Friday, February 23, 2018

APPLICATIONS OPEN: BBC WORLD NEWS KOMLA DUMOR AWARDS 2018

Journalists from across the African continent are invited to apply for the award, which aims to uncover and promote fresh talent from Africa.
The winner will spend three months at the BBC headquarters in London, gaining skills and experience.
Applications close on 23 March 2018 at 23:59 GMT.
The award was established to honour Komla Dumor, an exceptional Ghanaian broadcaster and presenter for BBC World News, whose sudden demise happened in 2014.
This year's award is being launched from Accra, Ghana.
The award winner must be an outstanding individual living and working in Africa, who combines strong journalism skills, on-air flair, and an exceptional talent in telling African stories with the ambition and potential to become a star of the future.
As well as spending time with the BBC in London, the winner will also get to travel to Africa to report a story - and have that story shared across the continent and the world.
Previous award winners alongside Jamie Angus, director of the BBC World Service Group will be present at the 2018 award launch in Accra.
To check your eligibility for the award and to apply, click here .
Source: BBC.com


Friday, February 16, 2018

Holding On to the Party that Let Her Go, Sirleaf Sues Boakai



Lawyers representing former President and standard bearer emeritus of the Unity Party (UP) Ellen Johnson Sirleaf have filed a lawsuit against former vice president and standard bearer of the party Joseph N. Boakai, alleging her expulsion orchestrated by Boakai was in violation of the UP’s Constitution and the 1986 Constitution of Liberia.
The suit before the Board of Commissioners (BOC) of the National Elections Commission (NEC) named other party’s officials also expelled and seeking legal redress were  Senator Commany B. Wesseh of River Gee County and member of the party’s executive committee, Medina A, Wesseh, ex-executive members and chairpersons on publicity committee and Patrick Worzie, acting secretary general.
The matter is expected to be heard on Tuesday, February 20, at 2pm, in the Dispute Hearing Room of the commission.
Madam Sirleaf and other party executive were expelled on January 18 of this year for allegedly violated the party’s constitution as the former president was seen campaigning with now President George Weah, who was then running under the Coalition for Democratic Change (CDC( during the 2017 Presidential and Legislative elections.
“The behavior of the expelled persons… constitutes sabotage and undermined the existence of the party,” said the statement announcing the decision, which was taken by the party’s executive committee.
The lawsuit filed by the International Law Group (LLG) alleges among others the meeting which led to the expulsion of the former president and other executive members of the party was secretly held at the residence of Boakai with 31 executive members in attendance, but only 17  voted to effect said prejudicial and illegal action.
They argued that the party’s constitution provides that the National Executive Committee shall require at least 42 votes in favor to acquire the two-thirds majority of the 65 members at the time of the decision, unfortunately only a majority of 32 were at the residence of Boakai that took the expulsion action.
“The said vote cast was far less than the two-thirds majority called for by the party’s constitution to constitute a quorum to effect any major decision as enshrined in the by-laws and constitution, of which Boakai must be held liable for the illegal expulsion and gross violation of the those legal instruments of the party,” the suit filed by LLG chief of litigation, Cllr. Jonathan Massaquoi alleges.
But when contacted for comment, Unity Party spokesperson, Mo Ali denied having any knowledge about the suit filed by former President Sirleaf. He however clarified that it was the Party acting through its Executive Committee that expelled former President Sirleaf and others.
It can be recalled that on Thursday, January 14, a group of individuals described as thugs converged on the UP Congo Town headquarters to stage a protest against the expulsion of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and few other party members. The protesting group had come to read a statement debunking the expulsions but met stiff resistance from security officers and other partisans on ground according to a report carried in the January 19th edition of the Daily Observer newspaper.
Further, according to the story, protesters who besieged the party headquarters were reportedly imported from various slums communities in and around Monrovia. They were described by party officials as thugs who have no stake in the party but had come to make the vicinity chaotic and bring the institution into public disrepute.
They were said to have been led by expelled UP Acting Secretary General, Patrick Worzie and several confidantes of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who was booted out of the Party earlier, when the protesters stormed party headquarters demanding use of the facilities to hold their press conference.
Some of those reported to have been involved in the fracas at the UP headquarters were the National Chair-lady of UP Women’s Wing, Maceatoh Wreh, former Nimba County Representative, Worlea Saywah Dunah, Assistant Minister at Transport Ministry, Kansualism Kansuah, Deputy Information Minister, Rixch Barsigiah, and several others.
The report further observed that scuffles erupted when security officers and few UP partisans who were on the ground initially resisted the entry of the group whose members were conveyed by four buses to the grounds of the headquarters.
Reacting to the expulsion at the time, the then Presidential Press Secretary Jerolimek Piah declared the party’s rules were clear on the requirement for expulsion, noting that such requirements had not been fully exhausted.
He said President Sirleaf had heard of the action against her by the party, but was focused on the conclusion of her transition. According to him the pronounced action by the UP did not deserve or require a reaction adding, “when she leaves the presidency, the party matter will be handled the party way”.
But the matter had since gone cold apparently leaving many with the impression that the issue had been laid to rest. However with this latest lawsuit seeking to reverse her expulsion, it appears that former President Sirleaf and her expelled allies have not since let go and are seemingly prepared to have the matter run its gamut including up to the Supreme Court if needs be.
It remains to be seen, however, whether this latest move on the part of former President Sirleaf will prove sufficient to compel a reversal of her misfortunes now that she is no longer president and lacks the coercive power of the office of an imperial Presidency.

