TYDE GHANA

TYDE GHANA

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TYDE GHANA is the largest political organization in Ghana committed to the principles of Social Democracy.

TYDE GHANA is an organization of young professionals who believe in Social Democratic principles and are grooming young people for strong leadership in Ghana and elsewhere in Africa and the world. The network includes young people in banking, trade, journalism, real estate, medicine, science, law, economic development, engineering, public service, entrepreneurship, ICT, academia, sports and CSO.

Photos 01/10/2013

NPP’s DECISION TO IMPOSE INCUMBENT MPs ON ELECTORATES IS UNDEMOCRATIC

TYDE GHANA observes with regret the communication on a manipulative agenda by a few stalwarts within the opposition New Patriotic Party to disenfranchise their grass-root electoral base. This formal communication reveals that NPP is considering a proposal will allow all of its current Members of Parliament to go uncontested in the party’s primaries ahead of the 2016 general elections.

This development smacks of backwardness which is contrary to the continuous calls for efforts to deepen democracy in Ghana and Africa in general. It is a clear affront on the NPP’s internal democracy and it is unfortunate to say the least. Political parties must recognize that Ghana’s strive to consolidate its democracy can only thrive when the parties themselves enhance their internal democracy through structures that promote inclusiveness and transparency of all who matter.

TYDE GHANA is particularly concerned about the impact this agenda will have on young people within the NPP who are nurturing political ambitions to succeed these ageing stalwarts.

Whereas some NPP MPs may be underperformers and that their constituency electorates may be hoping to abandon them for some other suitable candidates, the political ambitions of some prospective candidates, particularly young people, will be eventually dashed by this well-orchestrated agenda to disenfranchise both electorates and MP hopefuls.

A people who proffer to be liberal or property-owning democrats should not ply this wobbling path of undemocratic compartments. This motive has the propensity to create a bad precedence which will ultimately destroy the democratic structures within family of NPP, and also have far-reaching implications for Ghana’s multi-party democracy.

TYDE GHANA urges the leaders of the New Patriotic Party to forthwith jettison this ill-conceived idea of mass imposition of parliamentary candidates on the electorates in order to justifiably maintain the democratic dispensation within the party and country at large.

Photos 01/10/2013

Kofi Adda has been struggling to respond to former President Kufour's question on how he (Kofi Adda) was sacked from his former ministerial position in the Energy Minister. Hon Kennedy Agyepong has alleged Kofi Adda was booted out of office for his refusal to support the then NPP flagbearer contender Alan Kyeremanteng. Out of frustration, Mr. Adda has redirected his anger on President John Dramani Mahama.

Photos 01/10/2013

AMERICAN STUDENTS LAUDS GHANA GOVERNMENT FOR FEMALE APPOINTEES

Faculty and students of the Kennesaw State University on Monday recognised President Mahama for his belief in the capability of women and putting many in decision-making positions in his government.

Answering questions after a lecture that discussed Ghana’s growing international stature as a democratic and developing country at the Kennesaw State University in the State of Georgia, USA, President Mahama told the audience that he has appointed many women in his government because he believes that they “are the backbone of our society.”

President Mahama’s address marked what has been a yearlong study programme on Ghana by the University and dubbed ‘Year of Ghana’. Responding to a question about the role of women in Ghana’s future, Mr. Mahama said women have a role in Ghana today; noting that it explains why “ women of Ghana are playing a very prominent role in what is happening in our country.”

To a thunderous applause, which also dominated discussions after the lecture, President Mahama said “in our country women hold some of the most prominent positions in my government- our foreign minister is a woman, our Attorney General and Minister for Justice is a woman, the Minister for Transport is a woman, the minister for education is a woman, the minister for health is a woman, the minister for tourism is a women, the Chief Justice is a woman, the Director of Prisons is a woman, the Controller & Accountant General, who handles all government payments is a woman… there are so many of them.”

He also answered questions about youth development and employment programmes, what accounts for Ghana’s stability and soaring democratic credentials, reform of the security country and how his life and story can influence young people.

President Mahama will on Tuesday hold a number of business and investment networking sessions, grant an interview to CNN and hold a meeting with the Ghanaian Community in Georgia.

Photos 01/10/2013

KOFI AWOONOR : A MACABRE FINALE by Okey Ndibe

On the night of Saturday, September 21, 2013, I found myself talking admiringly about Kofi Nyidevu Awoonor, the Ghanaian poet, novelist, literary scholar, diplomat and teacher extraordinaire. The venue was Brooklyn, New York. My wife and I were there because, the next day, I was scheduled to speak at the Brooklyn Book Festival to promote my forthcoming novel, Foreign Gods, Inc. Sheri and I had spent part of the evening in Manhattan. We had looked in at three galleries, done a bit of shopping, and eaten at two restaurants, the last a Senegalese eatery on 29th Street, a pan-African space where Africans from different countries gather at all hours, make jolly, and speak a harvest of tongues.

It was close to 10 p.m. when we finally arrived at the Brooklyn apartment of our hosts, Sean Gallagher, a gifted painter who’s my wife’s academic colleague, and his wife Andrea Petersen, a journalist at the Wall Street Journal. Andrea had retired for the night, but Sean graciously offered us cheese and wine to wind down the day.

