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This place dier, every time it rains heavily it go flood 🤦🏾♀️
SIKAOFFICIAL🦍@SIKAOFFICIAL1
Heavy rains today have caused significant flooding on the Bel-Aqua stretch of the Accra-Aflao Road in Dawhenya, disrupting traffic movement on the stretch. [🎥: Kesse9223]
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Disturbing photos have surfaced showing health workers at the Fame Health Centre in Tatindo, a rural community in the Tatale-Sanguli District of the Northern Region, reportedly transporting a referred patient in a tricycle due to the absence of ambulance services.
The incident, reportedly not an isolated case is how staff have been forced to transfer critically ill patients to higher-level facilities.
[📸: Stephen Opoku Awudu]


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What happened at the Police Hospital? — Prof. Badu Akosa, Chairman of the Ghana Medical and Dental Council, breaks it down on Point of View with Bernard Avle, describing it as the saddest part of the Charles Amissah case.
Watch here: youtu.be/8DlHbcoDRno
#PointofView #EmergencyHealthcare #CitiNewsroom #CharlesAmissah #ProfBaduAkosa

YouTube
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When you see a How Ghanaian Are You? x @ChaleCheck event you know you’ve to pull up 🇬🇭🔥
Endless interactions, new connections & the sweetest community energy every single time 🫶🏾✨
#HowGhanaianAreYou #Ghana #GameNight
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#TechAdvocay 🇬🇭: Ghana should be building Africa’s next generation of tech giants.
Instead, we are debating whether software developers, startup founders, cybersecurity professionals, AI engineers, and freelancers need government approval to work.
If this #NITADraftBill2025 passes in its current form, it could become one of the most dangerous policy mistakes in Ghana’s digital history.
1️⃣. Let’s call this what it is:
A Bill that risks turning innovation into permission.
A young Ghanaian with a laptop, internet connection, and coding skills may now face certification barriers just to participate in the digital economy.
2️⃣. Section 46 of the NITA Draft Bill says no person can be appointed as an ICT professional in a public or private institution unless certified by the Authority.
So now government wants to decide who is “qualified” to work in tech?
That should scare every young Ghanaian.
3️⃣ Tech does not work like traditional bureaucracy.
Some of the best developers in the world are self-taught.
Some learned from YouTube.
Some learned from GitHub.
Some started from internet cafés.
Innovation has never depended on permission slips.
4️⃣ Which major African tech ecosystem became successful through state licensing of developers?
Not Nigeria 🇳🇬
Not Kenya 🇰🇪
Not Rwanda 🇷🇼
Not South Africa 🇿🇦
Those countries focused on startup growth, innovation funding, venture capital, infrastructure, and talent development. Not gatekeeping who can code.
5️⃣ Nigeria passed a @StartupActNg to CREATE an enabling environment for innovation and digital entrepreneurship.
Ghana is discussing legislation that many young developers fear could RESTRICT entry into the ecosystem.
That contrast matters.
6️⃣ Kenya became “Silicon Savannah” because regulators gave innovation room to breathe.
Imagine if M-Pesa had first needed years of licensing bureaucracy before launch. Africa’s fintech revolution may never have happened.
7️⃣ Rwanda is aggressively positioning itself as an innovation destination for AI, fintech, cloud infrastructure, and startups.
Meanwhile Ghana is debating prison terms, licensing structures, and enforcement powers around ICT participation.
How are we competing globally with this mindset?
8️⃣ The Bill gives NITA broad powers to:
• suspend licences
• revoke licences
• prohibit ICT activity
• seize equipment
• approve certain operational changes
This goes far beyond “professional standards.”
9️⃣ The scariest part?
The definitions are broad.
“ICT services.”
“Digital platforms.”
“Related ICT activities.”
In law, broad wording creates uncertainty and uncertainty kills startups.
🔟. Investors hate environments where rules can suddenly expand without clarity.
Young founders avoid ecosystems where regulation feels unpredictable.
Talent relocates where innovation feels safer. This is how brain drain accelerates.
11. Ghana already struggles with:
• youth unemployment
• startup funding gaps
• venture capital shortages
• limited support for creators and builders
The tech ecosystem is one of the few spaces where young people can create global opportunities from Ghana. Why make entry harder?
12. The irony is painful.
The same government talking about digital transformation may now create barriers for the very people driving that transformation.
You cannot build a digital economy while policing innovation like a controlled profession.
13. Every major global tech success story started with experimentation.
Facebook.
Google.
Stripe.
WhatsApp.
Flutterwave.
Paystack.
Most started with builders moving faster than regulation.
14. Regulation is important.
Cybersecurity matters.
Consumer protection matters.
Data governance matters.
But smart regulation protects innovation and bad regulation suffocates it.
15. Ghana needs policies that encourages:
• startups
• AI innovation
• software engineering
• digital freelancing
• remote work
• youth entrepreneurship
• global competitiveness!

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na gif my club use announce am cause no be new thing, meanwhile those ones go call TG omori. new taker 😭😭
Chelsea FC@ChelseaFC
CHELSEA ARE PREMIER LEAGUE CHAMPIONS! 🏆 #ChelseaChampions
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Salaries in Ghana: Over 60% of Ghanaians can’t save from their salaries every month
- Prof. Smart Sarpong [Snr. Researcher, KsTU] #JoySMS
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there’s like a whole “subgenre” of hiphop rappers like this with sick projects from 2010 through to 2020
I’m talking about jay electronica, jay rock, ab soul, schoolboy q, Isaiah Rashad, bas, cozz and them. (You get it)
Also they have some amazing joint projects (TDE boys esp)
Weffrey Jellington@jeffwellz
This album by Jay Electronica and Jay Z is so good I couldn’t stop listening when I first found it. Don’t even know how to describe it but those who’ve listened understand me.
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Throwback to an iconic How Ghanaian Are You? experience with @ChaleCheck at Wing Man East Legon. 🥤🀄️
#HowGhanaianAreYou #ThrowBackThursday #Ghana #GameNight
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