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 Cut in USAID funding: Uncertainty, fear grip health workers, patients in N/R

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An HIV positive mother with her child going for their medication but got stranded due to the termination of president Trump’s executive order.

 In the remote village of Karaga, a midwife at the local health centre is running out of options.

The centre, which serves hun­dreds of women and children, has been severely affected by the re­cent suspension of USAID funding.

Without essential medical supplies, Fati and her colleagues are compelled to take difficult, sometimes heartbreaking deci­sions.

“Just last week, we had to send a pregnant woman to another facility miles away because we didn’t have the right drugs to stabilise her condition,” she says with frustration in her voice. “We don’t know how long we can keep going like this,” she added.

Fati’s story is one of many unfolding across Northern Ghana, where USAID-funded programmes provide crucial support for ma­ternal health, malaria treatment, family planning, and HIV/AIDS care.

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The sudden funding halt an­nounced last week has sparked widespread fear and uncertainty among health workers and res­idents, who now face the grim reality of a potential healthcare crisis.

Mohammed Karim, HIV patient and a father of five, worries about his life and that of his children.

“I am afraid in some few days to come, my health would deteri­orate because without medicine, what are we supposed to do? We rely on the clinic, but now even the nurses are helpless,” he laments.

“Our lives will be miserable if no intervention is made. What are we going to do with all this stigma around us?” she asks with a chilly voice.

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Health officials have warned that if no immediate action was taken, the suspension could lead to a surge in preventable deaths.

A Health worker (name with­held), describes the situation as dire.

“Many of our facilities are de­pendent on USAID-supported sup­plies. Without them, we will see increased maternal and infant mortality, more malaria cases, and disruptions in HIV/AIDS treat­ment,” he explained.

“As you can see, all these women are here for medication and other supplies for their chil­dren, but with the directive by President Donald Trump in stop­ping the distribution of medical supplies they are stranded,” he added.

The impact is already being felt. Health centres are reporting dwindling stocks of antimalarial drugs, contraceptives, and HIV test kits. Without urgent inter­vention, experts warn that years of progress in public health could be reversed.

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In response, President John Dramani Mahama has directed the Ministry of Finance to explore ways to bridge the financial gap left by the USAID funding cut.

However, no clear timeline has been provided for when alterna­tive funding might materialise. In the meantime, local health authorities and international or­ganisations are scrambling to find emergency solutions.

For parents like Hajaratu, a mother of four, the situation is unbearable. “This is a matter of life and death. We need help now!” she pleads from the over­crowded health centre.

As uncertainty looms, commu­nities across northern Ghana can only hope that aid arrives before the situation spirals out of con­trol.

From: Geoffrey Buta, Karaga

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Arrest of Four Armed Robbers: Suspect collapses, dies during weapon search in Bolgatanga

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The Ghana Police Service has arrested four suspected armed robbers following an intelligence-led operation in Bolgatanga in the Upper East Region.

The suspects, identified as Abdulai Ibrahim, Amadu Rahman, Amadu Sulemana, also known as Saaga, and Adu Yakubu, were arrested on May 5, 2026.

Investigations indicate that on 4th May 2026, the suspects converged at Gbane, a mining community in the Talensi District, after travelling from Yagaba and Fumbisi to carry out a robbery operation, during which they robbed four motorbikes and several mobile phones.

During interrogation, the suspects admitted to a series of robberies within the Talensi District, along the Yagaba Fumbisi road and the Yagaba-Nanguruma road in the North East Region.

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They also confessed to a robbery at the Vikandi Phone Shop in Bolgatanga on 22nd March 2025, which was captured in a viral video in which they were seen wielding an AK47 assault rifle.

They further admitted to multiple robberies at Gbane mining sites, where gold and large sums of money were taken from victims.

The suspects later led Police to a farm near Biung, close to Gbane, where the gang leader, Amadu Rahman, had concealed an AK47 rifle.

A search of the area led to the retrieval of the rifle, with serial number 68100563, and eighty-seven (87) rounds of live ammunition hidden in a fertilizer sack.

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During the search to retrieve the weapon, suspect Amadu Rahman collapsed and was rushed to the Bolgatanga Regional Hospital but was pronounced dead on arrival.

His body has been deposited at the hospital morgue for preservation and autopsy.

The remaining three suspects are in Police custody and will be put before court to face the full rigours of the law.

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CDD, IMANI and 12 CSOs seek to join Supreme Court case challenging OSP Act

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Fourteen civil society organisations, including CDD, IMANI and 12 other CSO’shave filed an application at the Supreme Court seeking permission to join a constitutional case challenging parts of the Office of the Special Prosecutor Act, 2017 (Act 959).

The groups want to participate in the case of Adamtey v Attorney-General as amici curiae, meaning friends of the court, to provide legal and policy perspectives to assist the court in its determination.

In a joint statement issued on Wednesday, May 6, the organisations explained that the case raises important constitutional and public interest issues relating to Ghana’s anti corruption framework and the independence of public institutions.

The coalition includes Ghana Center for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana), Transparency International Ghana, the Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition (GACC), Democracy Hub LBG, STAR-Ghana Foundation, NORSAAC, Penplusbytes, the Africa Center for Energy Policy (ACEP), Odekro Parliamentary Monitoring Organization, A Rocha Ghana, Parliamentary Network Africa (PN Africa), IMANI-Africa, the One Ghana Movement, and Africa Education Watch.

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According to the statement, some of the organisations were directly involved in the drafting and parliamentary approval of Act 959 in 2017 and also campaigned for the establishment of the Office of the Special Prosecutor.

It noted that it jointly submitted what it described as one of the most detailed memoranda to Parliament’s Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Committee during discussions on the bill.

The coalition commended the Supreme Court for increasingly allowing amicus curiae participation in cases involving major constitutional questions.

According to the statement, such participation has helped to broaden public interest perspectives and strengthen constitutional adjudication in Ghana.

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The organisations stressed that their intervention is not politically motivated or directed at any individual involved in the case.

“It is motivated solely by a shared commitment to constitutionalism, accountable governance, anti corruption, institutional integrity, and the preservation of independent public institutions established to serve the Republic,” the statement noted.

The coalition expressed confidence that its participation would provide the court with institutional memory, comparative anti corruption standards and constitutional arguments to support a fair determination of the matter.

The applicants are being represented by Kizito Beyuo, Oliver Barker Vormawor, Samson Lardy Anyenini and Clement Kojo Akapame.

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By: Jacob Aggrey

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