9/11/2013

Catholic Men’s Council



Catholic Men’s Council for Accra
The Accra Archdiocesan Catholic Men’s Council (AACM), was recently inaugurated at the Holy Spirit Cathedral at Adabraka, Accra, with a call on men to actively partake in the evangelisation of the Church.
The new group, is an umbrella body for all Catholic Men Groups in the Archdiocese, tasked to co-ordinate their activities and intensify the evangelisation.   
It has Commander Joseph A. C. Combey (Rtd) as Chairman, with Mr. Lord Akita, Mamprobi Deanery; Mr. David Asetena-Krah, Kpehe Deanery; Mr. Philip Owusu-Ankomah, Kaneshie Deanery and Mr. Dominic Kpodovia, Osu Deanery as well as Kingsford Nii Otoo, Tema Battor Deanery, as Vice Chairmen.
Other Executives are Mr. Joseph Korang, Secretary, Mr. Edward Taylor, Assistant Secretary and Financial Secretary; Mr. Tony Wiredu, Treasurer and Mr. Kingsley Assensoh-Bediako, Public Relations Officer and Mr. Tobias Quist, Immediate Past Chairman;
Most Rev. Charles Gabriel Palmer-Buckle, Metropolitan Archbishop of Accra, who performed the inauguration and induction of the Executives, entreated Catholic men to be salt and light of the world, urging them to arise, rejoice and renew the Church in Accra.
He said it was by divine will that their inauguration was taking place during the 120th Anniversary of the founding of the Catholic Mission in Accra and in The Year of Faith.
The Archbishop explained that the aim of The Year of Faith pronounced by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI was to challenge the faithful to let their lives shine and spread the good news to their families, communities and society at large.
To discharge this task successfully, Archbishop Palmer-Buckle urged members of the Council to read Pope Benedict’s Post Synodal Exhortation to Africa: Afriae Munus, to make Africa the true Spiritual Lung of Humanity.
He urged members to rally behind their leaders and support them to help the Council grow from strength to strength.
Cdr. Combey in a welcome address said the Council started two and half years ago at the behest of Sir Samuel Kofi Asubonteng, Executive Secretary of the National Catholic Laity Council, whom he commended.
Sir Asubonteng in a remark, urged members to also read the new Encyclical by Pope Francis, charging them to be prayerful, united and work together to promote the Council.    
A representative of the Accra Archdiocesan Catholic Women Council (CWC), Mrs. Rita Ainooson, President of the Kaneshie St. Theresa CWC, congratulated the Men’s Council in a goodwill message.
Christian Fathers Association; Catholic Men Association; Catholic Men’s Confraternity; The Brotherhood Society and Men of Galeli sent representatives to the ceremony.

National Development Plan



'National Development Plan'
·        A panacea for Ghana's growth says Nubuasah

A Ghanaian Prelate has proposed the enactment of a holistic long term and binding national development plan for the country and depart from the era where governments used political party manifestoes to govern the country.

The call was made by Most Rev. Frank Nubuasah, SVD, Bishop of Francistown Vicariate in Botswana in an interview with the Catholic Standard in Accra, when he recently visited Ghana.

He stressed the need for a five year or 10 year cycle of national development plan which should elicit the views of all segments of the Ghanaian of society, be nationalistic in character and capture the nation’s aspirations and visions.

He underscored the essence for a National Development Plan that would guide the attainment of set goals of the country and which should be followed through by all elected governments, for continuity and progressive development of the Ghana.  

He stated that to ensure holistic development the country we should strive to run transparent by reducing corruption, accountable and address the poor maintenance culture.
Sharing Botswana’s experience, he said there was need for Ghana to institute measures that would improve responsible and accountable governance to not only win the trust of their citizens but the donor agencies as well.  
Bishop Nubuasah expressed concern about the poor maintenance culture in Ghana and most African countries, describing the phenomenon “as a systemic weakness that must be tackled with all seriousness”.
“For instance in most schools there are broken chairs parked and left to rot. Why can’t the school mobilise support from the Parent Teacher Association to fix those Chairs to enhance education? He queried.
“There was something we are certainly not doing right,” he stated and added that “if the country did the right things we would all benefit from its growth and development.”
The Bishop, sharing his views on the Supreme Court ruling of August 29, commended Ghanaians for conducting themselves peacefully during the election and Supreme Court verdict and expressed delight, but cautioned Ghanaians “not to look down on the judges” who gave the verdict, but respect them since they were neutral and referees in settling electoral dispute.
He said entreated adherersof religion particularly Christian and Muslims to continuously pray for peace to prevail in the country.
Said the Bishop: “peace is God’s gift to man, which is different from what the world gives.” He added that the peace in the country was the fruit of the prayers Ghanaians offered.
He urged citizens to live in peace with themselves, their families and the environment through conservation.  
The Bishop said by resorting to the Supreme Court,Ghana has shown that people could live peacefully even though they disagree and have their differences, noting that it was a healthy sign democracy the country’s was growing.
He cited the smooth transition of power from a sitting government to the opposition as a plus for the country, noting that the Supreme Court ruling has Ghana boosted the democratic credential of the country, which was a good example for other Africa countries to learn from.
He pleaded: We have only one Ghana so let’s work to engender greater national cohesion and peace in the country.

