Thursday, June 25, 2009

RELEASE 20 TRANSIT TRUCKS — YAYA (PAGE 3)

THE Country Representative of the Burkina Faso Shippers Council, Mr Yedan Yaya, has appealed to the authorities of the Tema Motorway Axle Load Control Unit to release 20 transit trucks which are being held by the unit for overloading.
He claimed that since the drivers had pleaded guilty and been fined by a circuit court, they should be pardoned and cautioned not to indulge in the practice again.
Mr Yaya made the call when commenting on the stranded trucks and their detention at the Tema Motorway Axle Load Control Unit for the past three weeks for load shedding after an order from a circuit court in Ashaiman.
The Tema Axle Load Control Unit has, for the past month, intensified its operations to ensure that transit trucks do not load above the permissible weight, a practice which has contributed to the deterioration of the country's roads.
As a result of the action, all overloaded trucks using the Motorway were impounded by the unit and processed for court by the police.
According to the Ghana Highway Authority Axle Load Control Law, trucks found guilty of the offence will have their seals broken and the excess cargo unloaded by Customs, Excise and Preventive Service personnel to enable the truck to continue the journey with the permissible weight.
The Axle Load Unit, as a result of its action, has started with the load shedding but the truck drivers have not provided vehicles for the transfer of the goods, bringing the operations of the unit to a halt.
Mr Yaya was not happy that the unit had, all of a sudden, decided to impound overloaded trucks.
He explained that though the law on shedding excess load and prosecuting offending drivers had existed since 2006, the intensity of the enforcement had not been communicated to the drivers.
He made it known that the drivers expected the law to be enforced but that unfortunately the enforcement had come earlier than expected.
Mr Yaya gave the assurance that if granted the freedom to go, the drivers would henceforth abide by the law.
The Chief Executive of the Tema Axle Load Control Unit, Mr Albert Owusu-Ansah, was against the views of the drivers, indicating that 85 per cent of transit truck drivers diverted their courses by using unapproved routes.
He said most of the recalcitrant drivers drove Burkina Faso-bound trucks, emphasising that trucks enroute to Niger had kept faith with the unit because that country had strictly enforced the law.

2 BURNT TO DEATH (1B)

TWO persons were burnt beyond recognition when the Audi saloon car, with registration number GT 9276 Z, on which they were travelling from Tema to Accra on Friday night skidded off the Accra-Tema Motorway, somersaulted and caught fire.
The car, which somersaulted across two rails on the motorway, landed on its roof, with the wheels up in the air, before bursting into flames.
When the Daily Graphic got to the scene, the car was mangled and completely burnt. Personnel from the Tema Regional Office of the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS) who went to the scene could only assist to retrieve the charred bodies of the victims into sacks to be sent to the 37 Military Hospital by the police.
According to the Public Relations Officer of the GNFS, Mr Prince Billy Anaglate, the station received a distress call informing it of the accident near the junction to the Accra Abattoir.
He said personnel from the service promptly responded to the call but after fighting the fire they could not trace the bodies.
Mr Anaglate said it was detected during the exercise that there had been two people in the car when the accident occurred, noting that while the driver was trapped in the car, the passenger fell off and got trapped under the car.
He said the fire personnel removed the doors of the car to enable them to remove the driver, after which the passenger was found under the car.
He said it took the firemen 30 minutes to hammer out the doors to remove the victims, adding that the charred bodies were put into sacks and handed over to the police, who deposited them at the 37 Military Hospital in Accra.
Police from Ashaiman were first to get to the scene to control traffic and ensure safety on the road.

