in me and thus ask me to obtain a transfer to a sister school in the region, I declined. He thus left me to my fate.
I however became stranded in life when my senior sister who was by then in Israel and thought could help me pay my fees failed to assist me.
Left without an option, I obtained a transfer from management of school and packed bag and baggage’s to continue the school at the Institute of Business Management and Journalism (IBM & J).
I took just a day for me to change my decision to start the new school as a continuing student after realising from the first lecture that all I learnt at my former school was junk.
I started all over again as a fresher.
My first week on campus was just like been to hell and back since each and every one of the students who set eyes on me had something to say about my stature.
I did not only become the centre of attraction but virtually became a laughing stock. Whilst some of the students described me as a boxer, others said I was wrestler.
Some even went to the extent of asking me to quit journalism to pursue a career in boxing, calling me ‘macho journalist’.
In fact, ‘macho journalist’ became my name until the saying that ‘to everything, there is season’ became evident in my life when my passion for students politics made me contest and won the positions of Vice President of both the Students Representative Council (SRC) and the Association of Student Journalists (ASJ) in the school.
I thus propounded a theory for myself, that ‘there is no option to life but there are several options in life’.
Charles Takyi-Boadu
Posted:Thursday, August 14, 2008
Life presents several opportunities, but the choice of making the right decision has always been a problem for man. This is the very situation in which I found myself after completing secondary education in the year 1999. I was thorn between the decision of joining the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) and pursuing a career in journalism, a profession that has severally been described as ‘noble’.
It took me almost two years to finally weigh the options at my disposal since I had a difficult time trying to decipher the wisdom in the advice of my parents and my personal instincts.
Considering the fact that I did not qualify for the university, my father had given indications of his preparedness to sponsor my education only if heeded to his advice and pursue a course at the polytechnic since it was the easiest way by which I could secure a job.
Apart from the polytechnic, the ‘old boy’ was not prepared to do anything else, let alone talk about journalism.
Though I fairly understood him, taking into consideration, the fact that his earnings was nothing worth writing home about and the fact that he had to equally take care of my other siblings; I defied his advice and went for the broke.
Determined as I was to pursue journalism, I was compelled by prevailing circumstances at the time to start trading in wears.
At a point, I realised most of my colleagues, with whom I completed school were all moving on, so I opted to pursue a course in journalism.
After a short while, I went into discussions with my mother, who bought into the idea of pursuing journalism. However, this, offer came with a conditional clause since ‘there is no free lunch anywhere’.
I was made to pledge that I was going to take my studies serious and stay away from bad company and the influences of peer pressure.
Under the circumstance, I was left with little or virtually no option than to promise to be of good behaviour and take my studies serious.
All this while, I was contemplating whether or not I will be admitted to the traditional journalism training institute, the Ghana Institute of Journalism (GIJ), considering the number of applications received each year.
I thus opted to purchase an admission form at one of the few private institutions which was producing equally good journalists, Manifold Tutorial College (MTC).
Lo and behold, I was offered admission to pursue journalism, with the option of public relations.
Matters got worse, after my first semester, when my father was transferred from the national capital, Accra to Kumasi in the Ashanti region.
Though my father now offered to pay my fees upon seeing the potential in me and thus ask me to obtain a transfer to a sister school in the region, I declined. He thus left me to my fate.
I however became stranded in life when my senior sister who was by then in Israel and thought could help me pay my fees failed to assist me.
Left without an option, I obtained a transfer from management of school and packed bag and baggage’s to continue the school at the Institute of Business Management and Journalism (IBM & J).
I took just a day for me to change my decision to start the new school as a continuing student after realising from the first lecture that all I learnt at my former school was junk.
I started all over again as a fresher.
My first week on campus was just like been to hell and back since each and every one of the students who set eyes on me had something to say about my stature.
I did not only become the centre of attraction but virtually became a laughing stock. Whilst some of the students described me as a boxer, others said I was wrestler.
Some even went to the extent of asking me to quit journalism to pursue a career in boxing, calling me ‘macho journalist’.
In fact, ‘macho journalist’ became my name until the saying that ‘to everything, there is season’ became evident in my life when my passion for students politics made me contest and won the positions of Vice President of both the Students Representative Council (SRC) and the Association of Student Journalists (ASJ) in the school.
I thus propounded a theory for myself, that ‘there is no option to life but there are several options in life’.
Nude pictures, video emerge from Legon
… student poses for boyfriend to take snap shots
…lesbians caught in the act
By Charles Takyi-Boadu
Posted:Thursday, August 14, 2008
Ghana’s premier university, the University of Ghana, Legon is fast becoming a breeding ground for berserk sexual practices especially involving female students on campus and surrounding hostels.
