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Akufo-Addo must take steps to investigate leaked tape on Dampare – Agalga

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President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo who is the Commander-In-Chief of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) must initiate steps to ensure that the leaked tape which captures an alleged plot to oust the Inspector General of Police (IGP) Dr George Akuffo Dampare is investigated, Member of Parliament for Builsa North James Agalga has said.

In the view of Mr Agalga, this matter cannot be pushed aside as any ordinary situation because it involves an alleged plot to subvert the will of the people in the 2024 general elections.

Speaking on the Ghana Tonight show on TV3 Tuesday, July 11, the Ranking Member on the Defence and Interior Committee of Parliament said “The reassurances from the Minister of Interior are not enough.

“First of all, the Minister doesn’t appear to be sure of who the persons are, those who were caught plotting to subvert the will of the Ghanaian people in 2024 to merely assure us that nothing untoward will happen, they have confidence in the IGP, do not have in contemplation any attempt to replace him with the people caught on tape is not reassuring at all.”

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He further asked the President to initiate steps to investigate this matter.

“Probe it to unearth those behind the audio and bring them to the book. The president, if you ask me, is the person who must put in the mechanism to ensure that those who are behind it are brought to book.”

The Minister for the Interior Ambrose Dery dismissed reports that stalwarts of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) are scheming to remove the Inspector General of Police.

“There is no plot to remove anybody,” he told journalists in Accra on Tuesday, July 11.

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He added “I can assure you that I serve a president who is committed and has respect for human rights. Under Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo we will make sure that 2024 is peaceful.

“One thing to be sure, 2024 will not be a violent election by anybody and no one will want to thwart the will of the people. If you vote us in, you vote us in, if you vote us out, you vote us out.”

Portions of an audio that allegedly captures the plot to remove Dr Dampare said that “Alhaji, my only problem… this current IGP if we do a mistake and take him to the elections, it will not help us.

“It will not help us at all and I will not mind if the position is not given to me but that man is changed; because he will not help us, he will not help us at all… he won’t help the party at all.

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“I know there are others who are also good for this position, if I don’t get and this man is changed and those people that we think they are our men get I (it is ok)t… Because we need to break this 8.

“That is important, we need to break the 8… Because I wouldn’t want doctor to become the flagbearer and then we lose the elections… ” one of the senior officers told the senior NPP members who is believed to be a former regional chairman of the party and now a traditional ruler.”

Source: 3news

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La Beach Hotel celebrates Christmas with Street Academy children

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Mr Ransford Nii Antie Quaye (right) sharing sharing some food on the street

Hundreds of street children received a special treat during the Christmas festivities as a result of a collaboration between the management of the La Beach Hotel and the Street Academy in Accra.

It was part of the Hotel’s current arrangement to provide lunch for the children of the Academy every Friday.

Members of the Foundation at the event

Courtesy that partnership, management of the La Beach Hotel feted hundreds of street children housed by the Street Academy, creating a partying moment for the children.

According to officials of the Hotel, the gesture was to let the children feel part of the festivities and not left out.

The children enjoyed delicious meals and snack after which they danced as they enjoyed the moment.

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According to the Hotel officials, “the season represents one that every parent gathers their children and shower them with gifts and others to make them happy but sadly, these unfortunate children are left on their own, having no one to care for them.”

“This is an event we intend to make an annual one. Through this, we hope to put some smiles on their faces. It is not proper to leave them on their own.”

The Executive Director of the Academy, Ataa Lartey, expressed gratitude to the management of the hotel, saying that, “this has gone a long way to excite the children and make them feel part of the celebration.”

He said due to the number of children that join around this time of the year, it becomes difficult for the Academy alone to shoulder this responsibility.

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“It is not easy to organise such activities alone because it draws a lot of children, that is, those in the Academy and their friends that follow them but with such cooperate supports, we are able to bring them together to share in moments like this,” he told The Spectator.

By Spectator Reporter

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First IUI quadruplets delivered in Ghana

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Dr Nana Yaw Osei

A 30-year-old surrogate mother has delivered a set of quadruplets at The Walking Egg Medical and Fertility Centre at Pokuase in Accra, in a rare surrogacy success that has brought renewed attention to assisted reproductive care in Ghana.

The babies-two boys and two girls- were delivered through a caesarean section in the early hours of Tuesday at 36 weeks and weighed an average 2.5 kilograms each, a weight doctors say was healthy for a multiple pregnancy.

A team of medical professionals delivering one of the babies

IUI stands for Intrauterine Insemination, a common fertility treatment where healthy sperm are collected, ‘washed’ and concentrated in a lab, and then directly inserted into a woman’s uterus around ovulation using a thin catheter to help sperm reach the egg for fertilisation, often used for unexplained infertility, cervical issues, or mild male factor infertility, and is less invasive than IVF.  

Speaking to The Spectator after the surgery, the Medical Director of the Centre, Dr Nana Yaw Osei, said the pregnancy was achieved through Intrauterine Insemination (IUI) and was not planned to result in multiple births.

“With IUI, you introduce prepared sperm into the uterus and have no control over how many eggs fertilized.”

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The quadruplets

“Unlike IVF, where embryos are formed outside the body and the number transferred can be controlled, this outcome was left entirely to nature,” Dr Osei explained.

He said unlike IVF which could result in multiple babies, this is “possibly the first IUI leading to quadruplets in Ghana.”

He revealed that the surrogacy arrangement was necessary because the intended mother had lost her uterus during surgery to remove fibroids, making it medically impossible for her to carry a pregnancy.

“She had no womb of her own, through no fault of hers,” Dr Osei said, adding that “Surrogacy was the only option available for her to have a biological child.”

When scans later showed that the surrogate was carrying four fetuses, the medical team considered fetal reduction, a procedure sometimes used to reduce risks in multiple pregnancies. However, the option was rejected.

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“As a strong Christian, fetal reduction is abortion to me,” Dr Osei said. “After discussions with the intended parents and the surrogate, we all agreed to continue with the pregnancy.”

Despite concerns commonly associated with multiple pregnancies, Dr Osei noted that the surrogate experienced no major complications, and the delivery was smooth. Paediatric assessments conducted after birth confirmed that all four babies are healthy.

Dr Osei again indicated that surrogacy, though still widely misunderstood, is recognised under the Registration of Births and Deaths Act, 2020 (Act 1027).

He urged the public to engage the subject with greater understanding.

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“Surrogacy is not about convenience,” he said. “It is about restoring hope to people who have lost the ability to carry a child.”

Describing the moment of delivery, he added, “I was in tears in the theatre. It reminded me why I chose this profession.”

By Esinam Jemima Kuatsinu

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