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We’re neighbours – Mahama reassures Chain Homes residents

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President John Dramani Mahama has emphasised that despite the demands of public office, he and his family remain accessible members of the Chain Homes community.

Addressing residents, Mahama acknowledged that his schedule often limits his presence in the estate, particularly on weekends.

“There’s hardly a weekend that I’m here when people are resting,” he said.

Still, he encouraged neighbours not to feel distant or intimidated.

“Don’t be intimidated by the soldiers and all that,” Mahama told them. “We’re neighbours.”

He said residents are welcome to visit when he is available, adding that some already do.

“A few of you have been coming. We share some drinks,” he said.

Mahama closed his remarks by thanking residents for their goodwill and urging continued unity within the community.

“Let’s continue to enjoy this good neighbourliness,” he said. “You’re all welcome.”

There is no justice in Jamaica’s music System

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Fantan Mojah has opened up about the economic and structural challenges facing conscious reggae artists in Jamaica, saying the system often sidelines the very music that built the culture.

Mojah said Jamaican airwaves increasingly favour foreign music over local roots sounds.

“In Jamaica, selectors play more foreign music,” he said on 3fm monitored by MyNewsGh. “So every year when royalty pay out, American artists get the money.”

According to Mojah, this imbalance forces many artists into creative compromises just to stay visible.

“There is no justice in the music in Jamaica,” he said. “So some artists have to sing certain songs to keep pace with their fan base.”

Despite his global popularity, Mojah rejected the assumption that success automatically translates into wealth.

“We wouldn’t say we make money,” he said. “We don’t do music because of money. We do it because of love.”

He also addressed long-standing rumours about his health, dismissing reports that he had collapsed.

“That was fake news,” he said. “People say anything for clout. Nothing like that happened.”

Mojah said Africa now represents both spiritual grounding and a future-facing market for reggae artists seeking respect rather than distortion.

“Africa understand how the market set,” he said. “Now is the time for Africa forget.”

As he prepares to mount the Bhim Festival stage, Mojah said the focus remains legacy, not controversy.

“Some things already gone in history,” he said. “You leave them there.”

Ablakwa schedules visit to Latvia

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Ghana’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, has indicated that he will be visiting Latvia over the death of Nana Agyei Ahyia.

He made this known after meeting with the bereaved family.

In a post shared via social media, he stated that the fact-finding mission has presented a preliminary report to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

He further indicated that correspondence with the Latvian government points to the fact that Latvian authorities’ investigations into the circumstances leading to the death of Nana Agyei have not been concluded.

The Minister is expected to travel to Latvia to hold talks with my counterpart and engage investigators and will be in the company of family members of the late Nana Agyei Ahyia.

Read The Statement Below

invited the family of the late Nana Agyei Ahyia to a meeting at the Foreign Ministry earlier today.

After directly conveying my deepest condolences, I briefed the family on interventions carried out by the Ministry following the tragic loss of Nana Agyei which include:

1) Promptly dispatching a fact-finding mission from our embassy in Germany having regard of their concurrent accreditation to Latvia;

2) The fact-finding mission has presented a preliminary report to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs;

3) Confirmation by Latvian authorities that investigations into the circumstances leading to the death of Nana Agyei have not been concluded;

4) My formal notification to the Latvian government of my decision to travel to Latvia to hold talks with my counterpart and engage investigators;

5) That my imminent delegation to Latvia will include representatives of the family of Nana Agyei Ahyia; and

6) Government of Ghana will engage independent experts to analyze all investigative reports, particularly the expected final report from the Latvian authorities to inform our next steps in the interest of justice.

For God and Country

Parliament takes up revised Ewoyaa Lithium lease

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Atlantic Lithium has submitted an amended mining lease for its Ewoyaa Lithium Project to Ghana’s Parliament, moving the project into the next phase of regulatory scrutiny as lawmakers begin consideration through the Parliamentary Select Committee.

