When Adiza Ibrahim, known widely as Kuburah Diamonds, realised she wanted to help women, she made a deliberate choice. She wouldn’t simply give handouts. She would give something more lasting. She wouldn’t just be writing on digital media for likes and comments. She looked beyond the superficial engagement and saw what was really happening. There […] The post Her
The Anglican Diocese of Seychelles in the West Indian Ocean has eternally recognised the Asantehene Nana Agyeman Prempeh I for his unyielding Christian faith while in exile. It concludes the centenary celebrations in Ghana and Seychelles of Prempeh’s return after 27 years. The 166-year-old cathedral, on Monday, October 27, 2025, unveiled a major concrete plaque […] The post Anglican
I’ve had it happen to me—right in the middle of a high-profile product launch, with cameras rolling and a room full of executives watching. Everything had been going smoothly: the lights were perfect, the energy was high, the audience was engaged. I had just wrapped up one segment and was transitioning into the next. I […] The post Mic Check with Mr Dei: When you blank
When Dr. Lawrencia Abena Wurah was honoured with two prestigious distinctions – the Leadership and Organizational Performance Excellence Award and the Resilience and Perseverance Award at the recent graduation ceremony of the Marshalls University College in Accra, one thing became clear – a feat recognising her outstanding academic performance, unwavering determination and her exemplary leadership […] The post Recognising
By Fiifi NETTEY The liberalisation of Ghana’s airwaves transformed the nation’s media landscape. Once dominated by state-controlled broadcasting, the sector has blossomed into a vibrant space of plurality, diversity and competition. Today, radio is not only a tool of entertainment but also a platform for education, national development and democratic engagement. According to the report […] The post Radio
When Ghana was gripped by the ‘no-bed syndrome’ crisis in 2018, the nation’s healthcare system stood at a crossroads. Hospitals were overcrowded, patients were being turned away, and despair filled the headlines. One story in particular, 70-year-old Prince Anthony Opoku Acheampong, who died in his car after seven hospitals turned him away over claims that […] The post Not
By Nnamdi O. MADICHIE The title says it all. “Soccer.” Really? Why should the United States continue to insist on calling the world’s most beloved game something different from what nearly every other country on the planet calls it – football? After all, the sport is played with your feet, not your hands. You kick the ball, not pick it up. […] The post It sucks when
Ei! Is that the feeling when one is approaching age 50? This morning I woke up and I was feeling fine. I drove to work, went for a meeting and came back and all of a sudden I felt some sharp pain on my right butt – that pain that one experiences when some nurses […] The post Useless Column with Mawuli Zogbenu: ‘No spectacles for husbands and wives?’ appeared
The man picked up the IPhone 16 Pro Max and Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra one after the other. He examined each of them critically, then laid them carefully back unto the counter. He was Eli’s 10th Customer. Eli had applied every marketing tactic his boss had taught him on this customer, hoping the man would […] The post Me and
Cycling enthusiast and residents of Tamale have commended Promasidor Ghana, through its flagship brand Cowbell, for its commitment to annual bike caravan, raising awareness on healthy living, wellness, environmental sustainability, cleanliness and awarding deserving cyclists who collected empty sachets of Twisco and Cowbell. The 20-km fun and non-competitive race, which hosted over 740 passionate cyclists […] The post Tamale
I have found a mentor. Not a cheerleader, not a consultant, not a coach: a mentor. Someone whose presence, though infrequent in conversation, remains constant in thought. Someone whose words weigh heavily and linger until I am compelled to live up to them. I call him Sensei. It feels fitting. Not because I study under him […] The post How I Chose My Mentor: The Man I Call Sensei. appeared
Power is changing its form. The traditional image of a nation standing tall behind its borders, projecting strength through armies and diplomacy, now faces a quieter, more widespread type: power without borders. The kind that moves through fibre-optic cables, trade routes, data centres, and remittance channels. The type of power that isn’t held solely by […] The post How Interdependence
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