As we nibbled and drank, we talked about a variety of subjects. I don’t recall now what provoked it, but at some point I began to talk about Awoonor. I told Sean that, among the reasons I admired the man, was that he returned to Ghana after a distinguished career as a diplomat – and returned to the classroom to teach at the University of Ghana in Legon. Awoonor had served as his country’s ambassador to Cuba, Brazil, and the United Nations. “It’d be rare, if not impossible,” I told Sean, a keen follower of my column, to find a Nigerian who would consent to return to the classroom after holding down several high-profile diplomatic posts.

Unbeknownst to me, Awoonor had died earlier that Saturday. He’d been shot dead in Kenya by a gang of al Shabab terrorists who had stormed the high-scale Westgate Mall in Nairobi, shocking the world with their macabre, gleeful homicidal spree. The group killed with horrifying gusto, leaving – in the wake of their gruesome attacks – the corpses of children, women, and the elderly. Their one stricture was sectarian: a fringe Islamist group, they set out to spare Muslims.

Sunday morning, Sheri and I went to Mass at a church whose congregants were mostly Haitian immigrants. Once outside, Sheri was buying a bouquet of roses for our hosts when I switched my mobile phone back on. There was a lone text message. I read it , and let out a sharp cry, “No!” Startled, Sheri ran to me to find out what it was about. Unable to speak, I offered her the phone to read for herself. The words, from a friend, were terse, to the point: “Your friend Prof. Kofi Awoonor was killed in Kenya.”

The bearer of the message is a US-based Nigerian friend whose work takes him to Ghana from time to time. In the last three years, I always asked him to look in on Awoonor during his stay in Accra. He’d return and remark on the man’s stunning common touch and uncommon generosity.

Like many of my generation, I have had the rare luck of getting to know closely some of the writers and intellectuals whose works shaped my literary worldview. As a secondary school student enchanted by the works of African writers, I could never have imagined a scenario where I would physically meet – much less become close to – such giants as Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Wole Soyinka, Ama Ata Aidoo, Nuruddin Farah, and – among those who have now danced and joined the ancestors – Chinua Achebe, Mokwugo Okoye, Lewis Nkosi, Kofi Awoonor.

Of Awoonor I have imperishable memories. I first met him in person in 1990 when he was Ghana’s permanent representative and ambassador at the UN. By then, I was a big fan of his poetry. I had also read and reread his intriguing, strangely confected novel,This Earth, My Brother...I was enthralled by the novel, having encountered nothing quite like it in African literature. I was a bit surprised to find him ambivalent about the work. On October 21, 1990, he autographed a copy of the book for me. He wrote in the book, “With the best of fraternal wishes – though the book is ‘old’ & the vision is slightly blurred.” He took greater pride in his second (and much less known) novel, Comes the Voyager at Last: A Tale of Return to Africa. He gave me a signed copy of the book on January 29, 1992. He marked it, “For Okey, in anticipation of his first child, and in the firm belief that he will keep firmly on the road – in the cause of our people.”

On first meeting him, I was struck by his effervescent intellect, the ease with which he navigated between the cultural matrices of his Ewe people and the literary traditions of different parts of the world. He was very fond of his aged mother, often telling me how, in conversations with her, she would be solicitous of his well being, as if he were still a teenager. “She’d sometimes scold me for not eating well. Or for keeping late nights,” Awoonor once shared.

Awoonor’s gifts to me were not only intellectual. In 1993, Japan hosted an international conference on Africa’s economic development. Most of Africa’s 50-odd countries sent delegates, with such heads of state as Jerry Rawlings of Ghana, Blaise Compaore of Burkina Faso, Nicephore Soglo of Benin Republic, and Yoweri Museveni of Uganda physically present. One day, Awoonor telephoned and asked if I wanted to go. I did, I responded, but the magazine I was editing at the time couldn’t afford the cost. “Let me see what I can do,” he said. What he did was persuade the Japanese ambassador to the UN, with whom he had forged a friendship, to arrange my visit. I traveled to Japan for two weeks as a guest of the Japanese government. I was able to cover the conference, and also to spend time in three cities – Tokyo, Kyoto, and Nara.

Wherever I met Awoonor – in New York, St. Louis, Accra, Port Harcourt, or Lagos – he came with that ready, resonant laughter that was something of a signature, those eyes that sparkled with life and seemed to peer right into your hidden thoughts, that bracing intelligence, and that zest for life. Rooted in the specificity of Ewe cultural mores, he was broad and complex enough to be an incurable pan-Africanist, unapologetic in his admiration for Kwame Nkrumah. He was a polyglot and a true renaissance man, an avid learner of languages and student of cultures. His book, The Breast of the Earth, remains an attuned and insightful guide into African culture and literature. Out of his many travels and diplomats forays was spun a book titled The Latin American and Caribbean Notebook, a poetic tour de force filled with alluring observations, nostalgic memories, and sharp wit. He was versed in several languages, including Spanish and Portuguese as well as several Ghanaian languages. His English was urbane, his diction sophisticated, and he’d cultivated a mellifluent delivery that could keep any audience spellbound.

