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17 student cadets awarded at 2025 Cadet Media Personality Awards

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• Hosts of the event were on point

Seventeen student cadets from various schools received awards while several other dignitaries were honoured for promoting fire safety education at this year’s Cadet Media Personality Awards held last Thursday at the Fire Academy and Training School in Accra.

A student recieving an award

The event coincided with the launch of the 2025 ‘Fire Safety Tales.’

The awardees received various prizes including tablets, smartphones, smart watches, laptops, game consoles, and trophies, among others. Student cadets from the Covenant Presbyterian School in Dzorwulu received most of the prizes.

The purpose of the ‘Fire Safety Tales’, a television programme to be broadcast on Fire Television, the television station of the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS), was to promote fire safety education through creative content.

Daniella Mawusi Ntow-Sarpong recieving a citation

Speaking at the launch of the programme and awards ceremony, the Director of Culture and Creative Arts at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Divine Owusu-Ansah, commended Cadet Media Ghana for creating a platform for young people to obtain practical skills in media literacy and reporting, while building a strong partnership with the GNFS and other security agencies.

He pledged the support of the Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Creative Arts to Cadet Media Ghana and the GNFS towards the launch of similar partnership programmes.

The Chief Fire Officer of the GNFS, CFO Daniella Mawusi Ntow-Sarpong, in her remarks, said that it was working with Usher University in the United Kingdom and the Ghana Education Service (GES) to create a fire safety curriculum for all basic schools in the country to educate the youth on fire safety.

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CFO Ntow-Sarpong noted that the GNFS had visited many schools, worship centres, markets, and communities to educate members on fire safety, noting that fire safety was a shared responsibility and therefore encouraged the public to build a strong relationship with the GNFS.

The Director of Cadet Media Ghana, the official media organisation for the National Cadet Corps Ghana, Mr. Jacob Nyarko, urged relevant stakeholders, including school heads and the GES, to prioritise media education.

Staff from the GNFS was awarded

Cadet Akosua Baah Asare of the Covenant Presbyterian School, Dzorwulu, now at Holy Child Senior High School, Cape Coast, was adjudged the overall best cadet personality and took home a laptop, a trophy, and bouquet as her prize.

By Benjamin Arcton-Tettey

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Damango wages war on shisha smoking among minors

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Shisha smoking on the rise

Troubled and anxious citizens in Damongo of the Savannah Region have expressed concerns about the number of young people, believed to be under the age of 18, involved in ‘shisha’ smoking in pubs and drinking spots within the township.

Eyewitnesses say the minors were seen patronising nightlife venues, where Shisha smoking happen in the open.

The situation has sparked renewed public concern over the enforcement of child protection laws and regulations governing the operations of entertainment centres in the municipality and country as a whole.

An eyewitness, who spoke to The Spectator on conditions of anonymity for security reasons, noted that the situation was becoming increasingly common.

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“This is not a one-off incident. It is becoming very common, but residents like us cannot openly report or speak about it because our lives will be at risk,” he said.

Under Ghanaian law, minors were prohibited from patronising Shisha.

Public health experts have consistently warned that shisha use exposes users to harmful substances that can negatively affect brain development, respiratory health, and overall well-being, particularly among young people.

The residents believe the alleged incidents point to broader challenges relating to youth supervision, substance abuse, and weak enforcement of existing regulations and have called on municipal authorities, security agencies, and regulatory bodies to intensify monitoring of pubs and entertainment centres to ensure compliance with the law.

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In an effort to address the menace, Mr Salisu Be-Awurbi, the Savannah Regional Minister, has led public education campaigns, engaged security agencies, and supported enforcement actions to address the rising use of illicit substances in the region.

Wura Kelly Seidu Boresah I, the Chief of Damongo, has also called on all stakeholders including parents, community leaders, institutions, and young people to actively support efforts to curb drug abuse, warning that the rising consumption of hard drugs poses a serious health threat to the future of the youth in the Savannah Region.

He also cautioned individuals involved in the sale and distribution of illicit drugs to immediately desist from the practice, stressing that offenders will face arrest and prosecution in accordance with the law.

From Geoffrey Buta, Damongo, Savannah Region

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Ga Mantse endorses initiative to end domestic voilence

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Dr. Theresa Baffour exchanging pleasantries with the Ga Mantse, Nii Tackie Teiko Tsuru II

Dr Theresa Baffour, an advocate for ending violence and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of SAHM SAHW Foundation, has said that society plays a critical and pivotal role in breaking the cycle of domestic violence.

According to her, domestic violence is a major contributor of making women, who are mostly the victims, mentally derailed and unable to engage in economic activities.

She said this when the foundation called on the Ga Mantse, Nii Tackie Teiko Tsuru II, to solicit support for the initiative by the “Strong and Healthy Minds, Strong and Healthy Women” (SAHM SAHW) to combat domestic violence within the Ga State.

The visit was occasioned by the fact that domestic violence cases have become quite prevalent in the Ga communities and is retarding growth.

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According to her, the canker was an impediment to national development because the victims were usually tortured and would have to go through series of therapies to return to the right state of mind.

Dr Baffour mentioned that Gender-Based Violence (GBV) places a mental toll on women, and was, therefore, important to break the cycle through comprehensive mental health support, crisis intervention and empowerment programmes in communities with high rates of GBV.

This intervention, she underscored, would help in empowering the denigrated victim of domestic violence to soundly heal, build and thrive.

Dr Baffour added that the initiative would provide holistic, trauma-informed mental health care and advocacy for young women affected by domestic violence.

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According to her, the above statement would create safe spaces for healing and equipping them with entrepreneurial skills for renewed hope and empowered life.

The Ga Mantse pledged his support for the laudable initiative to combat domestic violence and also acknowledged the need to address it in the Ga State.

Further endorsement came from Justice Julia Naa-Yarley Adjei Amoah, Chief of Staff at the Office of the Ga Mantse, as she commended the team of SAHM SAHW Foundation for taking a bold step to end the canker in the Greater Accra.

She added that it was a step in the right direction to save vulnerable women from torture, stress and emotional abuse.

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By Alfred Nii Arday Ankrah

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