Latest developments reveal some of these students in nude video footages and still pictures some of which are often captured with sophisticated mobile phones that make easy dissemination from phone to phone via Bluetooth.
The situation has become a matter of great worry to many parents and guardians who have their wards enrolled in the institution of high repute and the earlier authorities curb this threat, the earlier it would safeguard the image of the institution.
Presently, fresh photos have started emerging from one of the private hostel facilities in which a female student posed for her unscrupulous boyfriend to take snap shots of her nudity.
The shots, which according to credible sources were taken with a mobile phone makes a mockery of university education since it leaves much to be desired from a student of the premier university.
The pictures show an innocent-looking girl between the ages of 23-26 years posed for the camera, beaming with smiles for a person credible sources say is her boyfriend to take shots of her vital parts such as her buttocks, breast and vagina.
Obviously happy with what she was doing, she occasionally changed clothes, locations and posture for the shots to be taken.
From all indications, the boyfriend took the photographs with the due consent of the girl in question however for his exclusive viewing.
The Chronicle’s investigations on campus and the hostel where the girl resides disclosed that a friend of the girl’s boyfriend saw the nude pictures when he lent him the phone and upon seeing the nude pictures, he decided to send it via Bluetooth to his phone and later have a cursory look.
After viewing it, he also sent it to other colleagues on campus and then the circulation of the pictures started and spreading like wild fire to anyone desired to a look.
Another video which is also in the possession of this paper shows two female students, this time round in one of the traditional halls on the University’s main campus, one in brassier and ‘G string’ underwear and the other wearing shorts, fondling each other and groaning as though having real sexual intercourse.
The two girls, who also appear to be in their mid twenties and believed to be lesbians, are said to have filmed the act themselves either using a camcorder or a high powered mobile phone.
Anyone, especially parents who have their wards in the university and has had the opportunity of viewing the nude pictures and the video footage could not comprehend the creeping insanity prevailing on the campuses of the various universities especially at Ghana’s premier university.
It is believed that these practices are rife on campuses of the various universities in the country but students of the University of Ghana appear to be the worst culprits.
Over the last couple years, similar nude pictures and video footages have emerged from Legon, thereby making especially parents and various Legon Alumini to express concern about these despicable practices which by all standards is untertiary.
…lesbians caught in the act
By Charles Takyi-Boadu
Posted:Thursday, August 14, 2008
Ghana’s premier university, the University of Ghana, Legon is fast becoming a breeding ground for berserk sexual practices especially involving female students on campus and surrounding hostels.
Latest developments reveal some of these students in nude video footages and still pictures some of which are often captured with sophisticated mobile phones that make easy dissemination from phone to phone via Bluetooth.
The situation has become a matter of great worry to many parents and guardians who have their wards enrolled in the institution of high repute and the earlier authorities curb this threat, the earlier it would safeguard the image of the institution.
Presently, fresh photos have started emerging from one of the private hostel facilities in which a female student posed for her unscrupulous boyfriend to take snap shots of her nudity.
The shots, which according to credible sources were taken with a mobile phone makes a mockery of university education since it leaves much to be desired from a student of the premier university.
The pictures show an innocent-looking girl between the ages of 23-26 years posed for the camera, beaming with smiles for a person credible sources say is her boyfriend to take shots of her vital parts such as her buttocks, breast and vagina.
Obviously happy with what she was doing, she occasionally changed clothes, locations and posture for the shots to be taken.
From all indications, the boyfriend took the photographs with the due consent of the girl in question however for his exclusive viewing.
The Chronicle’s investigations on campus and the hostel where the girl resides disclosed that a friend of the girl’s boyfriend saw the nude pictures when he lent him the phone and upon seeing the nude pictures, he decided to send it via Bluetooth to his phone and later have a cursory look.
After viewing it, he also sent it to other colleagues on campus and then the circulation of the pictures started and spreading like wild fire to anyone desired to a look.
Another video which is also in the possession of this paper shows two female students, this time round in one of the traditional halls on the University’s main campus, one in brassier and ‘G string’ underwear and the other wearing shorts, fondling each other and groaning as though having real sexual intercourse.
The two girls, who also appear to be in their mid twenties and believed to be lesbians, are said to have filmed the act themselves either using a camcorder or a high powered mobile phone.
Anyone, especially parents who have their wards in the university and has had the opportunity of viewing the nude pictures and the video footage could not comprehend the creeping insanity prevailing on the campuses of the various universities especially at Ghana’s premier university.
It is believed that these practices are rife on campuses of the various universities in the country but students of the University of Ghana appear to be the worst culprits.
Over the last couple years, similar nude pictures and video footages have emerged from Legon, thereby making especially parents and various Legon Alumini to express concern about these despicable practices which by all standards is untertiary.
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