Source

Ghana's Oil and Gas Index 2017 (4th Quarter)




Key findings from the monitoring report indicate revenue management and local content  as topical issues  with revenue management issues dominating coverage of Ghana’s oil and gas sector.
Also, highlighted in the media monitoring report was the fact that Ghana recorded incidents of untimely disbursements of oil funds to projects. In addition to this, some projects that were funded by revenues from the oil and gas sector were poorly executed. Some did not actually exist and those that existed were abandoned.

 Investigations carried out by some news sources into the use of some GH¢83million from Ghana’s petroleum revenues by the Scholarship Secretariat in 2016 revealed that the oil funds were misused. Questions such as how to ensure value for money for oil-funded projects dominated. On the local content front, citizens became particular on the quantum of locally produced materials, personnel, financing, goods and services rendered in the petroleum industry value chain accrued to Ghanaians.
Despite the existence of Ghana’s Petroleum Revenue Management Act, 2011 (Act 815) that lays down the key parameters for collection, disbursement and management of Ghana’s oil and gas revenues, revenue management issues dominated the sector over the period of the study.

Key policy recommendations proffered to duty bearers from the findings include:
Ensuring value for money of oil funded projects by ensuring timely funds disbursements, corruption free contract award processes and quality supervision by oversight institutions.
Enhance skills, capacity of individuals and SMEs to ensure significant local participation in the oil and gas sector.
Increase nation’s take of oil wealth through better future negotiations and where possible, renegotiate existing contracts that do not benefit the country.
Promote backwards and forward linkages of oil and gas production with other sectors of the Ghanaian economy to enhance high developmental impact of this resource.

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Support the SDGs! Take the #HoryouLightChallenge


This world is the one thing we all have in common! By working together, we can achieve great good things for the future of humanity. Change for social good, however, is an everyday endeavor and it starts with you and us to inspire others around us.
To put this idea into practice, Horyou has decided to set up the #HoryouLightChallenge for all changemakers, in support of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals!
As a proponent of the SDGs, our Horyou community believes in the power of positivity and is constantly spreading positive actions and ideas worldwide; and by ensuring international cooperation and inclu- sion, it directly promotes SDG#17.
Be a part of this global partnership and take our #HoryouLightChallenge. All you have to do is choose one SDG, support it with a positive action (see examples below), and share it on Horyou.
Together, we can show the world that every expression of positivity, no matter how big or small, has a great positive impact. Each one of us, in our own way, can be a light within our own community and be- yond. Share your light with the ones around you and the SDGs will be met.
To take the challenge and have a chance to win an all inclusive trip to Singapore and participate in SIGEF18 (or one of our many other prizes*), we invite you to use your creativity and share your social good actions with Horyou.

