30.10.06

Addo- Kufuor inaugurates assemblies in Upper West

Dr Kwame Addo-Kufuor, Minister of Defence on Monday inaugurated a 27-member newly constituted Wa West District Assembly at Wechiau in the Upper West Region.


He read the President's inaugural speech in which he charged the Assembly members to serve their country at the decentralized level of governance in a way that would make their constituents feel they were also participating in the governance of their nation.

He advised the members not to seek their personal interest against the public good and warned that members who used their positions to gain contracts or undue favours from assemblies, would be committing a very serous offence and liable to sanctions.

Dr Addo-Kufuor urged District Chief Executives to discharge their responsibilities creditably in order to convince everybody that they were nominated with the people's interest as the paramount consideration.

Mr Daniel Kuusogno Dari, the district Chief Executive said the Assembly has been allocated a total of 25 billion cedis since 2004 out of which 13.8 billion cedis had been received and expended on programmes aimed at improving the living conditions of the people.
These funds, he said came from the District Assemblies' Common Fund, HIPC relief fund, District Wide Assistance Project and the Youth Employment Fund.
Dr Addo-Kufuor also inaugurated the 25-member Wa Municipal Assembly at a well-attended ceremony at Wa during which he read the President's inaugural speech.
GNA

Elizabeth Ohene inaugurates Birim South District Assembly

Ms Elizabeth Ohene, Minister of State at the Office of the President on Monday inaugurated an 81-member Birim South District Assembly at Akyem Oda. The assembly is made up of 54 elected members, 24 Government appointees and three ex-officio members, including the District Chief Executive, Mr Frank Kwame Busumtwi, Mr Yaw Osafo-Maafo and Mr Felix Owusu-Adjapong, Members of Parliament for Akyem Oda and Akyem Swedru, respectively.

The occasion coincided with the inauguration of three Metro Mass Transport buses for the area. Ms Ohene who read a speech on behalf of President John Agyekum Kufuor, urged the assembly members not to seek their personal interest against the public good.


He said any member who would use his or her positions to gain contracts or undue favours from the assembly would be committing a serious offence and conflict of interest and should be liable to sanction.


In a welcoming address, Mr Busumtwi cautioned the new assembly members that being assembly member was not an easy task. "It requires hard work, perseverance, dedication, humility and tolerance", he said.


Mr Busumtwi expressed worry that the assembly had not been able to achieve its revenue target for the past three years and expressed the hope that with the crop of new assembly members' things would change for the better.


He mentioned sanitation as a major problem facing the assembly, adding that it was faced with the problem of getting land for final disposal site for both solid and liquid waste.

The assembly later elected Mr Robert Amoah, a 44-year-old educationist, as the Presiding Member. Mr Amoah, who was the only contestant, polled 74 out of the total 76 votes cast.He thanked the assembly members for the confidence reposed in him and gave the assurance that he would live up to expectation.

Rotary organizes free eye screening and treatment

Dr Francis Odame, Specialist Ophthalmologist of the Korle Bu and La Hospitals, on Monday suggested the establishment of an eye bank, saying this is important to replace some damaged parts of the eyes of patients.

He admitted that the establishment of such a bank would not be easy but could be done if there were ready donations to serve as stock. Dr Odame was speaking to journalists at an exercise to screen for glaucoma and cataract in Accra and its environs.

He said there was no single eye bank in West Africa but the idea was important to replace some damaged eye components through donations from those who passed away.
Dr Odame called for routine eye check-ups for school-going children while employers should also make it mandatory for workers to go for check-ups.


The eye screening exercise, which is free, is part of efforts by the Rotary Clubs of Accra Ring Road Central D9100, Windsor, Canada and the Rotary Eye Institute Navsari of India to bring medical assistance to the doorsteps of the needy.


It is also to create awareness about eye diseases and disorders. The programme would be followed up with medical treatment as well as surgeries at the La General Hospital.


Over 70 patients would undergo surgery, 400 would be given medicated glasses while others would receive medication. Dr Viral Purohit, Head of the Rotary Eye Institute Navsari of India and also leader of a 13-member team, said it was the hope of the Institute to establish a clinic in Ghana.


He said a mobile clinic would also be established to take care of the poor in the villages.
GNA

UN Internet Governance Forum to Focus on Development

Meeting for the first time in Athens from 30 October to 2 November, the United Nations Internet Governance Forum will focus on "Internet Governance for Development." The theme was determined by the strong consensus reached at the World Summit on the Information Society and afterwards that the Internet should be a key for development, said Markus Kummer, Executive Director of the Forum's secretariat.

Topics to be addressed at the Forum include free flow of information and access to knowledge, threats to Internet security such as spam and "phishing," the "multilingualization" of the Internet, international domain names not in the English alphabet, and expanding access for users in poor countries.

There will be no negotiated outcome, but the Forum will seek to stimulate a dialogue between the private sector, civil society and the academic and technical communities and their institutions, who are running the Internet and have their tradition of informal bottom-up decision-making and networked communication; and the more formal and structured world of governments and intergovernmental organizations.

The Greek Prime Minister, Kostas Karamanlis, will speak at the opening on Monday, which will also be addressed by the two "fathers of the Internet," Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn, co-inventors of the TCP/IP protocols.

The Greek Minister of Transport and Communications, Michalis Liapis, will chair the four-day meeting. Nitin Desai, the Chairman of the Forum's Advisory Group, will chair the session devoted to discussing the way forward. More than 30 workshops will be held in parallel to the main session.

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