Monday, 15 August 2016

HISTORY OF GHANA (1966-79) 2 BETTER copy

History of Ghana (1966–79)

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1966–79

Leaders of the 1966 military coup, including army officers Colonel E.K. Kotoka, Major A.A. Afrifa, Lieutenant General (retired) J.A. Ankra, and Police Inspector General J.W.K. Harlley, justified their takeover by charging that the CPPadministration was abusive and corrupt. They were equally disturbed by Nkrumah's aggressive involvement in African politics and by his belief that Ghanaian troops could be sent anywhere in Africa to fight so-called liberation wars, even though they never did so. Above all, they pointed to the absence of democratic practices in the nation—a situation they claimed had affected the morale of the armed forces. According to General Kotoka, the military coup of 1966 was a nationalist one because it liberated the nation from Nkrumah's dictatorship—a declaration that was supported by Alex QuaisonSackey, Nkrumah's former minister of foreign affairs.[1]

Despite the vast political changes that were brought about by the overthrow ofKwame Nkrumah, many problems remained. For example, the underlying ethnic and regional divisions within the society had to be addressed. The apparent spirit of national unity that seemed to have developed during the Nkrumah years turned out to have resulted in part from his coercive powers as well as from his charisma. As a consequence, successive new leaders faced the problem of forging disparate personal, ethnic, and sectional interests into a nation with shared identity and interests. The economic burdens, aggravated by what some[who?] described as past extravagance, crippled each future government's ability to foster the rapid development needed to satisfy even minimal popular demands for a better life. The fear of a resurgence of an overly strong central authority continued to dominate the constitutional agenda and to pervade the thinking of many educated, politically minded Ghanaians. Others, however, felt that a strong government was essential.[1]

A considerable portion of the population had become convinced that effective, honest government was incompatible with competitive political parties. Many Ghanaians remained committed to non-political leadership for the nation, even in the form of military rule. The problems of the Busia administration, the country's first elected government after Nkrumah's fall, illustrated the problemsGhana would continue to face.[1]

National Liberation Council and the Busia years, 1966–71Edit

The leaders of the coup that overthrew Nkrumah immediately opened the country's borders and its prison gates to allow the return from exile or release from preventive detention of all opponents of Nkrumah. The National Liberation Council (NLC), composed of four army officers and four police officers, assumed executive power. It appointed a cabinet of civil servants and promised to restore democratic government as quickly as possible. The ban on the formation of political parties remained in force until late 1968, but activity by individual figures began much earlier with the appointment of a succession of committees composed of civil servants and politicians as the first step in the return to civilian and representative rule.[2]

These moves culminated in the appointment of a representative assembly to draft a constitution for the Second Republic of Ghana. Political party activity was allowed to commence with the opening of the assembly. By election time in August 1969, the first competitive nationwide political contest since 1956, five parties had been organized.[2] The assembly produced a document providing for a parliamentary republic with a president as head of state and a prime minister as head of government. Largely in response to Nkrumah's authoritarian excesses, the president's powers were greatly reduced, to a point almost entirely ceremonial. Real power rested with the prime minister and cabinet.

1969 electionEdit

The major contenders were the Progress Party (PP), headed by Kofi A. Busia, and the National Alliance of Liberals (NAL), led by Komla A. Gbedemah. Critics associated these two leading parties with the political divisions of the early Nkrumah years. The PP found much of its support among the old opponents of Nkrumah's CPP- -the educated middle class and traditionalists of Ashanti Region and the North. This link was strengthened by the fact that Busia had headed the NLM and its successor, the UP, before fleeing the country to oppose Nkrumah from exile. Similarly, the NAL was seen as the successor of the CPP's right wing, which Gbedemah had headed until he was ousted by Nkrumah in 1961.[2]

The elections demonstrated an interesting voting pattern. For example, the PP carried all the seats among the Asante and the Brong. All seats in the northern regions of the country were closely contested. In the Volta Region, the PP won some Ewe seats, while the NAL won all seats in the non-Ewe northern section. Overall, the PP gained 59 percent of the popular vote and 74 percent of the seats in the National Assembly. The PP's victories demonstrated some support among nearly all the ethnic groups. An estimated 60 percent of the electorate voted.[2]

Busia governmentEdit

Immediately after the elections, Gbedemah was barred from taking his seat in the National Assembly by a Supreme Court decision involving those CPP members who had been accused of financial crimes. Gbedemah retired permanently from active participation in politics. The NAL, left without a strong leader, controlled thirty seats; in October 1970, it absorbed the members of three other minor parties in the assembly to form the Justice Party (JP) under the leadership of Joseph Appiah. Their combined strength constituted what amounted to a southern bloc with a solid constituency among most of the Ewe and the peoples of the coastal cities.[2]