#HoryouLightChallenge Instructions

  • Create an account on www.horyou.com
  • Create your Horyou Light Challenge post (photo, video or text) on the platform with the one SDG that you have selected among the 17 SDG examples. You can also create your own positive challenge and post it!
  • Share your Horyou post via Twitter, Facebook or any other Social Media with the #HoryouLightChallenge hashtag, along with the hashtag of the SDG that you have supported (ex: #SDG7)
  • Invite your friends to light (watch how lights work here) your post on Horyou
  • Try to get the largest number of lights and win a trip to SIGEF18 Singapore!

17 SDGs challenge examples

Make a contribution to a charity of your choice or directly to a person in need
Prepare your favorite dish for someone who can’t afford to have it
Share a healthy food recipe
Educate / share your educational sources on a topic you’re passionate about
Share an inspiring speech from someone defending gender equality
Share the ways in which you can reduce water waste in your community
Tell us about your favorite source of renewable energy and how it supports sustainable development
Share with us how your job or dream job contributes to sustainable economic growth
Tell us which innovative idea you would invest in
Tell us about the most inspiring action you’ve done to help others
Use your bike or public transport to go to work
Share tips on package free/ second hand/ fair trade and ethic shopping
Sort out your waste for recycling
Pick up the trash on your favorite beach/ lake/ river
Plant a tree
Tell us about your favorite figure promoting peace and justice and post one of his/her inspiring quotes
Share your challenge on the Horyou platform and light your favorite posts
Are you up to the challenge? Go ahead, pick your SDG, engage your friends and be a special guest on the Social Innovation and Global Ethics Forum in Singapore.

Read more about it here.

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Applications Now Open for the Youth Solidarity Fund


The United Nations Alliance of Civilizations (UNAOC) is pleased to invite youth-led organizations to apply for the Youth Solidarity Fund (YSF). The call is open to organizations from select countries whose work seeks to foster peaceful and inclusive societies through improved understanding and collaboration across cultures, faiths and beliefs.
Through a competitive evaluation process, YSF will award seed funding (up to USD 25,000) for the implementation of selected projects that demonstrate innovative approaches to intercultural or interfaith dialogue and advance the mission of UNAOC. YSF only supports projects that are entirely developed and managed by youth for the benefit of youth.
Established in 2008, the Fund responded to calls for action made by young civil society leaders around the world on the importance of establishing funding mechanisms for youth-led organizations. Since its creation, YSF has funded 57 youth-led organizations in 34 countries.
Today, the Fund continues to support youth-led civil society organizations, with a particular focus on the role of young people in promoting peace and in preventing violent extremism. YSF contributes to advancing the implementation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 2250 on Youth, Peace and Security, which establishes the policy framework to support and engage young people as part of inclusive, participatory approaches to building peaceful and inclusive societies.
Details on the programme, application guidelines, eligibility and selection criteria are available here. Applications close on 16 February 2018, at 5:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Time (New York).
The Youth Solidarity Fund 2018 edition is supported by the Government of Finland

Monday, February 12, 2018

Net Neutrality: Does it matter?



The Internet revolution is making the world a better place. Since its birth in the 1950s, the Internet has become an ubiquitous global system of interconnected computer systems that use Internet protocol suites (TCP/IP) to connect billions of devices worldwide and provide countless online services.  
In recent years ‘net neutrality’ is in the news. Professor Tim Wu coined this term in 2003, to express  the idea that “internet service providers (ISPs) and governments should treat all data transactions on the internet equally, not discriminating or charging differentially by user, content, site, platform, application, type of attached equipment or modes of communication. This is to say that Internet users should enable access to all content and applications running on the Internet irrespective of the source, and access to particular products or websites should not be blocked as well.  
When Net Neutrality is respected, there is no blocking of content, no throttling (intentionally slows down some content or speeds up others), and no paid prioritisation where some services are stuck in a “slow lane” because they do not pay a special fee.  

