Seidu Kpebu

19.8K posts

Seidu Kpebu

Seidu Kpebu

@kpebu

Communications Consultant, Former Human Rights Director, Pan Africanist. Social citizen of the world from the constituency of Ghana

Ghana Katılım Eylül 2009
2K Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
ExMasturbator Saved By JESUS🙏🏽
Hello @realDonaldTrump on behalf of all Ghanaians don’t give a dime to any Ghanaian asking for reparations.. none of them or their family or ancestors have been slaves because if they were they wouldn’t even be in Ghana .. Ghanaians sold their own people into slavery to white man and as such don’t deserve any reparations.. if anyone deserves reparations it’s the black Americans … thank you sir
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@SaddickAdams Argentina voted against Ghana's resolution on chatel slave trade. Ask yourself why they aren't blacks in that country. They used to exterminate blacks and finally pushed all of them to Brazil and other Latin American countries. They considered blacks a curse and evil spirits.
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Saddick Adams
Saddick Adams@SaddickAdams·
Check the countries that abstained from voting TransAtlantic Slave Trafficking as crime against humanity. Britain leads 😂
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@_GhChronicles They've already started in earnest. Shameless. Always taking credit for what they haven’t worked for.
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Ghana Chronicles
Ghana Chronicles@_GhChronicles·
NPP will soon applaud Nana Addo for this.
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@SamuelAyeh13 I have consistently warned the whole country to beware of Sulemana Braimah and Manasseh Azure. These are entrepreneurs of downers.
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DR SAMMY AYEH
DR SAMMY AYEH@SamuelAyeh13·
Incongruous Sulemana Braimah , what really is your position on Big push projects ? After being exposed that not all the contracts were single-sourced as you want us to believe , you’re now talking about value for money Where is the findings of your independent valuation report?
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@nyavorx @fourthestategh Of course, the Forth Estate thrives on scandal exposè. Where there are no scandals, they would attempt to manufacture one. Without scandals they're irrelevant as a media outlet.
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A-Jay🇨🇦🇬🇭
This is the before-and-after of the Pokuase-Nsawam road. According to @fourthestategh, we should go and destroy it because it was a sole-sourced contract.
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@lordcudjoe Not shocking. That was always the plan, just so they could embarrass the President.
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Franklin CUDJOE
Franklin CUDJOE@lordcudjoe·
Just in- Lincoln University withdraw Mahama honorary doctorate because of his stance on LGBTQ+. Shocking!! See below! FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Ghana Embassy Expresses Disappointment Over Lincoln University’s Late Concerns Regarding Visit of H.E. John Dramani Mahama Washington, D.C. | March 24, 2026 The Embassy of the Republic of Ghana in the United States wishes to express its profound disappointment regarding a last-minute communication received from Lincoln University concerning the scheduled visit of the President of the Republic of Ghana, John Dramani Mahama, on Thursday, March 26, 2026. The visit, which includes the conferment of an honorary doctorate degree, honoris causa, had been agreed upon following extensive prior engagement between the University and the Embassy. Indeed, only last week, officials of the Embassy, together with representatives of Lincoln University, conducted a full walkthrough and finalized all logistical and programmatic arrangements ahead of the President’s visit. It is therefore both surprising and regrettable that, just hours ago, the Embassy received a communication from the University indicating that concerns had been raised by a group regarding President Mahama’s perceived position on Ghana’s Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, currently before Parliament. The University has indicated that these concerns did not surface during its earlier due diligence and vetting processes prior to extending the invitation to President Mahama. The Embassy wishes to place on record the following: •President Mahama’s visit was formally accepted in good faith, following an official invitation by Lincoln University, an institution with deep historical ties to Ghana, including its distinguished association with Ghana’s first President, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah. •All preparations for the visit have been duly completed, reflecting a shared commitment to the success of this important engagement. •The timing of this development is deeply concerning, particularly as it arises after all arrangements have been concluded and with the President already in the United States—having arrived in New York in anticipation of honoring the University’s invitation. While the Embassy acknowledges Lincoln University’s right to engage its internal stakeholders and uphold its institutional values, we note with concern that the issues now being raised relate to ongoing legislative processes within Ghana, which are subject to democratic deliberation and are not the unilateral position of any one individual. President Mahama has consistently demonstrated leadership grounded in democratic principles, respect for human rights, and inclusive dialogue on complex societal issues. It is therefore unfortunate that these concerns have emerged at such an advanced stage, without prior engagement or clarification. The Embassy remains committed to constructive dialogue and mutual respect. We trust that the longstanding and historic relationship between Ghana and Lincoln University will guide a thoughtful and balanced resolution of this matter.
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@CallmeAlfredo Stop this nonsense. You guys are the very reason why this country cannot develop. Entrepreneurs in downers.
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Alfred
Alfred@CallmeAlfredo·
When over 75% of contracts are awarded through sole sourcing, it’s no longer an exception. It’s the norm. There is no “urgency” that justifies sole sourcing road construction at that scale. How do we know the state is getting value for money? How do we guard against political favouritism? The current government campaigned loudly against the abuse of sole sourcing while in opposition. Awarding over 75% of contracts this way between September and February is the very abuse they once condemned. As for the justifications, politicians will always come up with them. An extra couple of months to go through competitive tendering will not be the end of the world. Unless there is something improper to hide, all multi-year, multimillion-cedi projects should be subject to competitive tendering. Sole sourcing must be the exception, not the norm!
The Fourth Estate@fourthestategh