As he grew older – he was killed at 78 – he clung to a stubborn youthful joy, had a rich, resonant laugh, and a sense of humor that was altogether becoming and infectious. He was amazingly generous, a man who sought to nurture younger writers – and who exuded great energy whenever he had young aspirant writers as an audience. In 2009, he brought his gifts – his gregariousness, eloquence, and passion for literature – to Port Harcourt where he and Soyinka headlined the inaugural edition of the now estimable Garden City Literary Festival. Many budding writers who took his master class spoke excitedly about his style, the way he’d challenged them, and his depth of knowledge.

Each evening, I looked forward to unwinding with him and Soyinka in the capacious lounge of the hotel. I’d listen to their repartee, two friends and contemporaries who had gone to many cultural battles together, who’d shared the enchantments and adventures of narrating a continent. Awoonor and I flew to Lagos on the same flight. Ifeoma Fafunwa, my brother-in-law’s wife, treated us to a smorgasbord of delicious Nigerian meals and an excellent red wine. The next morning, a friend of mine took us to Terra Kulture for a delectable brunch.

“Okey, I will see you in Accra,” Awoonor said to me as he boarded a cab to Murtala Muhammed Airport for his trip back to Ghana. Alas, that visit will never take place. Still, it is Awoonor, not his murderers, who will have the last word. For the future belongs to humanists like Kofi Awoonor, not depraved men who kill and maim in the name of God. Awoonor’s vision and intelligence and creative fecundity will continually to light our paths, renew our world and reinforce our humanity. His voice will rise, defiant, beyond the machinations of desiccated minds who delude themselves that a point is made through callous mass murder.

Please follow me on twitter @ okeyndibe

Photos 01/10/2013
Photos 01/10/2013

President Mahama's lecture at the Kennesaw State University in the state of Georgia, USA.

Photos 30/09/2013

The Democratic-led Senate voted 54-46 against the bill, which would fund the government only if President Obama's healthcare law were delayed a year.

If no agreement is reached by midnight (04:00 GMT), the government will close all non-essential federal services.

The shutdown would be the first in the US in 17 years.

More than 700,000 federal government workers could be sent home on unpaid leave, with no guarantee of back pay once the deadlock is over.

One of the key points of contention in the political stalemate has been President Barack Obama's healthcare law, popularly known as Obamacare.

Photos 29/09/2013

CRITICAL APPRECIATION OF PRESIDENT MAHAMA’S SPEECH AT THE 68TH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY

In subjecting this recent address to proper scrutiny and analysis for the general good of the Ghanaian populace, particularly young people, TYDE GHANA has observed that President Mahama laid emphasis on socioeconomic and democratic dispensation in Africa, diplomacy, counter-terrorism strategies, paradigm shift to north-south engagement and youth unemployment. Below are few remarks:

This is the first time an African leader has been bold to draw the UNGA’s attention to the specificity of democracy. President Mahama stressed that ‘‘Democracy is not a one-fits-all-size venture. Nor is it a one-time event. It’s a system that takes decades to build ...’’ It gives credence to a school of thought that the West’s idea of democracy might not be well suited for Africa, owing to the continent’s unique culture, traditions and history. TYDE, however, believes that President Mahama could have added a word of caution to the West to stop meddling in the affairs of African elections.

President Mahama was eloquent in his calls for partnership rather than sympathy. This will cement a win-win scenario in all economic agreements. However, TYDE thinks the G8’s Lough Erne Declaration which seeks to champion fair taxes, increased transparency and open trade as vital drivers of private enterprise growth, poverty reduction, job creation and prosperity for people around the world is a vapour. There are still unresolved issues surrounding even the Economic Partnership Agreement for Africa. The West has been paying lip-service to Africa for long.

It appears that listeners in Ghana have misconstrued the announcement of the Youth Jobs and Enterprise Development Fund as a replacement for GYEEDA. The President’s recognition of the global phenomenon of youth unemployment and Ghana’s resolve-style to mitigate it was contained in his address to the UNGA. It could be recalled that this Fund was a 2012 campaign promise to provide young people with entrepreneurial skills and access to the funds needed to establish businesses or expand existing ones, thereby creating new employment opportunities. Africa has a fast growing population, more than 50 percent of which is below the age of 35.

Even though he spoke with a heavy heart, the killing of Prof Kofi Awoonor being recent, he heavily denounced the outrageous degeneracy of innocent lives through terrorist attacks everywhere on the globe. He was emphatic that the global quest for counter-terrorism strategies must be coherent, consistent and concentrated.

TYDE GHANA has examined the various addresses by heads of states and other proceedings of the 68th General Assembly. We believe that President Mahama’s address was one of the most excellent and insightful, and that the thrust of his speech will become a mainstay for policy observers across the globe.

Photos 29/09/2013

NAA OKAILEY MAKES GHANA PROUD. She placed 3rd at the MISS WORLD 2013 CONTEST, being the FIRST GHANAIAN EVER. Young women in Ghana salute Naa Okailey.

Photos 28/09/2013

The new Conjugal Coat of Arms for Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge of the UK

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