One Service, Free Basics (the new name for internet.org), is receiving a lot of criticism from internet activists across the world, with India banning them for the violation  of net neutrality principles by offering free access to selected online content and services and putting others to a disadvantage by causing unfair competition. Free Basics, which is available in 37 countries including Ghana, aims at increasing access for low-income customers by allowing them to create a Facebook account on their devices and also access a limited set of internet services at no charge. Both Wikipedia Zero and Google Free Zone are other examples of zero rating services.  
Some benefits of not upholding Net neutrality  
Price differentiation, improving economic efficiency, increase in broadband penetration, reduction in customer costs and the provision of essential services to the poor who cannot afford access can all be stated as some of the advantages of not upholding the net neutrality principle. 
In support of Net Neutrality  
According to President Barack Obama You “don’t want to start getting a differentiation in how accessible the Internet is to various users,” “You want to leave it open so that the next Google or the next Facebook can succeed.” Conventionally it is not just possible for a smaller firm to compete with established companies such as Facebook when they are able to offer services based on discriminatory data tariffs. Furthermore this situation creates barriers to entry and a non-level playing field for other players especially start-ups thereby stifling innovation.  

Throwing net neutrality out of the window means a whole set of users (out of the same window) because then, they are considered as spammers, scammers, and phishers, with other “bad” Internet citizens excluded from sending mail through certain web mails.  
Also violation of Net Neutrality can lead to an outright block of country-level IP addresses, which affects countries in West Africa, including Ghana because of the prevalence of “scammers”. 
In many emerging markets, a new generation of messaging apps such as WhatsApp are threatening SMS revenues while Voice Over IP (VOIP) is eating away voice revenue. A predictable reaction is to break net neutrality principles by setting up differential pricing in order to protect dwindling fortunes of the operators but this does not serve the interest of consumers.  
Is Net Neutrality a Myth? 
Some persons argue that we should not be discussing net neutrality in Africa, or in Ghana, because it is the preserve of persons with high speed internet access who do not have the access challenges which are the bane of most users on the continent.  However, internet access is constantly improving; and net neutrality will increasingly become more and more important an issue to grapple with in Africa.  
Conclusion  
At the end of the day, it is important not to create a two-tier Internet-one for the haves and the other for the have-nots. Breaking Net Neutrality can lead to control and censorship of Internet content which does not augur well for openness on the Internet. When the principle of net neutrality starts to be eroded, it should be of grave concern to everyone because it has the tendency of creating walls instead and hindering open Internet as per its original design.  

The writer is the Executive Director of Penplusbytes.org - you can follow him on twitter at www.twitter.com/kwamigh WhatsApp: 0241995737

Tuesday, February 06, 2018

Petroleum Register Not Interactive Enough




Penplusbytes www.reportingoilandgas.org commends the Petroleum Commission, for the launch of the Petroleum Register in accordance with section 56 of the Petroleum (Exploration and Production) Act, 2016 (Act 919) which directs the establishment and maintenance of a public register for all petroleum agreements, licenses, permits and authorizations. However, the online platform could be made more interactive to enable greater information and knowledge exchange.
Penplusbytes www.reportingoilandgas.org note with keen interest how the platform will ultimately bring about a certain level of transparency in the oil and gas sector. But, certain key challenges remain and Penplusbytes www.reportingoilandgas.org recommends the following actions to be undertaken by the Petroleum Commission to ensure the Register delivers on what it has been designed to do.
  1. Provide stakeholders with a single, cost-effective, authoritative source of secure, valid, standardized, sharable, and timely petroleum-related information.
  2. Present data in formats in which information can be retrieved immediately on-line through “Queries” and (or) downloadable in PDF, CSV or Excel formats.
  3. Make available and accessible to the public, beneficial owners of companies that have obtained rights to extract oil and gas in Ghana.
  4. Enhance citizens’ comprehension of the register by making it interactive where possible by adding visualizations, glossary of terms, a site search engine, live chat feature, pop-up help screens, clickable maps and interactive timelines.
  5. The platform provides useful additional information through hyperlinks however, certain relevant sections such as: permits to install and operate facilities, reconnaissance licenses, drilling permits are empty and should be updated as soon as possible.