President Mahama and the governing NDC vowed that they would avoid the abuse of sole-sourcing. But in the government’s flagship Big Push programme, there appears to be a complete disregard for this pledge. Read more here 👉🏾 bit.ly/4bJVgIL

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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@SammyGyamfi_ @Bridget_Otoo What's the value of journalism if it's intended to derail the progress of critical development projects and programmes? If a sole sourced contract can genuinely resolve a nagging national challenge what's wrong with it? This clear abuse of journalism and the freedom granted.
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Sammy Gyamfi
Sammy Gyamfi@SammyGyamfi_·
1. The deplorable state of our roads is one of the biggest national security threats we face as a country. Bad roads have claimed many lives through fatal road accidents, armed robbery etc. 2. I am reliably informed that, the Surveying, Designing and Costing of Big Push road projects alone took the Ministry of Roads about 7 months to complete. 3. Resorting to the National Competitive Tendering process for the award of these critical road projects would have taken another couple months before the projects could even commence. This could have delayed the completion of most of the projects beyond 2028. 4. Competitive tendering processes have in some cases lasted for months. A typical example is the competitive tendering process for the Road Toll project that has not still be completed in about a year due to its complexities. 5. Section 40 of the Public Procurement Law provides for Single Source procurement method on grounds of urgency, among others, subject to the approval of the Public Procurement Authority (PPA). Thus, sole sourcing is lawful. The unjustified use and abuse of sole sourcing is what President Mahama and the NDC have condemned. 6. There is not a scintilla of evidence in the Fourth Estate publication that shows that the use of sole sourcing for the said Big Push road projects was unjustified or that there were any breaches of the law or abuse of the process. Neither was any evidence of the cost of the projects being inflated adduced by the Fourth Estate. 6. In opposition, the NDC never said sole-sourcing was a sin or unlawful. We only preached against the unjustified use and abuse of sole-sourcing in the award of government projects, some of which were established by the Auditor General to be inflated. In fact, some of us cited audit findings of the Auditor General to show that sole-sourced cocoa road projects, some of which were awarded to Bawumia’s brother were inflated. 7. In the case of the Big Push road projects, all projects that were awarded through sole sourcing received prior PPA approval as same was justified on grounds of URGENCY. Value for Money audits were conducted. The contracts were not awarded to a select few but rather carefully selected, multiple, competent and experienced contractors with demonstrable capacity to complete the works on time. None of the contracts have been established to be inflated. The urgency of the projects cannot be denied. And like all road projects, payments are based on actual work done certified by independent Consultants. 8. As a matter of fact, 23 out of 84 Big Push road projects, such as Suame Interchange, Ofankor- Nsawam, Adenta- Dodowa, etc. are inherited road projects that were all awarded by the previous NPP government through sole-sourcing with no dedicated funding. This government has simply novated the projects, maintained the contractors and provided for funding for them under the Big Push policy. The 23 road projects were not re-awarded. Yet, the Fourth Estate has mischievously added all these projects to their list of sole-sourced contracts awarded by this government. Clearly they could have done a better job. 9. So what’s the point really? The NDC spoke against sole-sourcing in the past so every resort by the NDC to sole-sourcing in government must be condemned? Is that the logic being canvassed by the Fourth Estate? A classical case of comparing oranges with apples.
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@AnnanPerry When a country incubates entrepreneurial mercenary journalists, that's what happens. These are exploiting media freedom for personal gains. As a stakeholder in the media, I feel disappointed with our standards lately. However, there are still some fine journalists out there.