COCAINE BUSTED IN TEMA...Woman, 3 others arrested (1b)

A 40-foot container with 61 parcels of a substance suspected to be cocaine was intercepted at the Tema Port on Tuesday.
The parcels, with a total weight of 71.45 kilogrammes, were said to have been concealed in a cargo which had been declared as chewing gum from Ecuador in South America.
The container, consigned to Augustina Abu of Abu Augustina Enterprise, was intercepted after it had gone through the scan at the port.
The Daily Graphic was told on arrival at the port that the container, together with the exhibits, had been taken to Accra for investigations to commence.
A source at the port said the container was among the cargo on board a vessel which had docked at the port on May 3, 2009.
It said based on intelligence reports, surveillance was mounted on it until Tuesday when it was checked to undergo scanning.
According to the source, the scan indicated that there were some irregular goods in the container and a team of security personnel which was following closely at the checkpoint called for a thorough search of the cargo.
It said two travelling bags which looked different from the chewing gum containers were found during the search. The substances were discovered during an examination.
The Tema Regional Police Commander, Deputy Commissioner of Police Mr John Kudalor, confirmed the incident but gave no further details.
Officials in Accra, however, told the Daily Graphic that the consignee, Augustina, reported to the police later in the day while three suspects, including two clearing agents and a driver, were assisting the Narcotics Control Board (NACOB) in investigations.
The suspects in custody have been identified as Kennedy Osei, Simon Fafa Bedy, both of Seko Clearing Agency in Tema, and Francis Abbey, the driver of the truck, with registration number GR 9241 A, which was to cart the container from the port.
The Executive Secretary of NACOB, Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Robert Ayalingo, told newsmen yesterday that the interception of the drugs followed weeks of surveillance and profiling by the Joint Port Control Unit under NACOB.
He explained that after the profiling, personnel of the unit, comprising personnel from NACOB, CEPS, BNI and the police, decided to tag it for thorough investigations.
ACP Ayalingo said the 61 parcels were concealed in two travelling bags and placed at the entrance of the container, which he explained was to facilitate “easy hand-picking” before any searches.
He said field tests on the samples proved positive for cocaine, leading to the arrest of the suspects.
He said the interception only confirmed positive measures that had been put in place to deal with the drug menace and prevent the drug from getting to the streets.
He, however, said the method of concealment had become so sophisticated that the government needed to provide more equipment, especially itemisers, at all the points of entry.
ACP Ayalingo justified the need for the equipment at all points of entry because the 588 parcels of cocaine that were intercepted at Nsawam last year came through the Paga border.
Commenting on the interception, a security expert, Dr Kwesi Aning, said the seizure “shows the dangerous nature of the challenge that we are facing, namely, that drug lords and leaders apply both business and warfare tactics to undermine, lull and eventually deliver the blow that destroys their opponents”.
He said the government’s consistent rhetoric about curbing the drug menace in Ghana and making this country an unattractive narcotics highway and transit point to Europe had seriously sent shock waves around the globe.
He explained that the response of the drug lords had been what was expected and based on their rational choices and calculations as to what government’s real intentions were.
“What is important is to understand the variables that go into the calculations of drug lords. And, in this case, their calculus is that African governments make noise and pull back from the brink. Secondly, that they will test the government to see its seriousness and, therefore, what happened in Tema is reflective of this 'testing of the waters' or government’s resolve. This is a victory for Ghana because this ship has been on the high seas for just about two weeks or less and, therefore, the rationale was to see if the defences could be breached,” he stated.
Dr Aning, however, advised the government to back its rhetoric with operational support for all the agencies mandated to respond to that threat.
“This is because while the government works and thinks in four and eight-year cycles, drug lords work and think in 20 and 30-year cycles, infiltrating their agents into important sectors. This will be a long, difficult, dangerous and uphill task for the government,” he added.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

ARMED ROBBERS HARASS RESIDENTS OF COMMUNITIES 11 AND 12 (PAGE 30)

