Hello @DidiJollof please you need to improve on your delivery time because I ordered food and after 48mins, food hasn’t even been dispatched from the legon branch
We are also hiring senior data scientists, machine leaning engineers, director of data science and data analytics lead. If you you’re qualified hit me up. It’s your opportunity to join a world class team and have fun and work on exciting projects with lots of money.
I will be spending my July to track most of the interventions targeted at the youth and its impact 18months on
National Apprenticeship Program
1m coders program
Adwumawura
I want to turn my attention to the Ministry of Youth Development
Decayed and Neglected: The deplorable state of roundabouts in Accra and Tema
At the Ogbodjo roundabout, the problem is made worse by recent downpours. The potholes become muddy pools of water after it rains. The rainwater masks holes deep enough to punish any driver who mistakes the surface for safe asphalt. The roundabout is a busy route for commuters, linking Madina, East Legon and Adenta/Ashaley Botwe.
Ironically, the La Nkwantanang Municipal Assembly, which is responsible for basic infrastructure in the area is less than 300 metres away. Despite the proximity of the assembly to the heavily damaged roundabout, the state of the roundabout has remained unchanged save for some occasional patch work.
Watch more here: https://t.co/NWblgbqGkQ
At the Tema Valco Roundabout, the most severe damage is within a lane that leads commuters from the Tema Harbour to other parts of Tema and Accra. The stretch has deteriorated so badly that it is described by some drivers as “manholes.” Rather than ease traffic, some residents told The Fourth Estate that the route is accident prone.
Drivers using the stretch are forced to slow down to protect their vehicles from damage. A narrow pavement along the road has turned into a contested turf between pedestrians and motorists avoiding the damaged road. Most of the drivers, in an attempt to dodge the potholes, drive over pavement straight towards a busy bus stop, often startling pedestrians.
Watch more here: https://t.co/NWblgbqGkQ
The scholarship secretariat was set to up to help mainly brilliant but needy so why are so many of these people not getting access but MPs and other well to do in society
Ghana has failed it’s citizens 💔💔💔
If you talk right now people will say you talk too much but university graduates are calling Ghana Met fraud for a forecast…. WEATHER FORECAST… you it’s okay
No single president is willing to sacrifice to make the country better. It’s always stupid decisions everytime when they assume power. None of them thinks about Ghana, they only enrich themselves and their families. How’s flood supposed to kill this guy in 2026? Oh God
So, the MCE for Ayawaso North, has given residents just six weeks to vacate their homes so the area can be demolished to make way for a 24-hour economy market. You're displacing about 7,000 people, yet there are no clear relocation or resettlement plan in place. How is this fair to the affected residents? @GhanaPresidency@FelixKwakyeOfo1 please this needs an urgent redress
The President is going around giving speeches about floods like Accra was hit by a hurricane. It was normal rain for a few hours o. If ordinary rain can flood homes, destroy roads, kill people and expose the whole city, then the problem is not the rain. The problem is years of poor drainage, weak planning, no enforcement and leaders who keep explaining failure instead of fixing it.
The problem is not that government does not know what causes flooding. They know. The problem is that knowing the problem has become a substitute for fixing it.
When we tragically lost eight Ghanaians in the helicopter crash, including two ministers, there were strong assurances that the fight against galamsey would be intensified. Yet beyond the initial statements, what has really changed?
If anything, the biggest change has been the decline in media coverage. When was the last time the government provided a comprehensive public update on the fight against illegal mining? One could easily assume the problem has disappeared, when in reality it has simply faded from the headlines. The next major environmental disaster will bring it back into public discussion.
The devastating floods in Accra will follow the same pattern. There will be public outrage, emergency meetings, directives, and promises of decisive action. Some short-term measures will be implemented. Then, as public attention shifts elsewhere, the urgency will fade until the next tragedy forces the issue back onto the national agenda.
This cycle of governing by crisis is one of our biggest governance challenges. We react to disasters instead of consistently managing the underlying risks. We announce interventions but rarely sustain the institutional focus, accountability, and follow-through needed to solve problems permanently.
Whether it is galamsey, flooding, power sector challenges, or road safety, the pattern is remarkably similar. The issue dominates the news after a tragedy, momentum builds briefly, then gradually dissipates before meaningful, lasting reforms are embedded.
Until we break that cycle and build institutions that focus on sustained implementation rather than episodic responses, many of the challenges Ghana has faced for decades will continue to resurface.
We’ve dragged government.We’ve dragged MMDCEs. Now it’s time to ask Ga chiefs the uncomfortable questions,Being a traditional leader shouldn’t make anyone immune from criticism.If politicians can be called out, then Ga chiefs who facilitate building in waterways deserve the same
I am trying to reach a friend who lives in Accra to know that she is SAFE and I have tried repeatedly without success
Please RETWEET so anyone close to her as a work colleague or know her will try and reach her and get back to me
Her name is Keziah Nana Yaa Agyeiwaa
Flood is exposing everybody. The party with the umbrella still left citizens in the rain. Apparently the umbrella is only for campaign posters not rainy days. 3y3 zu