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KOJO DYNAMIC 𓃵
KOJO DYNAMIC 𓃵@AnnanPerry·
23 of the big push projects were project NPP awarded on sole sourcing and abandoned. Suame interchange, Ofankor, Adenta Dodowa etc . We novated them as big push to give them a new life and complete them . The fourth Estate added all that. #BigPushRoadsEverywhere #AbanPapaAba
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@AfricanJesu That's why you don't hear them talk about Pan-Africaniism. They're indeed mentally colonised.
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AfricanJesu
AfricanJesu@AfricanJesu·
A few things I've learnt from this war: Nigerians are mentally colonized Nigerians know next to nothing about geopolitics Nigerians are easily propagandized by religion If slavery were to return today, Nigerians will walk themselves onto the slave ships and chain themselves
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ᴅʀ ꜰ. ꜰʀᴀɴᴄɪꜱ
Something to learn from Iran: Nations should be independent, build their own weapons, control their resources, and be ready to face every bully. Unfortunately, the majority of African nations are still asleep.
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Dennis Edward Aboagye
Dennis Edward Aboagye@DennisMiracles·
Quiet unfortunate, to see our cocoa, being traded in local markets like tomatoes. Cocoa has been an anchor to this country for over 136years We risk losing it all without knowing what the sustainable altenative would be. May be, with this, it’s time for everyone to see what The People’s Forum has been talking about all these weeks. There’s something fundamentally amiss with the Government’s management of this important sector and that needs to be addressed with all seriousness. We know the government is a mess and a waste but we can’t sit by and simply watch them destroy cocoa. Whiles you underrate the seriousness of the current situation, note that, cocoa is being traded in our local markets so cocoa farmers can have money to buy salt and pepper. And this is happening becos Government cannot find money to pay them and buy their cocoa.
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@JoyNewsOnTV God is watching all of you. That's if you believe in Him. This is so annoying. What else should H.E. President Mahama do for you? Just so unfair to a President who is working his socks off to create favourable business environment for you. You had 35% lending rate in the past.
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Seidu Kpebu retweetledi
Ghana Police Service
Ghana Police Service@GhPoliceService·
ON THIS BLESSED OCCASION OF EID-AL-FITR, THE GHANA POLICE SERVICE EXTENDS WARM WISHES TO ALL MUSLIMS ACROSS THE COUNTRY MAY THIS TIME OF SACRIFICE, PEACE, AND UNITY BRING BLESSINGS TO YOU AND YOUR FAMILIES. EID MUBARAK 🙏🌙🌟
Ghana Police Service tweet media
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@Hajjyass70 Has the Chief imam issued a statement confirming today Friday as Eid?
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Muhammad Yaasiin
Muhammad Yaasiin@Hajjyass70·
So my babe won’t be calling me at 3:00 am again now that Ramadan is over? Insha Allah, next year she’ll be tapping me to wake up from bed instead of calling 🙏🏾.
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@sheikhwithswag That's contrary to what Islam prescribes. "Your geographical arear" cannot be anywhere in the world. Just so unfortunate that people are trying to legitimise illegality. We have significantly wide time zones and that must be taken into consideration why "Geographical area".
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Sheikh Abdul Rahman Abubakar
Sheikh Abdul Rahman Abubakar@sheikhwithswag·
Please let’s have a clear education here: Global sighting does NOT mean Saudi only. It means accepting a reliable moon sighting from anywhere in the world. The Question for some is So why Saudi often? A thread
Sheikh Abdul Rahman Abubakar@sheikhwithswag

Ghana’s Ramadan moon 🌙 or Saudi’s moon? 🇬🇭Is following Saudi Arabia really a Fiqh position? Let’s talk knowledge, not noise. Please don’t forget to repost and let’s educate the Ummah the Ummah’s unity should be our priority. #jummahmubarak May Allah accept our Ibaadah #ameen