RESIDENTS of Tema communities 11 and 12 are currently living in fear following successive robberies and attacks by a group of armed robbers in the area on the dawn of last Thursday.
The robbers left in their trail, the death of one person and made away with their booty, which they looted from seven houses within the two communities.
The deceased was identified as Clleta Massisgillino, an Italian and an employee of the Desimone Company. Mr Massisgillino was allegedly killed when he tried to interfere in the operations of the robbers.
For several hours, the other residents who were robbed of their properties were locked up in their rooms with their watchmen tied up.
In separate interviews with the Daily Graphic, some of the residents alleged that the robbers attacked three houses including a flat belonging to Desimone at Community 11 and forced the residents into one room and locked it up to enable them loot the houses without any resistance or hindrance.
Explaining the circumstances that led to the death of Massisgillino, the residents said at the time of the robbery, the deceased was in another room when he was attracted by the shouts of his neighbours.
According to them, as the armed robbers were making away with the booty, the deceased upon seeing them, attempted to take photographs of them.
Unfortunately, the armed robbers saw him, inflicted machete wounds on him before shooting him in the stomach, killing him instantly.
The robbers extended their operations to Community 11 and robbed four houses and a gas filling station.
The Tema Police have said that investigations were underway to identify the armed robbers.
According to the residents, they are afraid because the area links up with the motorway, which makes it easy for robbers to get access to their communities.
They called for intensive police patrols. They also appealed to the police high command to ensure that police telephones were active and working because on the night of the incident, they called the police but to no avail.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

CHIEFS URGED TO PLAY LEADERSHIP ROLES EFFECTIVELY (PAGE 18)

The Tema Metropolitan Chief Executive, Mr Robert Kempes Ofosu-Ware, has appealed to chiefs in the area to play their leadership roles effectively to engender the needed conducive atmosphere for development.
He said without a harmonious peaceful and conducive atmosphere and relationship between the leaders and the assembly, it would be difficult to view each other as partners in development who needed to come together to accomplish roles assigned to them.
Mr Ofosu-Ware made the call when he paid separate courtesy calls on the Tema Mantse, Nii Adjei Kraku, and the Kpone Mantse, Nii Tetteh Otu, at their palaces in Tema Manhean and Kpone respectively to announce to them his official assumption of office as the Tema Metropolitan Chief Executive.
He asked for their prayers, blessings and support to enable him to achieve what he had set out to do for the people in the metropolis.
Mr Ofosu Ware gave a promise to be a good listener and work hard to ensure that in 2012 the electorate renewed their mandate for the National Democratic Congress (NDC) to continue in office.
He also gave a promise to promote unity in the metropolis to ensure that everybody contributed his quota to the development of the metropolis.
At Tema Manhean, Nii Adjei Kraku urged the metropolitan chief executive to leave a good mark of hard work at the end of his tenure.
Congratulating Mr Ofosu Ware for assuming the high office of the metropolitan chief executive, Nii Kraku stressed the need for him to study structures in the metropolis to enable him to understand the needs of the people to attract their support.
“Tema has expanded leaving behind problems of sanitation among others,” he said.
An elder of the Kpone Traditional Council, Mr Nathaniel T. Nortey, said the assembly concept was supposed to be non-partisan hence the need to de-couple partisanship to give way for development.
He said it was easier to make promises but difficult to fulfil them, and, therefore, called on the metropolitan chief executive to make his ideas visible through action.
The Paramount Chief of the Kpone Traditional Area, Nii Tetteh Otu, said he was glad to receive the new chief executive because as he put it Kpone-Katamanso had been very faithful to the NDC.
He advised Mr Ofosu Ware to be patient with the staff of the assembly but ensure that the right thing was done in accordance with the laws of the assembly and guidelines of the Civil Service.
Nii Otu urged the assembly to set up a task force to strictly enforce building laws and that presently residents in the metropolis had abused the lay-outs and were building indiscriminately with some extending their structures onto the streets.
He expressed concern about the use of dug-out gravel pits on Kpone lands, which had over the years become dumping grounds for liquid waste by private waste management companies from Accra.
Nii Otu said the traditional council would in due course send a delegation to the assembly to discuss issues militating against development in the Kpone area and the metropolis as a whole.
The chief executive was accompanied by a team of officials from the assembly including the Metropolitan Co-ordinating Director, Mr Kwaku Akpotosu, and the Engineer, Mr Victor Mensah.