Gideon Ofosu-Peasah
Policy Analyst, Penplusbytes
0246067976

Monday, February 05, 2018

January 22, 2018 - The Day The Internet Made Journalism Awkward



Monrovia – I’m squeezing near the plinth of a platform set up for journalists to get view of the podium where Liberia’s most important politicians and foreign heads of states are seated to see George Weah swears in as Liberia’s 24th President.

Above me, journalists scuffling to get a clear shot of Mr. Weah as he hugs Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the woman he would succeed in the next couple of minutes. The noise from the crowd in the stadium is deafening; the scene is ecstatic. And all is set for the former football icon to assume the highest office in the land.
Meanwhile, the sun is showing no mercy, so I picked a spot in the blur shadows of the steel plinth. All I want is my laptop and smart phone and the Internet. The world has to be up to speed with the happenings here, I said in my head. Next to me, my colleague maneuvers a tight spot too. He is struggling to connect our portable Wi-Fi signal to his laptop. 
“Do you have any luck yet,” I asked for the ninth time in about 30 minutes. He ignores me. 
“Is the internet connected now?” I shouted. 
“No!” He lifts his head and looks at me. His face covered with frustration.
"He has tried to publish a story to our news website for the last two hours and the Internet was just not working. 
“This so-called 4G Internet we have in this country is a complete mess,” he said; this time his disappointment was even more palpable. 
“I tell you oooh,” I agreed with a shy. My eyes glued on my phone hoping the Skype App goes online.
A Turkish television station had asked me to file live reports to them, but the Internet is now a menace. 
About 15 minutes later, there was still no luck with the Internet. I’m thinking our devices are faulty. Just maybe. 
The two Internet service providers – Lone Star and Orange – are just not working. 
“I’m really fed up with this damn Internet today,” someone exclaims from the crowd of reporters. 
“You’re experiencing the same problem with your Internet,” I said quizzically. 
“Yes,” he turns to me – the smirk on his face showing disappointment. “In fact, my Lone Star (Lonstar Cell/MTN) calls are not even going through. I don’t know what’s happening today.” 
I look at my colleague for reaction. We’re not enduring a miserable Internet alone, I would have said to him.
But he’s finally given up. He’s done trying to connect to the Wi-Fi. 
But I’m persistent. 
“I am going to ask these international journalists if they are facing the same problem with the Internet as we are,” I said, pointing to a group of foreign reporters standing a few meters away. He still shows no interest in my probe. 
“Excuse me,” I glided my arms for attention. “Do you speak English?” 
“Yes,” said an Asian-looking reporter, apparently in his late 30s. I assumed the guy is a Southeast Asian either from China or Japan. 
“I am from New York … with the Times,” he said. “New York Times.” His accent clears my doubt completely. 
“I can’t even send pictures of text; the Internet is just not helping my work today, dude,” he said, but in a cranky tone.  
I conceded it was a real problem hampering every journalist covering the inauguration ceremony.
“Same thing with me,” I replied. “This is a serious problem for our work today. Any way, thanks for your time.” I walked away. 
An hour later, George Weah is now officially President, but the Internet is worse than ever.  
Several reporters doing live streaming on Facebook are in ire. One of them, an acquaintance, turns to me for solace. 
“This is a complete disaster, what will I do?” He asks hopelessly.  
“I think these cellphone companies should have brought boosters on this stadium to beef up the internet signal because a lot of people are trying to connect and the signal is just over jammed,” I said.  
“Maybe they should start doing it for big events like these. We can’t have this situation. It’s unbearable for our work. This is modern time, and we need Internet to do efficient work as reporters,” he adds. 
“Most definitely,” I said, turning around to pick up my camera. 
“All we can do now is take notes, photos, and record. It’s impossible to do real time reporting; the Internet is a disaster,” I said.