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Nana Ama
Nana Ama@char_osei·
Day 19: The authority of the Skin In northern Ghana, authority is not represented by a stool. It is represented by the skin. Chiefs are not enthroned or enstooled. They are enskinned. The skin is not a mere seat—it is the symbol of office, legitimacy and lineage. It connects the chief to generations before him and defines his place within the traditional order. And not every chief may use any skin. The type of skin is governed by rank and custom. Certain skins are reserved for paramount rulers, while others are assigned to sub-chiefs—each one signalling authority, hierarchy and responsibility. Even when a chief sits on a chair, the rule remains: The chair must rest on the skin. Because the authority does not come from the chair. It comes from the skin. In most of northern Ghana, leadership is not assumed. It is inherited, structured, and symbolised. #GhanaAt69 #NorthernGhana #ghanamonth🇬🇭 #TraditionalAuthority Pictures - Copyright: ©2015, William Haun
Nana Ama tweet mediaNana Ama tweet media
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@goalsside Nonsense. In 1976 Morocco against Guinea: Morocco left the field, after Guinea scored a goal, and later came back and won the game to lift the cup. I expected quality arguments from the legend.
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Seidu Kpebu
Seidu Kpebu@kpebu·
@sammybartels @kojofrimpong Massa you people should stop this legal gymnastics. It makes the case even worse. The response of CAF President, Mostepe, is a slap in the face of football lovers in Africa and across the world. The anger across the world shouldn't be doused by any attempt to shield corruption.
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Samuel Bartels
Samuel Bartels@sammybartels·
Here are my initial thoughts on the CAF Appeals Committee's recent decision: 1. It's important for each party involved to have the right to assert their perspective and take steps to support or defend their position. Morocco was entitled to appeal after considering the relevant laws following the DC decision, and Senegal has the right to pursue whatever remedies they see fit. 2. This is a critical juncture for CAF; they find themselves under scrutiny in the public eye. The legitimacy of their decision is being questioned, and state actors are likely to weigh in, making this a particularly significant ruling. 3. It's crucial to recognize that it was a judicial body of CAF that decided to revoke Senegal’s title—not CAF as a whole or its President. However, the controversies surrounding CAF’s seeming favoritism towards Morocco, along with the recent postponement of WAFCON, create a troubling context that cannot be overlooked. Are these factors simply correlated, or do they play a causal role? 4. The CAF President is emphasizing the integrity and impartiality of the members of its judicial bodies. While it’s unjust to question their honesty, the inconsistency of decisions made by CAF and its judicial bodies will inevitably be revisited and examined closely. 5. There has been considerable emphasis on fairness and proportionality in this case. CAS historically has leaned towards proportionate responses and maintaining sporting integrity. Is the decision to strip a continental title—an esteemed accolade in African sports—a justified reaction to a 17-minute protest that involved no violence and where the game continued? Will CAS adhere to its own standards regarding "Sporting Integrity"? 6. Are there possible resolutions beyond the binary options currently presented? Is it simply Senegal retaining the trophy versus Morocco winning 3-0 and being crowned champions? Such dichotomies tend to simplify complex issues and stifle creativity. Does the law permit a more nuanced solution that addresses the concerns of all stakeholders? 7. It’s highly likely that the final ruling from CAS will leave no party entirely satisfied, creating lasting repercussions in African football. Is the sport prepared for the aftereffects of what may be a hollow victory? 8. CAF President Dr. Motsepe claims this is about legacy. Yet, which interpretation of this situation will redeem CAF and African football from the chaos that followed Senegal's 1-0 win in the 2025 Final? 9. What will the final decision mean for both his legacy and that of CAF? How might it alter the landscape of African football? Could the very legacy that Motsepe aims to build inadvertently tarnish his time as CAF President? 10. “Fiat iustitia ruat caelum”—"Let justice be done though the heavens fall!"
Yaw@theyawofosu

🗣️ CAF President speaks.. Dr. Motsepe speak for the first time after the Appeals Committee ruling of the AFCON final between Morocco and Senegal. Called for respect of the decision of the Appeals Committee.

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