TOR RESUMES OPERATIONS (PAGE 3)

THE Tema Oil Refinery (TOR) which was shut down last January for maintenance works will resume regular supply of petroleum products to the consuming market from Monday, June 22.
The plant is 92 per cent through with the maintenance works, with the remaining eight per cent of work to be done representing fine-tuning the parameters of the equipment to ensure a smooth start up.
Speaking to the Daily Graphic, the Public Affairs Manager of TOR, Mrs Aba Lokko, confirmed the completion of work and gave the assurance of a regular supply from Monday.
She said the plant had to be shut down completely in mid January to enable the Residual Fluid Catalytic Cracker (RFCC ) to undergo major routine maintenance works.
Mrs Lokko explained that the RFCC ran a complex business process and, therefore, needed to undergo utility tests several times to ensure that it synchronised after fine-tuning.
She said the Crude Distillation Unit (CDU) had residue input for the RFCC and, therefore, the plant had no problem supplying the market.
Mrs Lokko gave the assurance that there would not be any shortage of fuel because finished products brought in by private oil companies were still being supplied.
She said TOR would supply petrol, gas oil, liquefied petroleum gas and all the other by-products.
When motorists got wind of the closure of the refinery early this month, there was a rush for petroleum products, which created a shortage on the market.
This was followed by rumours about increases in the price of petroleum products, adding to the woes of motorists.
However, with the deregulation, private oil companies lifted finished products to fill the yawning gap and sought the assistance of TOR in the storage and supply of the products.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

UNCTAD TRAINS 23 IN PORT MANAGEMENT (PAGE 55)

THE Training and Capacity Development section of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) has opened a five-day training programme for 23 personnel engaged in port management to begin a two-year training cycle.
Ghana is the first English-speaking West African country to benefit from module one of the programme designed by the UNCTAD in collaboration with the Dublin Port Company to ensure efficiency and improvement in port operations.
The participants were drawn from Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority (GPHA), Shippers Council, Regional Maritime University, Customs, Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS), Advanced Stevedores and MoL Ghana Ltd.
The programme is to improve on the capacity of the participants, as well as make them become trainers of trainers in a series of training courses that will be run on eight modular series in two years.
At the inaugural launch of the programme, the Project Officer in charge of Train for Trade Programme of UNCTAD, Mr Mark Assaf, said the main objective of the programme was to promote the integration of developing countries into the world economy, to help shape the current policy debates.
Mr Assaf said the policy focused on ensuring that domestic and international actions were mutually supportive in bringing about sustainable development to make progress towards the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals.
He said UNCTAD had provided continuous support to member states in the field of transport and port activities through research, consensus building and technical assistance.
Mr Assaf noted that specific programmes at UNCTAD had dedicated resources and efforts to sustain activities in the field of trade facilitation, transport and logistics, customs modernisation policy and legislation.
He said port communities around the world had a vital role to play in attracting trade flows and contributing to the development of their national economies.
Mr Assaf urged port communities to foster economic development by providing efficient and competitive services to facilitate trade.
The acting Director-General of the GPHA, Mr Nestor Galley, said the authority in conjunction with UNCTAD, would continue to commit resources to the development of human resources and skills to achieve its vision of becoming the most preferred port in the West African sub-region.
The Local UNCTAD Co-ordinator, Mr Alphonse Wordi, and three others made up of Mr Richard Acquah, Mr Komieteh Botchway and Ms Perpetual Osei Bonsu, were the first to attend the first training of trainers workshop in Dublin with the support of Irish Aid under UNCTAD-Dublin Port Company co-operation.
They would form the core human resource base for the local training programme to impart what they learnt in Dublin to their colleagues in Ghana.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

LIONS BUILD EYE CLINIC FOR TEMA GENERAL HOSPITAL (SPREAD)