The revised lease reflects updated fiscal terms agreed after consultations led by the Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, bringing royalty and levy provisions into line with Ghana’s current mining laws.

The changes are intended to balance state revenue expectations with investment stability as the country seeks to expand its minerals portfolio beyond gold.

Ewoyaa, located in the Western Region, has become central to Ghana’s ambitions around critical minerals, with lithium increasingly viewed as vital to electric vehicle production and renewable energy storage.

Alongside the revised lease, Parliament is also reviewing a new legislative instrument proposing a price-based royalty framework for lithium projects.

While key terms from the original lease approved in October 2023 remain intact, the Select Committee is expected to examine the revisions after Parliament reconvenes from its recess and make recommendations on ratification.

Atlantic Lithium says it remains confident in the process but acknowledges that parliamentary changes or delays are still possible.

Approval of the lease would clear a major hurdle toward developing Ghana’s first lithium mine, a step that could elevate the country’s position in the global lithium supply chain and draw further mining investment.

The company says it will continue to brief shareholders as the parliamentary review progresses.

This is not my estate

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President John Dramani Mahama has rejected claims that he owns the Chain Homes Estate, describing the narrative as false and detached from his family’s experience of moving into the community.

Speaking at a community gathering in the estate, Mahama said he arrived in Chain Homes not as an owner but as a tenant after struggling to secure accommodation elsewhere.

“We were looking for a place to rent and we didn’t get,” he told residents. “Finally, they said there’s a place at Chain Homes, so we came to check.”

Mahama recounted that the property was identified through Chain Homes after a private owner made it available for rent. According to him, his family had limited options at the time.

“She said, ‘We have no choice anyway. It’s not about whether we like it, we’ll take it,’” he said, explaining how the decision to move into the estate was made.

He dismissed suggestions that the estate belongs to him, using sarcasm to underline what he called the absurdity of the claim.

“They say it’s Mahama’s estate, so all of you who bought houses here bought them illegally,” he said. “You should have paid the money to me.”

Mahama said his remarks were meant to clarify the record and reaffirm his status as a resident, not a proprietor.

They took me house to house

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President John Dramani Mahama has shared personal details of how his family settled in Chain Homes, saying the move was shaped by chance encounters and neighbourly acceptance rather than privilege.

Addressing residents, Mahama said his introduction to the estate came through individuals he already knew, including former colleagues and schoolmates.

“The first person I met that I knew was Paul,” he said. “He came to welcome me on behalf of the residents.”

Mahama said the welcome extended beyond formalities, recalling how neighbours offered to introduce him around the community.

“He said one of the evenings, I’m going to take you around to greet our neighbours,” Mahama noted.

He also spoke of reconnecting with old acquaintances, including a university friend he described as entrepreneurial even during their student days.

“We were in university together,” he said. “When new Chinese films came, he would buy the rights, show them on campus and charge us small student money.”

Mahama said those relationships and interactions eventually influenced his family’s decision to make the estate their permanent home.

“They convinced us to make our permanent home in this estate,” he said.

Three gunned down as Police foil robbery in Ashaiman

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The Tema Regional Police Command has successfully foiled an attempted robbery at Community 24 within the Adjei-Kojo District in the Ashaiman Division of the Tema Region.

On Sunday, 21st December 2025, at about 1:30 a.m., the Ashaiman Divisional Police Intelligence Team received information regarding an ongoing robbery at a private residence at Community 24. Acting promptly on the intelligence, a police team moved to the scene to intervene.

Upon arrival, the police encountered six young men, all wearing face masks and hoodies, and armed with machetes, guns, and other offensive weapons. The suspects opened fire on the police, who returned fire. During the exchange of gunfire, three of the suspects were fatally wounded and later succumbed to their injuries, while the remaining three suspects, believed to have sustained gunshot wounds, managed to flee the scene.

