FDA advises students against tobacco use

A team from the Western Regional Office of the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) Thursday engaged some school children in the Effia Kwesimintsim Municipal Area on the need to avoid tobacco and other substance abuse.

The children were enlightened on the effects the use of other types of substances could have on the human body.

Ms Ivy Dorinda Essien, a Regulatory Officer, said the children were made part of the sensitization programme to arm them with the requisite knowledge to make informed choices as they grew up.

Mr Solomon Boni, the Public Relations Officer, FDA, said the global campaign aimed to raise awareness on the alternative crop production and marketing opportunities for tobacco farmers and encouraged them to grow sustainable, nutritious crops.

The campaign would also expose the tobacco industry’s efforts to interfere with attempts to substitute tobacco growing with sustainable crops, which contributed to the global food crisis.

Close to 800 school children from the municipality were engaged as part of activities to mark World No Tobacco Day, on the theme: ‘We Need Food Not Tobacco’.

Mr Boni said the Authority was also carrying out market surveillance to ensure that consumers were protected against any unwholesome commodities in the market.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Deactivated SIM cards can still be registered – Telecoms Chamber

All unregistered Subscriber Identification Module (SIM) that have been deactivated can still be registered, the Chamber of Telecommunications has assured.

The Chamber said data on the deactivated SIM cards would be restored immediately the user completed the registration exercise using the Ghana Card and biometric data captured by the mobile operator.

In an interview with the Ghana News Agency, Dr Kenneth Ashigbey, Chief Executive Officer, Chamber of Telecommunications, said at least three million unregistered SIM cards had been deactivated as of Thursday morning.

He said as of the May 31, 2023 – the deadline for the SIM registration exercise – about nine million SIM cards had not been registered.

Dr Ashigbey said six million more unregistered SIM cards could be deactivated in the coming days.

He said users of the deactivated SIM cards could not make or receive calls, send or receive text messages, access internet services, and perform mobile money transactions.

However, the deactivated numbers could receive messages from their mobile operator and could also access the code for the registration of the SIM card – *404#

‘It is important that we all take advantage of this window and register our SIM cards now because we don’t know when the National Communications Authority (NCA) will close that window.

‘The Ministry of Communications and Digitalisation, the NCA, and the Telcos are not interested in barring people’s numbers. It is to ensure that these fraudsters that are in the system are taken out,’ Dr Ashigbey said.

The SIM card registration campaign started on October 1, 2021, and was due to end on March 31, 2022.

The National Identification Card, also known as the Ghana Card, is the only document that can be used to undertake the registration exercise.

However, due to some difficulties in the acquisition of the Ghana Card, the NCA extended the deadline for registration multiple times until May 31, 2023, which was communicated as the final deadline.

Dr Ashigbey said about 7.4 million mobile money accounts, holding an amount of GHc200 million have not been registered and thus will be deactivated.

He said monies on blocked accounts would be kept in a special account.

Dr Ashigbey said owners of restored mobile money accounts would be required to undergo a process to have monies restored in their wallets.

‘If you do not have a Ghana Card, go to the National Identification Authority for the card. Once you get the Ghana card, dial the registration code, and get registered. Once you get registered, you will get your number back,’ Dr Ashigbey said.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Upper East has enough rabies vaccines – Dr Dzotsi

Dr Emmanuel Kofi Dzotsi, the Upper East Regional Director of the Ghana Health Service (GHS), says the Region has enough rabies vaccines at its medical store to manage dog bites.

‘We have enough quantities at the Regional Medical Store for the populace to use. It is free, the most important thing is that the Clinician must certify the condition that it is a needed intervention,’ he said.

The Director, at a one day orientation workshop for journalists on risk communication on rabies, prevention and control in the Region, emphasized that ‘not every dog bite is from a rabid dog.’

The workshop was organised by the GHS in collaboration with the USAID, which brought together journalists from various media outlets across the Region.

Dr Dzotsi said the correct source of vaccines was health facilities, ‘Let’s give correct information to the public, for vaccines, the correct source is the facility because rabies vaccine is a cold-chain commodity. So right from its production outside the country, it is in cold-chain.

‘Immediately it arrives at the airport, our cold van transports it to the national cold room and from there, they are transported to the Regional and District cold rooms in our cold vans. So there is no broken cold-chain,’ he explained.

He said with health facilities, members of the public were assured of well preserved, quality and potent vaccines, and further advocated immediate medical attention if anyone had a dog bite, for early remedy, ‘Don’t apply anything to a dog bite wound.’

Per information at the Regional Health Directorate, the Region for the past five years recorded cases of dog bites across all Municipalities and Districts.

In 2018, six suspected cases of dog bites were recorded, two of the cases were from the Bawku Municipality, one from the Bolgatanga Municipality and three from the Bongo District, who all died.