THE Minister of Health, Dr George Sipa-Adjah Yankey, has inaugurated an eye care centre worth GH¢ 600,000 at the Tema General Hospital to serve the metropolis and its environs.
The facility, which has the capacity to cater for about 2,000 patients weekly, was built by the Tema Lions Club with contributions from some institutions and private individuals.
The centre has features, including two waiting areas, consulting rooms, a screening room, operating theatre, optometry, treatment room and dark room.
Dr Yankey, in commending the club for supporting the hospital, announced that the Ministry of Health was in the process of turning the Tema General Hospital into a regional hospital and would, therefore, ensure that it received the necessary support in terms of equipment, human resource and funding for its operation.
He said the ministry would send a team of experts to undertake survey and assessment of the hospital regarding its upgrading to a regional status.
The Health Minister gave the assurance that it was the Government’s intention to make health care accessible to all Ghanaians in order to achieve results in its fight against infant and maternal mortality.
Dr Yankey disclosed that his recent visit to the Tema General Hospital had exposed some maternal problems, as a result, the ministry had sought GH¢4 million to put up a new maternity block for Tema and Maamobi, both in Accra, to ease congestion in the wards.
On the need to have facilities for eye treatment, he said conservative statistics showed that eye problems constituted a significant percentage of cases seen in hospitals around the country, indicating that it fell within the top 10 causes of patients attendance, accounting for over two per cent of cases.
Dr Yankey expressed concern that some people had suffered for several years, simply because there were not sufficient structures to cater for them when they fell sick.
However, he said the centre would help the ministry to meet some of its challenges, especially in the Tema area, where there was a large population with industries that had the potential for creating problems as a result of exposure and failure to adopt protective measures.
Dr Yankey disclosed that it was the hope of the ministry to turn the centre into one that would be capable of providing diagnosis and treatment and effective operative surgical services to develop and deliver comprehensive range of established treatment options in eye care.
The minister proposed the establishment of a public health outfit to help work towards promoting preventive programmes within industries and the communities in Tema and its environs.
He, therefore, called on those who would be working at the centre to demonstrate a high sense of professionalism and dedication towards patients.
The Superintendent of the Tema General Hospital, Dr Mrs Charity Sarpong, who was grateful to the Lions Club, said workers at the hospital had to work in a very deplorable state because the structures were weak with outmoded equipment.
Dr Mrs Sarpong appealed for support from organisations and public institutions in the metropolis to go to their aid as was done by the Lions Club .
The President of the Tema Lions Club, Mr Clement Torsutse, stated that it was the objective of the club to raise funds for the construction of an ultra-modern eye care centre for the people of Tema and beyond.
He expressed the gratitude of members of the club to all those who made various donations to enable the club to undertake construction of the project.

Friday, June 12, 2009

FIRE DESTROYS PROPERTY AT SITE ONE (BACK PAGE)

about 20 structures were razed to the ground when fire swept through Site One of Community One in Tema last Wednesday, rendering about 50 families homeless.
The site, which is one of the targeted areas by the Tema Development Corporation (TDC) for redevelopment has its wooden houses clustered without space for easy access in times of disaster .
According to the Regional Public Relations Officer of the Tema Region of the Ghana Fire Service, Mr Prince Billy Anaglate, at about 8.48 p.m., the fire office received a call announcing a fire outbreak in the community.
He said when firemen got to the scene, the whole area had been engulfed by fire which was spreading fast.
Mr Anaglate said because of the intensity of the fire, the Trade Fair fire station was called to offer support.
He said it took the firemen 40 minutes to bring the situation under control.
Mr Anaglate said items burnt included electrical appliances, personal belongings, food vending structures, utensils and other wares meant for sale.
Some of the residents who lost their wares told the Daily Graphic that for sometime now they had been experiencing electrical shocks from their structures anytime it rained.
A baker, Auntie Attah, said once a young boy who was sent to buy bread from her had an electrical shock when he touched part of her structure.
She said they released him by hitting his hand with a piece of wood, after which the boy was sent to hospital.
Another resident, Mr James Afful, who runs a chop bar, said most of the houses had loose electrical wiring on the roof tops, which made the residents vulnerable to electric shocks.
Meanwhile, the Metropolitan Chief Executive for Tema, Mr Kempes Ofosu-Ware, has visited the scene to console the victims.
He said the site was a temporary area which had become a permanent settlement and, therefore, promised to meet with the management of the TDC over its plans for the area.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