MEDEC



MEDEC champions environmental journalism
The Media Development Centre (MEDEC), a Non-Governmental Organisation has in collaboration with the Centre for Public Interest Law (CEPIL), launched a media capacity training programme christened ''Journalism Clinic'' for young media practitioners and trainees to develop interest in Environmental Journalism and effectively report on it.
The Clinic which would be organised thrice annually throughout the country, to sharpen the skills of Journalists to report more on environmental issues and varied areas of environment that were often under reported.   
Launching it in Accra, Mr. Richard Ellimah, Executive Director of the Centre for Social Impact Studies (CeSIS), said it was important for the media to focus their  attention more on other developmental areas including the environment, instead of concentrating on politics and sports to the neglect of other sectors.
He stated that the poor sanitation in the country was a reflection of a weak local government structure to tackle the challenge, which, he added, might make Ghana miss the Millennium Development Goal on reducing maternal mortality, environmental sustainability and access to water and sanitation.
Mr. Ellimah lamented that  most of our Journalists lacked the requisite academic background to comprehensively report on specialized fields including environment, health, natural resource extraction, finance and economic reporting and commended MEDEC for taking the initiative to build capacity for Journalists.
Welcoming the guest, Mr. Okunyin Boaz Orlan-Hackman, Executive Director of MEDEC, said the Organisation would help Journalists to specialise in the various fields.

He noted that the Clinic would assist Journalism Training Schools to adequately prepare students to focus more on developmental issues.
Mr. Fredrick Asiamah, Director of Communications and Partnerships of MEDEC, explained that his outfit would employ various media tools to promote grassroots development.

He said MEDEC intended to use workshop and field tours in its training and establish a database for Environmental Journalists in the country.
Dr. Messan Mawugbe, Managing Consultant, Centre for Media Analysis, challenged Journalists to be innovative and change the trend of Journalism in the country, by giving in-depth reporting on environment instead of depending on press releases.

He urged them to use simple language in their reportage to effectively communicate to their audience.
At the launch were some staff of Journalism Training Schools in Accra, and Journalists.
Speakers including Mr. Augustine Niber, Director of the Centre for Public Interest Law (CEPIL), Mr. Samuel Obri of the Centre for Scientific Research Institute and Mrs. Hannah Owusu Koranteng, Associate Executive of Wassa Association of Communities Affected by Mining (WACAM) as well as Mrs. Ama Kudom-Agyemang, Communication Consultant.

Among some topics discussed were Status of Environment and Resource Reporting;  Resource Extraction and Health: Pollution Factor; Human and Social Factors of Resource Extraction; Connecting Law and Environment and Importance of Environmental Reporting.   
   

5/16/2013

Ensuring discipline, order on our roads




That discipline which corrects the eagerness of worldly passions, which fortifies the heart with virtuous principles, which enlightens the mind with useful knowledge, and furnishes to it matter of enjoyment from within itself, is of more consequence to real felicity than all the provisions which we can make of the goods of fortune. (ROBERT BRIDGES)


