Gbi-Wegbe E. P School to benefit from Pencils of Promise project

Pencils of Promise (PoP), an education-focused non-profit Organisation, has broken ground for the construction of a 3-Unit classroom block for the Gbi-Wegbe E. P School to improve upon teaching and learning.

The edifice, expected to be completed in months, would accommodate the kindergarten pupils of the school.

Mr Freeman Gobah, Country Director of Pencils of Promise, noted that the community, for about four years now, wrote to the Organisation for assistance.

He said the gesture to support the community was also due to some dilapidated structures of the school which were still in use.

Mr Gobah said as a not-for-profit Organisation, they would provide 80 per cent of the total work to be done in the form of skilled labour while the community provide 20 per cent of work including labour and building projects.

He noted that the Organisation had built many schools in the Municipality and would continue to address the educational needs of other communities.

Mr Gobah admonished the community to offer the needed support to ensure that the project was completed on schedule.

Mr Daniel Noble Awume, Hohoe Municipal Chief Executive (MCE), said it was commendable that PoP had come to assist the community adding that the community must be committed to working assiduously towards the project completion.

Mr Kafui Boso, Acting Hohoe Municipal Inspector of Chiefs on behalf of the Education Director, expressed gratitude to the Organisation for the support.

He said it was the hope that the project would see the light of day.

Mr Patrick Dzandu, Assemblyman, Gbi-Wegbe Traditional Area, expressed gratitude to Pencils of Promise for assistance when the community called on them.

He said they would complete the project since some citizens had already begun supporting the project.

Mr Dzandu urged the community to always take a keen interest in the education of children since they would become future leaders.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Population expert calls on stakeholders to intensify education on reusable menstrual pads

Dr Emmanuel Manu, Head of Department, Population and Behavioural Sciences, Fred N. Binka School of Public Health, UHAS, says there is the need for educating girls on the use of locally produced reusable menstrual pads to help them deal with problems associated with pad affordability during menstruation.

He said the education on the pads would erase some myths surrounding menstruation such as ‘it is a taboo to touch menstrual blood.’

‘Menstruation is a biological and reproduction process without which one will not be born so people should not feel shy to touch menstrual blood.’

Dr Manu, speaking during the climax of activities to mark this year’s World Menstrual Hygiene Celebration in Hohoe, said menstrual hygiene had been a problem with girls from rural areas when it came to menstruation.

He noted that most girls in rural areas nationwide and in the Volta Region were from poor homes and hardly afforded pads during their menstrual periods.

Dr Manu said when the girls get equipped in producing their own pads, it would help them afford more pads since the materials used were less expensive.

He urged girls to always be hygienic when they were on their periods and not be shy whilst they went through the period and also teach their colleagues about menstruation.

Miss Portia Owusu Annor, the Facilitator, noted that reusable pads were hygienic, absorbable, clean, durable, and repeatable.

She said the reusable pads had no chemicals in the materials used which in a long way do not pose dangers to the users.

Miss Annor said the advantages of the reusable pads were that the user could design the length and thickness of the pads according to their preferences.

She said reusable pads were the preferable choice of the users since they met the desires, patterns, and designs to suit their comfort.

Mr Israel Wuresah, a Member of the Organising Committee, said it was their mission to create awareness to ensure that people had good knowledge about menstruation and menstrual hygiene.

He said one of the key areas being looked at was to end period poverty by teaching girls how to produce their own menstrual materials they needed to be able to manage their menstruation.

Mr Wuserah said equipping girls with the skills to produce their menstrual materials would be in the short term while they hoped the government took off taxes on menstrual materials.

He said their aim was ending period stigma where young menstruating girls were being stigmatised by their colleagues and male parents such as restricting the girls from some tasks at home.

Mr Wuserah said they hoped to extend the education to all young girls while hoping that beneficiaries would continue to teach their friends.

Ms Juanita Agyei, a 10-year-old pupil from Momo Montessori School and a participant said she was delighted with the knowledge imparted to help her when she began to menstruate.

More than 100 girls from selected schools in the Hohoe Municipality, teachers and some seamstresses benefitted from the activities to mark the Day held on the theme: ‘Ending Period Stigma.’

Other activities carried out included a float, radio talk, a donation to Gbi Special School and talks on menstrual hygiene.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Illegal Exporters Of Scrap Metals Put On Notice

The Scrap Metal Council has issued a stern warning to scrap metal dealers who export scrap metal illegally through the Lunga Lunga, Malaba and Namanga border points.