TEMA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE APPEALS TO GOVT (PAGE 29)

Members of the Chamber of Commerce in Tema have appealed to the government to consider making the investment climate favourable for local business people to grow business in the country.
They claimed that interest rates had shot high and this, according to them, had put fears in them as far as financial support from the financial institutions were concerned .
These concerns were expressed at a forum organised by the Tema Chamber of Commerce in Tema to educate members on how to access funds for their businesses and practise good ethics .
The forum, which was attended by small scale business people and producers discussed the frustrations that some local investors had to go through to gain support financially for their businesses.
The Regional Executive Chairman of the Chamber, Mrs Victoria Ekua Hajar, urged them to network to enable them, share ideas and information and also learn from each other.
She was optimistic that local industries would thrive, if the people involved were able to adopt bold initiatives without looking back at previous frustrations and set-backs.
Mrs Hajar said many business people gave up their local production activities and preferred to travel out to wait for weeks for their goods specifications to be produced for them .
She noted that this had contributed to the dumping of under-quality goods into the country.
Mrs Hajar disclosed that the Chamber was outlining some measures to ensure that members acquired requisite knowledge and support through advocacy programmes to strengthen their production base.
She urged them to build up their confidence in doing business to help achieve their goals in the business sector and generally the economy.
Mrs Hajar advised them against corruption and called on them to be vehicles of change to encourage other people to set up their own businesses instead of going after goverment jobs, which do not exist.
She called for good managerial practices and book-keeping to qualify for funding from the banks .
Mrs Hajar said the Chamber would continue to invite resource persons from banks and investment institutions which had SME centres to impart knowledge to them in their field of operation .

AXLE LOAD CONTROL UNIT MOVES INTO ACTION (PAGE 25)

THE Tema Motorway Axle Control Unit has carried out a load-shedding exercise to reduce cargo on seven impounded transit trucks at the Tema Motorway Axle Control Unit to meet the Ghana Highway Authority's permissible weight.
This follows a court order after the drivers had been made to pay various fines totalling GH¢ 21,000 for carrying load above the stipulated weight .
The affected drivers , Borra Abdaramane , Abdul Fatao, Traore Lassina, Hamidu Dauda, Kassim Sanuko, Simbibe Zaoubahunu and Drissa Ballo were conveying cargo to Burkina Faso, Mali and the northern part of the country.
Some members of the Joint Association of Transport Unions who were at the Unit to give support to their members were against the load-shedding exercise.
They explained that the unit lacked storage facilities where the excess load could be kept safely from the vagaries of the weather.
This led to long arguments between personnel of the unit and the drivers, who argued that the cargo did not belong to one person, so the load-shedding could affect the identity and classification of the various goods.
The drivers appealed to the Chief Executive Officer of the Axle Load Unit, Mr Albert Owusu-Ansah, to grant them pardon to go with their load.
They also claimed that the affected drivers would incur extra cost if the goods were offloaded because they would have to look for transport to convey the off-loaded goods to their destinations.
Mr Owusu-Ansah explained to the drivers and their executive that he had no power to set them free, adding that “my work ends at ensuring that the over-weight truck did not use the road to shorten its life span”.
He was convinced that if the trucks were weighed at the loading points, the drivers would be saved the problems they were facing .
Mr Owusu-Ansah noted that the process of load-shedding was time consuming because no one could break the seals on the cargo except the Customs, Excise and Preventive Service (CEPS), the sole body which has the authority to break the seal.
He appealed to the Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority and production industries to ensure that all trucks leaving the port and their premises carried the right weight of load to avoid interceptions.
Meanwhile, the unit has impounded nine other transit trucks which are currently being processed to be put before court to enable the unit to shed off the excess load.