It was a hot Friday afternoon, when Deka (not exactly his name), a Driver of an Ashiaman bound tro-tro bus struggling to keep to his lane in a mild afternoon traffic jam, got irked and    removed a cane from the side of his seat to lash one driver who carelessly crossed him on the George Walker Bush Highway or N1 Highway.
The other driver who was jolted by the crack of the wipe, obviously oblivious of the inconvenience he caused Deka, who had to abruptly apply his brakes, got out of his car to confront Deka.
The confrontation turned into a mini fight, a street fight of a sought, between the two drivers which caused a brief traffic. The ensuing brawl became interesting as it drew a marmot crowd and cheerful onlookers, some only interested in the winner, while others asked what caused and not why the two drivers were fighting.
But for the timely intervention of the police who happen to be passing by, the confrontation would have lasted longer. In the aftermath of the scuffle, Deka was unreservedly condemned, criticised and chastised by the court of public opinion, who impatiently or hurriedly pronounced judgement on Deka.  Most of them could not phantom what right Deka had to use a cane on the other Driver.
Although Deka might not be right in using the cane on the other driver, there is this alibi that the other driver was equally guilty of careless driving which provoked Deka's action.  
Indeed, Deka's case could be one such example of indiscipline on our roads, however  concerns of alarming road accidents, caused by traffic offences including wrong overtaking, overloading, indiscriminate parking and offloading of passengers, share disregard for road traffic rules and impatience, should be a wake-up call to all to join hands in ensuring greater discipline our roads.
Often times discipline, tolerance, honesty and respect for one another are usually considered in many societies to be important virtues that are necessary for its development. This is based on the fact every discipline individual would naturally be lawful, do right to all manner of people and help ensure the good of all, but is it the situation on our roads and in our society.
Indiscipline at a glance
Indiscipline, intolerance, impatience and disrespect are a common place on our roads in many parts of the country, where tro-tro or commercial vehicles and perhaps many private drivers compete, not just for the space on the roads but trade insults in equal measure. It is like a jungle war fare, where the fiercest or the strongest predominates.
Some indiscipline acts of motorist
In fact, no rule seems to work on our roads. As a result almost every motorist manages to meander through dense traffic each day, or use unapproved routes to cut-corners and reach their destination on time.
The traffic caused at the Lapaz, Kwashiman and Awoshie intersections of the N1 Highway during rush hours, and perhaps other similar ones on other roads is worrying. The impatience, desperation and frustration make travelling on these roads a little scaring if not unfriendly.
It sometimes gets interesting when you watch the bumper-to-bumper nature in which the vehicles move and wonder what happens to the rest of the vehicles should one breakdown? Your guess is as right as mine.
Most tro-tro drivers, their assistants (mates) and private car owners daily flout road traffic rules, thus compounding an already worse situation on our roads. Aside being very insulting, they could be cited stopping and picking passengers at unauthorised places, to the extent of even stopping in the middle of the road to offload and pick them.
The disrespect some drivers and their ‘mates’ metes out to the passengers is worrying. By these acts passengers are made to feel it is a privilege to board their vehicles, instead of a service they pay for.
Aside the wrong overtaking, indiscriminate changing of lanes and other unsightly acts, there is this wired incident that suggests authorities must designate places for people to urinate on our roads.   
The other day I saw a neatly dressed man in a black three piece suit who packed his car on the outer lane of the under bridge of the Dimples overpass of the N1 Highway urinating.
Another category of indiscipline road users are the motor riders commonly called ‘Okada or ‘Zamaja’.  Some of them inexperience as they may be risk their lives and those of their passengers without wearing crush helmets,  ply our roads in the city and in most remote areas with such speed as if they were in race.
The manner in which they dangerously weave through traffic and their shear disregard for traffic lights, ridding through red-lights, poses a danger if a not a nuisance to other road users. 
Passengers act and inactions
There was another scuffle I witnessed between a drivers’ mate and a Macho guy I boarded a vehicle with from Darkuman to Circle. It was around the time the new fare were being charged as a result of adjustment in petroleum prices. The rude mate who was charging 100 per cent increment on the fares would not rescind his decision, so the Macho guy taught him a bitter lesson when the mate insulted him. Although not the right way to deal with the situation, the Macho guy did the job for many passengers who were being exploited.
Sometimes, outspoken passengers who raise their voices against such acts including wrong overtaking, overloading, over-speeding and exploitation are branded ‘too-known’. And yet many passengers are to blame for condoning with this indiscipline acts. 
It is true that the ‘fama nyame’ or ‘Nyame be twea wo ka’ attitude of most of them is not helping matters. It is even appalling that those who know the law unfortunately condone with the drivers and their mates in perpetuating this illicit acts, just because they want to get to their destination early.       