The Council Chairman Mr. Francis Mugo said during a consultative meeting with Coast Scrap Metals Dealers Association to find a lasting solution to the vandalism menace that the council has written to the Inspector General of Police to furnish the council with names of dealers engaging in vandalism.

‘There are people who have been exporting scrap metal against the law through Lunga Lunga, Busia and Namanga borders,” said Mugo, adding that they will be arrested, arraigned in court and their license revoked.

Mugo urged the dealers not to contravene the laws governing the scrap metal sector in the country. He further revealed that they will initiate changes to the Scrap Metal Act, 2015 to bring collectors, dealers and agents into the council regulatory framework.

‘The scrap metal business is thriving; in our country, there are 18 millers who use 300MT of scrap metals. It helps improve the environment. The scrap metals are used to produce steel products used in the construction of roads and houses. It’s a vital sector,’ Muo said.

‘For scrap that cannot be milled in our country, we grant dealers license to export to other countries. When we give them export licenses the country earns foreign exchange. We will soon gazette our inspectors who will work with the police to bring sanity to the sector,’ he added.

He urged dealers without valid licenses to apply lest they be apprehended and fined Sh10million or seven years imprisonment. ‘In Mombasa County, we have 42 scrap metal dealers in our records but we know there are many who are operating without a license,’ he added

‘We recommend all scrap metal dealers to have a business license and the association to self-regulate. Let them know that it is not good for someone to destroy government infrastructure,’ he said.

The Chairman said they are working closely with all the relevant government agencies to end the vandalism of infrastructure.

The meeting with scrap metals dealers was necessitated by vandalism of infrastructure from the Ministries of Energy and Transport.

Chairman of Coast Scrap Metal Dealers Association Dickson Kibuu said the meeting aims to educate dealers on how they can do business without vandalising government infrastructure.

He said the sector suffered when it was closed in 2021 by the government as a result of vandalism of critical infrastructure by unscrupulous businessmen.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Economists Call For International Collaboration To Curb Challenges In Economic Planning

The African Economic Research Consortium (AERC) in partnership with African Econometric Society (AFES) and support of the government held a conference in Nairobi calling for international collaboration so as to curb challenges of available data in economic planning.

The three-day conference titled ‘Bringing rigour and evidence in economic planning in Africa’ aims to offer access to reliable, credible and up to date economic data in a quest to chart favourable plans in Africa.

It also seeks to use economic theory, mathematics and statistical inference to its phenomena in policy making objectives.

National Treasury Cabinet Secretary Prof. Njuguna Ndung’u highlighted the need for reliable economic statistics and data provided by professionals to aid development planning in the continent.

Ndung’u called for concerted efforts among policy makers and management technocrats in the country and Africa as well beyond to address the challenge of current credible and reliable data in economic planning.

He added that there is a need for adequate economists, statisticians and econometricians who are dependable and available on a timely basis widespread, regionally and internationally so as to improve the sector.

‘Most African countries are usually in arrears, especially within the National Accounts Statistics. As a policy maker, I know how frustrating it is to work with scanty data or stale evidence,’ disclosed Ndung’u.

Royal Danish Embassy Ambassador to Kenya Ole Thonke emphasised the need to enhance research to unleash the continent’s potential addressing its structural, fundamental and economic issues and challenges citing that many African countries still struggle with imports and exports in spite of their growth and moving forward.

‘I am a firm believer that Kenya and Africa have abundance of skilled manpower and natural resources when put to good use via better research and police will unleash more opportunities for a better future consequently drive our economy forward,’ said Thonke.

Echoing his remarks, AERC Executive Director Prof Theophile Azomahou acknowledged that that research plays a key role in economic development and as a leading economic policy and research institution they are working on advancing the role of econometrics in the country.

Azomahou stated that they are geared towards strengthening the capacity of researchers and graduate students in Africa by advocating and impacting economic knowledge and policies, noting the regional conference for Africa as the first step in the right direction.

‘This week prefigures the future of global knowledge and excellence in putting our feet into those big giants,’ said Azomahou.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Over 900,000 Hectares of Land Readied for Planting Tree Seedlings this Ethiopian Rainy Season

More than 902,000 hectares of land is readied for planting tree seedlings this Ethiopian rainy season, according to Ethiopian Forestry Development (EFD).

Ethiopia has managed to plant 25 billion seedlings in the past 4 years through the Green Legacy Initiative.

EFD Deputy Director General Motuma Tolera told ENA that the comprehensive activity carried out through the initiative is a successful project that has mobilized massive public participation like the Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD).

