This is the day the Lord has made, I’ll rejoice and be glad in it.
Not because I deserve it, not because I worked for it, but because you deemed and willed it so and that’s how I know you’ll watch over me again. IJN, Amen 🙏🏾
Ebi aa nie oo
See reason/excuse being given to justify Jordan’s inclusion
No real analysis, just vibes
Is it Brandon-Asante or Iñaki Williams that will panic upon seeing the crowd.
You cited one player’s anxiety from 2010, that was 16 years ago. Football has fairly advanced since then
I have tried as much not to jump into the Jordan Ayew issue cos as long as you are an Ayew you should expect criticism
I have coached teams were my old players were not energized but you start them on the pitch cos of the game tempo and when the game settles you take them out.
Against England will be much noisy atmosphere. You need strong hearts like Jordan on the pitch till the game settles.
My first time of coaching against a mammoth crowd was against Kotoko and it was not easy to adjust. A Black Stars player told me he came out of the dressing room in 2010 WC and run back to the dressing room cos the crowd scared him. Let's be cautious cos the English atmosphere can swallow some players on the pitch!
Lieutenant Robert Ebenezer Abossey Kotei
1. A Ghanaian high jumper, military officer, and politician.
2. Legend has it that during his boyhood in the Cameroons, boys who failed to clear the makeshift high jump were given a harsh whipping by their playmates.
3. To spare himself these painful whippings, he mastered the art of high jumping.
4. In July 1960, he'd go on to win the British AAA Championships title and set the Ghanaian high-jump record in London, a record that remained unbroken for 36 years, until 1996.
5. Caught in the hands of Ghana's AFRC military junta in 1979, Bob Kotei's legs ceased to jump high after a bloody exercise at the stakes of the firing squad.
🎥: Robert Kotei (far right)
Ernest Akore was a chief of staff for Ken Ofori Atta who doubles as US citizen. Extracting him is becoming difficult for the OSP.
The dual citizenship amendment bill must be dropped.
1. Yesterday, Australia’s border police reported that a consignment of charcoal from Ghana shipped to Port Botany in two containers contained methamphetamines worth ~$210 million in street value.
2. That’s like a lot of meth, man.
3. On the Aussie side, a British actress and an Adelaide couple have been taken into custody.
4. We are not getting any serious filla from Ghanaian security agencies. In the last two years, we have seen several of such strange criminal consignments popped up with zero updates from the security services.
5. Remember the Sapeiman bust? The one where kilos of gold and cash were found in mysterious boxes? No serious update till now.
6. The Australian meth bust actually happened in April 2026. Ghanaian law enforcement have known since then. Not one word.
7. This bust involving charcoal however opens up an interesting new angle outside the Ghanaian security services.
8. No one can ship or tranship charcoal out of Ghana without a Charcoal Export Permit from the ENERGY COMMISSION. And if the charcoal originates in Ghana, one needs a Charcoal Production License.
9. I once investigated a situation where Ghanaian charcoal producers were blaming Energy Commission for delays in securing permits for export, leading to a collapse in overseas sales.
10. What’s more, the permit process includes the intended shipping line’s details, approved export quantity, and authorised destination.
11. The permit bears the name of the licensee, permit validity period, and the destination. Since quotas are strictly enforced, circumvention is literally criminal.
12. Energy Commission, where is the data?
13. By convention, these details are even supposed to be in the publicly inspectable register.
14. So far, the only data on charcoal exports from the Energy Commission do not include Australia as an end-destination for the 13 primary exporters. Asia tops and then Europe.
15. Commercial databases only shows only $124k in wood exports (of which charcoal is likely a small subset) to Australia.
16. Regarding meth itself, Ghana is a growing node in the production of “precursors,” i.e. raw chemicals that can be turned into meth with ease (with imports supposedly regulated by NACOC), according to GI-TOC, UNODC, and other global intel services. But documented raids in Africa on actual meth factories have mostly been in South Africa and Nigeria.
17. In fact, the June 2022 Daniel Ameko/Ibrahim Fosu case was a Ghana-to-Australia meth bust using Aramex as courier.
18. Then there was a 2025 transhipment case involving Rwandan and Nigerian nodes with Ghana as transit hub.
19. Very little info has been published by the security services about all these episodes. Meanwhile, such developments raise Ghana's risk profile for all Ghanaian travellers and businesses dealing with overseas parties.
20. Will the Energy Commission do better on this one? Will they? We want the data.
I’ve seen a lot of these takes, and it’s important to understand that beyond age, there’s also a power dynamic at play.
A sexual relationship between a teacher and a student is wrong not only because of age, but because of the position of authority involved.
Even in workplaces, relationships between people in unequal positions or even colleagues often violate policy for this very reason, because power can influence consent, decision-making, and consequences.
This issue has so many layers, but we seem far more willing to scrutinize children or subordinates than the adults who hold the power and SHOULD KNOW BETTER.
If we want to have a separate conversation about minors, consent laws, or sexual activity among young people, that’s fine. But for now, let’s not lose sight of a simple principle: those entrusted with authority have a greater responsibility to act appropriately.
There is a huge pedo problem
There is a huge problem when it comes to code of ethics
Even lecturers are not allowed to have sexual relations with students within or in other departments how much more shs level of education
If left alone citizens will be indisciplined, they’ll like to cut corners to their advantage. It is human nature. That is why law enforcement and leadership is key to sustainable development
Do you know how “spoilt” young girls in the Americas and Europe are? Most of them get on birth control even before they hit 18.
Go online and search what happened to teachers that tried anything funny with these girls, even the legal ones.
Mo ti afuom ha ne nkurases3m sei aah
The fact that not everyone in SHS is a minor doesn’t change the ethical issue. Teachers should never pursue romantic or sexual relationships with their students. The power imbalance makes genuine consent questionable and undermines the trust placed in educators. Hope this helps