Littering is another indiscipline act numerous passengers commit daily. One can sight filthy debris of post-dated posters and banners streets, as well as black polythene and sachet bags, littering our beautiful bus terminals, streets and roads. These are the same filth that choke most of our drains and cause floods whenever it rains. Visit the 37, Ashaiman, Atimpokou, Asamankese, Bolga, Ejura, Kejetia, Nkrumah Circle, Takoradi, Tudu, Tema, Techiman and Tamale bus terminals in the evenings to have a look the filth there.
Pedestrians and other road users
They are sometimes impatient to wait for the green light before crossing the road. They sometimes do this carelessly at unapproved routes without recourse to whether those places were designated lawns or gardens. At Nkrumah Circle for instance near the Pedestrian Mall linking the Ghana Commercial Bank Tower, pedestrians have created unauthorised routes on the lawns. At the   Lapaz, Achimota, and the Kwashiman sections of the N1 Highway some pedestrian are sometimes seen scaling or jumping the walls or road railings risking their lives in the process.
Often, they are seen calling passengers to board vehicles at bus stops. These guys for the purpose of this discourse referred to as ‘bus stop bookmen,’ have virtually tuned our bus stops into mini bus terminals that often turn chaotic and worsen the traffic situation at such places as Lapaz, Shiashi, Achimota Overhead, Kwashiman. Vehicles that pack and load at these bus stops for hours instead of the normal two to five minutes is gross indiscipline to road safety.    
Another act of indiscipline is perpetuated by those who do business on the pedestrians walk ways or bus stops along the roads. They compete with the pedestrians for the little space and woe betides any pedestrians who steps on their wares. Due to this, pedestrians are forced to share the routes meant for moving vehicles. You can imagine the risk.
Usually spotted shabbily dressed, profusely sweating under a merciless sun but strive to push their truck loads of scrapes through traffic jams, lawns and meander through unapproved routes in a busy city like Accra. The truck pushers who are claiming a right to using the roads are a common phenomenon in Accra and their movement is causing inconvenience not just to motorist but pedestrians and perhaps law enforcers.
The activities of beggars, street hawkers’ and roadside market operators are but a nuisance to roads users. They all seem to be operating on the blind side of the law and one wonders whether personnel of the law enforcement agency are checking their activities.
Law enforcers
Right conduct of law enforcers is paramount to ensuring greater discipline. But it is worrying when these officers, who are suppose to correct the ills and bring sanity on our road, turn round to condone, collect and sometimes extort various sums of monies from these offending drivers. What kind of rule or convention for instance allows officers to always check driver’s particulars at the rear of their vehicles?
 In any case there is cause to worry whether the efforts of the few good Police personal out there will actually salvage the carnage on our roads.
As for the spot fine yet to be introduced and other road traffic laws, only time will tell whether they could effectively help improve discipline and restore sanity on our roads.
Contractors and government
Commitment to standards in building lasting monuments is only a tribute we pay to our profession as artists, artisans, architect, contractors, civil engineers, technocrats or sculptures. Be that as it may, the government as the organ that awards these road contracts must make funds available and must in the good name of GHANA insist on long lasting quality roads, instead of cutting corners to provide a number of shoddy roads that cries for repairs now and then.
Contractors as professionals must resolve to build better roads for Ghanaians to use and not roads that would kill them, for what is the use of monuments that brings death to a people that it seeks to help as aspire to greater heights?
Conclusion
Discipline according to William E. Homan quoted in Readers Digests, 1969 is important simply because we live in an organized society where, if you have not learned life's requirements at early age, you will be taught later, not by those whose love tempers the lesson but by strangers who could not care less about the harm they do to your personality.
Homan's insight only goes to confirm the fact that the longer we allow the canker of indiscipline to eat into our social fabric, the more we pay the price for it. It therefore behooves us as a people to improve our lots, based on a discipline citizenry. We cannot have short cuts to develop this nation but instill the virtues of discipline, respect for each other, patience and tolerance of dissenting views.      
So far as discipline is concerned, it controls the individual by appealing to his reason and conscience and his self-respect. Therefore parents, adults, schools and government must make a conscious commitment at instilling the virtues of discipline in the mind and hearts of Ghanaians. This is because discipline is a necessary ingredient in national development and thus Ghanaians ought to remember their outmost responsibility of being disciplined to make a Ghana a better place for all to live.
Writer’s email: kybem11@yahoo.com
kwesiyirenkyi.blogspot.com

An Honourable Truce

In the truce of a Tuesday, are tests of our testaments. But as we trace the interests in our tents while talking our tastes, we...