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Friday, April 9, 2010
Motor Bikes Banned In Bawku
Posted: Daily Guide |Friday, 09 April 2010
By Charles Takyi-Boadu & Ebo Bruce-Quansah, Bolgatanga
Another death was recorded in Bawku yesterday, as a Moshie man was shot dead around 3:30 pm, in the volatile conflict zone.
No reason has been assigned for the shooting of the deceased, Adam Kayaba Osman alias Willa, but it is suspected to be linked to the recent target killings in the area.
The death of the man, who was gunned down between Misiga and Kulungugu in the Bawku municipality, came on the heels of a riot act read by the government to deal ruthlessly with trouble makers and their collaborators in the area.
Willa, a Moshie from Burkina Faso, was in a truck loaded with cola nuts and onions when he was pulled out and killed. Two others sustained gunshot wounds.
For a start, a ban has been placed on the use of motorbikes in the municipality, after security operatives detected that most of the killers use motorbikes to commit the heinous offence.
The National Security, through the District Information Service, announced a 24-hour ban on the riding of motorbikes, starting from April 9, 2010, until further notice.
This is likely to affect movement as most residents commute on motorbikes.
According to a DAILY GUIDE source, the message, which was passed through the Municipal Security Council (MUSEC), was initially hard for members including the Chairman, Abdulai Musah, to pass to the residents of the area.
This was probably due to the importance of motorbikes to the economy of the area, as well as the movement of the people of the area.
There had been a ban on riding motorbikes in the area, from 6:00pm.
DAILY GUIDE sources said people were seen hooting at the information van while it made the announcement through the township yesterday.
Efforts to talk to the MCE for the area, Abdulai Musah, who is also Chairman of MUSEC, proved futile, since his phone was either switched off or out of coverage area.
However, the Bawku Divisional Police Commander, Chief Supt Christopher Kwaku Boadu-Preprah, confirmed the ban, but could not give reasons for it.
DAILY GUIDE sources in Bawku said the information van had announced that the ban was necessary because motorbikes, being the main means of transport, have mostly been used in the target killings in the area.
From the reaction of the residents during the announcement, there is likely to be an uprising, which the National Security either failed to consider or has the intention of using severe force to implement.
Motorbike is the means of transport for most workers, including teachers, nurses, assembly staff, as well as traders and many others in the area, hence the ban is anticipated to bring the municipality to a standstill.
The ban covers all persons in the area, including the police, military, Assembly staff and other security personnel.
At a press conference in Accra yesterday, government vowed to deal ruthlessly with any individuals or group of persons who are found culpable in fueling the Bawku conflict.
It has indicated its preparedness to arrest and subsequently prosecute leaders and sponsors who incite violence in the area, saying with emphasis that “there will be no mercy.”
Information Minister, John Akologu Tia, told journalists that “there are sponsors of this conflict who sit in Accra and engage in shameless acts that exacerbate the situation”.
He therefore tendered in evidence a T-shirt with the inscription ‘original chiefs of Bawku’ which according to him, was printed in Accra and sent to Bawku to ostensibly provoke the anger of one of the feuding factions.
The Minister noted that these sponsors, who, instead of offering leadership in peace and mediation, have rather chosen the path of perdition and incitement, emphasizing that “we want them to know their hands are dripping with blood”.
Mr Tia gave his word that the security agencies are in the process of not only rounding up all these elements but “we want to make it clear that there will be no mercy for such persons” since according to him, “the inherent situation in Bawku is of much concern to government”.
‘National Service Is Part Of Job Creation’
Posted: Daily Guide |Friday, 09 April 2010
By Charles Takyi-Boadu
THE RULING National Democratic Congress (NDC) seems to be having a hard time defending its claims of having created some 1.6million jobs across the various sectors of the economy.
This became obvious yesterday when government attempted to ridicule the opposing New Patriotic Party’s (NPP) argument that, it is only the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) which can tell whether specific government agencies employed people in a particular year or not.
In a bid to defend the government’s claim, the Minister of Information, John Akologu Tia, created the impression that the National Service Scheme, which was established in 1969, is employment in itself, since according to him “Hundreds of personnel are doing their national service within the civil service, contrary to the claim that there is a permanent freeze in employment to the service and also that there will not be any national service posting there”.
“While it is important that they were just engaging in politics as usual, it is important to point out that government, through the office of the head of Civil Service, employed in 2009”, he emphasized.
By this, the government and its Information Minister wanted Ghanaians and for that matter, journalists, to consider national service as part of the 1.6million jobs it has created.
It is however not clear whether national service is a job in itself.
The minister is however optimistic that after their surveys, the GSS would later this year, confirm what the various professionals have indicated to government in the matter of jobs.
The minister that noted in 2009 alone, despite the that fact the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank had asked government to put a freeze on employment in the civil service, approximately 982 persons were employed.
According to Mr. Tia, those figures strongly confirm government’s view that despite the constraints, they are working hard and creating opportunities throughout the country.
This, according to him, is the reason why their opponents in the NPP decided to go overdrive with all kinds of rebuttals.
In addition to all the other measures that government reckons are creating jobs throughout the country, the Information Minister noted with emphasis that, 1,563, 982 people were engaged in various sectors thought-out the country.
Under the Youth in Agriculture Programme, he indicated that a minimum of 47,000 people have been engaged whilst the Eco-Brigade Programme which is a multi-sectoral initiative for training the youth in fiber glass making, boat building and beach protection has engaged some 10,000 people.
For this reason, government is said to be considering a review of the whole concept of the National Youth Employment Programme (NYEP) as an employment rather than a skills training programme for the youth.
Apart from that, the Minister claims the oil and gas industry has already engaged some 1,000 people, a figure he anticipated would quadruple in the next two years.
According to the Minister, “This breakdown, does not even take into account persons engaged by the private sector and also many state-owned companies that have been restructured and positioned for growth and have employed many young graduates”.
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