The police retrieved the following exhibits from the scene: three face masks, three machetes, and one unregistered Royal 125 motorbike. The bodies of the deceased suspects have been conveyed to the Police Hospital for preservation, identification, and autopsy.

Hospitals and health facilities within the locality have been alerted to notify the police through the emergency lines should any male persons report with gunshot wounds.

The Command highly commends the operational team who undertook the operation. Members of the public are encouraged to continue supporting the Police with timely information to help maintain peace and security.

Napo expresses concerns over The Legal Education Reform Bill, 2025

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Former running mate of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Dr Mathew Opoku Prempeh, known popularly as Napo, has raised concerns on the Legal Education Bill 2025.

According to him, legal education must remain the core mandate of the General Legal Council, with the government providing support.

He holds the view that the government must not direct how legal education should be because that is the global best practice.

Napo believes that the future of the legal profession must be protected at all costs, adding that the training of lawyers should never be subordinated to political control.

Making this position known in a post shared via social media, he said, “The Legal Education Reform Bill, 2025 is worrying.

Legal education must remain the core mandate of the General Legal Council, with government providing support, not direction, in line with global best practice.

The future of Ghana’s the legal profession must be protected and the training of lawyers should never be subordinated to political control”.

What Is The Legal Education Reform Bill?

The Legal Education Reform Bill, 2025 proposes reforms aimed at expanding access to legal education while maintaining high standards in teaching, learning, and outcomes. The Bill seeks to achieve this by separating the regulation of legal education from the regulation of the legal profession, while also strengthening the bar association’s role in setting and enforcing standards for legal education.

Under the Bill, professional legal education and training would move from the Ghana School of Law to accredited universities. It introduces a Law Practice Training Course to be offered by these universities to prepare eligible candidates for a National Bar Examination. The course will focus mainly on clinical legal education, with an emphasis on practical lawyering skills rather than purely theoretical instruction.

Applicants who hold a Bachelor of Laws degree or another approved first degree in law will be required to apply for admission to the Law Practice Training Course at an accredited university. Only after completing this step will they be eligible to apply to sit for the National Bar Examination.

STC has started making profit even with few buses—Transport Minister

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Transport Minister Joseph Bukari Nikpe has disclosed that the State Transport Company (STC) has started making a profit with the few buses it has available.

He says this improvement is what prompted the president’s intervention to secure a loan from GCB to purchase new buses for the company.

Joseph Bukari Nikpe is assuring the people of Ghana that by the end of the first quarter of 2026, STC will take delivery of new buses to augment the work they do.

Speaking on Accra-based Channel 1 Television, he said, “God willing, we should have buses by the end of the first quarter.”.

He continued, “Before the President would have agreed to talk to any bank, there were some inner arrangements we had to make.

Now put them on their own toes to see how they can be able to manage, and we have seen improvement in their daily mobilization of funds. The little buses they have, they are beginning to make a profit, which is a clear indication that if we do any arrangement for them, they will be able to pay.”

Afenyo-Markin raises security concerns over dark route to Jubilee House

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Minority Leader Alexander Afenyo-Markin has expressed serious concern over the lack of streetlights on the road leading to the Jubilee House, calling it a major security risk.

Speaking on the floor of Parliament on Friday, March 14, 2025, Afenyo-Markin urged the government to act swiftly, emphasizing that such negligence was unacceptable in the heart of the city, especially near the seat of government.

“Mr. Speaker, it’s not good for the security of the presidency if the entire route leading to the Office of the President is so dark. This is in the heart of the city—it is worrying,” he stated.

He further called on the Minister for Greater Accra to appear before Parliament and provide assurances on the steps being taken to improve lighting in the area.

“I would plead that the leader of government business programs the Minister for Greater Accra to come and assure the House of the steps she is taking to address the situation.

“We need sufficient streetlights in the city, particularly so in the area where the seat of government is located,” Afenyo-Markin added.