He noted that planting trees is not a matter of choice but survival for Ethiopians because unless millions of seedlings are not planted every year, we will be exposed to serious dangers caused by climate change.

“The Green Legacy Initiative is not a matter of choice as most of our mountain areas are being severely degraded,” the deputy director general said, adding that recent studies show that millions of hectares of land are also going to deteriorate unless they are quickly covered with trees. There is a lot of soil erosion.”

According to him, over 7 billion seedlings are prepared so far to plant more than 6.5 billion tree seedlings. For this reason, the tree seedlings are readied for planting after research was conducted to identify what kind of saplings to plant, in what kind of environment, and what kind of soil.

Subsequently, over 902,000 hectares of land is prepared for planting seedlings.

Motuma added that the community’s participation has been improving from time to time in seed selection, planting, and caring for the trees.

More than 250 million saplings were planted in Oromia, Sidama, South, SouthWest Ethiopia regions, and Dre Dawa City Administration during this belg season.

Source: Ethiopian News Agency

Africa Moves To Protect Its Interests In Global Tax Rules, Stem Illicit Financial Flows

Africa moves to protect its interests in the global tax rules to increase revenues and stem illicit financial flows, according to African Union(AU).

The African Union has issued a press release after concluding a three-day meeting of the Specialized Technical Committee on Finance, Monetary Affairs, Economic Planning and Integration- Sub-Committee on Tax and Illicit Financial Flows.

The meeting under the theme “Tax in Africa: contemporary issues affecting the continent” and adopted recommendations that ensure African interests are protected in the design and implementation of the global tax rules, and ways to improve domestic resource mobilization for Africa’s development.

The meeting discussed parameters of the African position on the promotion of inclusive and effective tax cooperation at the United Nations and on the consideration of the enactment of a Domestic Minimum Top-up tax for tax base protection ahead of the incoming global tax rules, it said.

It also adopted recommendations to use the VAT toolkit by African Tax Administration Forum (ATAF) for improved revenue collection on cross-border supplies; and identified areas where future legislative action or coordination would benefit Member States,

The African Union and relevant partners, in regard to addressing the issue of wasteful tax incentives, stemming of illicit financial flows respectively, and improving continental domestic resource mobilization necessary for the development of the continent, it was stated.

The digital economy has experienced unprecedented growth over the past few decades, transforming the global economic landscape and reshaping the way businesses and individuals interact.

This phenomenon has been driven by rapid advancements in technology, widespread internet access, and the increasing penetration of smartphones and other digital devices.

However, this increased consumption of digital goods and services, delivered across borders and intangible in nature, has brought with it challenges on the difficulty in establishing the appropriate jurisdiction for tax collection, as well as determining the value for taxation purposes.These developments have had a negative impact on Africa’s ability to mobilize revenues.

Africa is therefore looking to actively engage in the global tax debate at the United Nations on international tax cooperation, and the opportunities it presents for increased domestic resource mobilization.

Further, the new global tax rules will have an impact on existing national tax incentive policies and present an opportunity for African countries to protect themselves from ceding their taxing rights to countries where multinationals are resident on existing tax incentives lower than the 15 percent global minimum tax, according to the new rules.

This requires African countries to enact domestic minimum top-up tax legislation to tap into this revenue. Similarly, revenue collection from e-commerce goods and services requires the implementation of simplified VAT regimes.

African Union Commissioner for Economic development, Trade, Tourism, Industry and Minerals, Albert Muchang stated that to effectively operationalize the UN Convention on International Tax Cooperation, the process must be inclusive in incorporating the views of existing African structures and leverage the work of the UN Committee of Experts on International Tax Cooperation.

He further said the member state-led intergovernmental body ought to have a well-resourced technical structure to focus on specific pain points in developing countries not addressed by previous initiatives to address gaps in tax cooperation.

“At the continent level, the core issue is how Africa can develop tax administrations to increase investments from the current level of 20 percent of GDP to 40 percent. By incorporating the views of existing African structures, the operationalization process of the Convention will ensure accountability and full ownership by the Member States,” he added.

United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) Acting Executive Secretary, Antonio Pedro underscored the need for a complete overhaul of the global financial system, the creation of an operational debt relief and restructuring framework, strengthened domestic resource mobilization as well as an inclusive international tax system.

“Global financial architecture reforms need to be coupled with an international tax framework that can ensure the taxing rights of African countries in an inclusive and equitable manner. As such, it is critical to formulate an African Position on the UN Tax Convention,” he added.

Source: Ethiopian News Agency