All three suspected cases of dog bites, each from the Bolgatanga and the Kassena-Nankana Municipalities, and the Bawku West District recorded in 2019 died while five suspected cases, one from Builsa South, two from Builsa North and Bawku West respectively, also died in 2020.

In 2021, a suspected case from the Bolgatanga Municipality died, while in 2022, another suspected case was recorded in the Bawku West District with six follow-up dog bites from Garu.

According to the Directorate, the Bawku West case died, while the Garu cases were not clinically diagnosed.

Mr Robert Bayuo, the Regional Data Officer of the Veterinary Services Department, said domestic dogs constituted the major mode of rabies transmission.

‘Dogs are the main sources of human rabies, but rabies remain one of the under reported tropical diseases that affect marginalised and vulnerable people. Rabies is under reported because it has a long incubation period.

‘And so if you get a bite today, sometimes it can take you up to a year before the onset of the disease. So by the time the disease will be manifesting, you might have even forgotten the bite you had in the past,’ Mr Bayuo added.

Source: Ghana News Agency

EU Awards Full Masters Scholarship to 53 Ethiopian Students

The European Union (EU) has awarded a full Masters Scholarship to 53 Ethiopian students for the academic year 2023-2024, according to the Delegation of the EU to Ethiopia.

The students will spend two years in prestigious European Universities in 12 European countries to pursue their Master Degrees in various fields, it added.

In a press release it sent to ENA, the EU Delegation stated that the Erasmus+ Scholarships are exclusively awarded to students coming from both EU and non-EU countries that have been selected to attend one of the Erasmus Mundus Joint Programmes at Masters or Doctorate level.

Ethiopia is one of the top beneficiary countries of the Erasmus programme, it was learned.

Since 2004, Ethiopia has been one of the top five performing countries in the world and top in Africa, both in terms of student selection and applications for the Erasmus Scholarship programme, according to the presser.

Since 2010, the European Union has awarded the Erasmus Mundes Scholarship to more than 500 Ethiopian students.

The EU Delegation Head in Ethiopia, Ambassador Roland Kobia said “the Erasmus+ European scholarships highly contributes to the country’s human development effort in higher education”

The program offers a lifetime opportunity for young Ethiopian students to pursue their studies at the highest level, to learn more about European cultures, languages, academic systems and, not least, people at some of the best universities in Europe.

Apart from improving the student’s expertise, the scholarships are also meant to enrich the student’s life experiences, help create mutual understanding and openness between people and cultures, the ambassador noted.

“We hope that these scholarships will help these students to excel and that they will return to Ethiopia with enhanced skills and knowledge useful for the country and themselves, as well as with fond memories of Europe.”

The Erasmus+ Scholarship programme is a valuable opportunity for Ethiopia as it supports the country’s endeavor of the development of higher learning to address its need of more experts of science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and humanities.

Source: Ethiopian News Agency

Foreign Affairs State Minister, Kuwait Ambassador Hold Talks

Foreign Affairs State Minister Mesganu Arga and Kuwait Ambassador Nayef Hapes Al-Otaibi held talks at his office today.

According to the ministry, the state minister commended the historic and excellent bilateral relations between Ethiopia and Kuwait.

He also expressed his gratitude to the Government of Kuwait for its sustained assistance to Ethiopia at different times. Furthermore, Mesganu called for additional support to the reconstruction and rehabilitation efforts in conflict-affected areas of Ethiopia.

He also emphasized the importance of materializing the Joint Ministerial Commission meeting between the two countries.

The state minister added that both countries should work closely together, alongside the IGAD and the African Union, to help resolve the challenges faced by the Horn of Africa region.

Kuwait Ambassador Nayef Hapes Al-Otaibi on his part reiterated his government’s commitment to expedite the signing of the bilateral labor agreement and the holding of the first Joint Ministerial Commission meeting.

Both sides also exchanged views on various other issues of common interest, it was learned.

Source: Ethiopian News Agency

Gov’t Underlines Need for Investigation of Alleged Aid Misuse or Diversions

The Government of Ethiopia has condemned misuse of aid and stressed the need for investigation of allegations of misuse or diversions.

In a presser it released today, the Ethiopian Disaster Risk Management Commission stated that “the way forward comprises continuing taking resolute actions to ensure accountability and installing safeguards solely based on mutual understanding and humanitarian objectives.”

The government has been working with the UN and other bilateral and multilateral partners to facilitate aid delivery and accelerate post-conflict recovery programs, the pressed added.

Moreover, the government has a coordinated system among the relevant agencies and is cooperating with the donor community to ensure that aid reaches the beneficiaries.

According to the commission, the Pretoria Peace Agreement has created a safe and conducive environment for sustained, and unimpeded humanitarian access to communities affected by the conflict.

Condemning therefore any misuse of aid, it noted that the government has a track record of holding those found responsible for abuse accountable and is working with regional authorities in ensuring accountability.

Source: Ethiopian News Agency