Busia, the PP leader in both parliament and the nation, became prime minister when the National Assembly met in September. An interim three-member presidential commission, composed of Major Afrifa, Police Inspector General Harlley of the NLC, and the chief of the defense staff, Major General A.K. Ocran, served in place of an elected president for the first year and a half of civilian rule. The commission dissolved itself in August 1970. Before stepping down, Afrifa criticized the constitution, particularly provisions that served more as a bar to the rise of a dictator than as a blueprint for an effective, decisive government. The electoral college chose as president Chief Justice Edward Akufo Addo, one of the leading nationalist politicians of the UGCC era and one of the judges dismissed by Nkrumah in 1964.[2]

All attention, however, remained focused on Prime Minister Busia and his government. Much was expected of the Busia administration, because its parliamentarians were considered intellectuals and, therefore, more perceptive in their evaluations of what needed to be done. Many Ghanaians hoped that their decisions would be in the general interest of the nation, as compared with those made by the Nkrumah administration, which were judged to satisfy narrow party interests and, more important, Nkrumah's personal agenda. The NLC had given assurances that there would be more democracy, more political maturity, and more freedom in Ghana, because the politicians allowed to run for the 1969 elections were proponents of Western democracy. In fact, these were the same individuals who had suffered under the old regime and were, therefore, thought to understand the benefits of democracy.[2]

Two early measures initiated by the Busia government were the expulsion of large numbers of non-citizens from the country and a companion measure to limit foreign involvement in small businesses. The moves were aimed at relieving the unemployment created by the country's precarious economic situation. The policies were popular because they forced out of the retail sector of the economy those foreigners, especially Lebanese, Asians, and Nigerians, who were perceived as unfairly monopolizing trade to the disadvantage of Ghanaians. Many other Busia moves, however, were not popular. Busia's decision to introduce a loan program for university students, who had hitherto received free education, was challenged because it was interpreted as introducing a class system into the country's highest institutions of learning. Some observers even saw Busia's devaluation of the national currency and his encouragement of foreign investment in the industrial sector of the economy as conservative ideas that could undermine Ghana's sovereignty.[2]

The opposition Justice Party's basic policies did not differ significantly from those of the Busia administration. Still, the party attempted to stress the importance of the central government rather than that of limited private enterprise in economic development, and it continued to emphasize programs of primary interest to the urban work force. The ruling PP emphasized the need for development in rural areas, both to slow the movement of population to the cities and to redress regional imbalance in levels of development. The JP and a growing number of PP members favoured suspension of payment on some foreign debts of the Nkrumah era. This attitude grew more popular as debt payments became more difficult to meet. Both parties favoured creation of a West African economic community or an economic union with the neighbouring West African states.[2]

1972 coup and backgroundEdit

Despite broad popular support garnered at its inception and strong foreign connections, the Busia government fell victim to an army coup within twenty-seven months. Neither ethnic nor class differences played a role in the overthrow of the PP government. The crucial causes were the country's continuing economic difficulties, both those stemming from the high foreign debts incurred by Nkrumah and those resulting from internal problems. The PP government had inherited US$580 million in medium- and long-term debts, an amount equal to 25 percent of the gross domestic product of 1969. By 1971 the US$580 million had been further inflated by US$72 million in accrued interest payments and US$296 million in short-term commercial credits. Within the country, an even larger internal debt fuelled inflation.[2]

Ghana's economy remained largely dependent upon the often difficult cultivation of and market for cocoa. Cocoa prices had always been volatile, but exports of this tropical crop normally provided about half of the country's foreign currency earnings. Beginning in the 1960s, however, a number of factors combined to limit severely this vital source of national income. These factors included foreign competition (particularly from neighbouring Côte d'Ivoire), a lack of understanding of free-market forces (by the government in setting prices paid to farmers), accusations of bureaucratic incompetence in the Cocoa Marketing Board, and the smuggling of crops into Côte d'Ivoire. As a result, Ghana's income from cocoa exports continued to fall dramatically.[2]

Austerity measures imposed by the Busia administration, although wise in the long run[citation needed], alienated influential farmers, who until then had been PP supporters. These measures were part of Busia's economic structural adjustment efforts to put the country on a sounder financial base. The austerity programs had been recommended by the International Monetary Fund. The recovery measures also severely affected the middle class and the salaried work force, both of which faced wage freezes, tax increases, currency devaluations, and rising import prices. These measures precipitated protests from the Trade Union Congress. In response, the government sent the army to occupy the trade union headquarters and to block strike actions—a situation that some perceived as negating the government's claim to be operating democratically.[2]

The army troops and officers upon whom Busia relied for support were themselves affected, both in their personal lives and in the tightening of the defence budget, by these same austerity measures. As the leader of the anti-Busia coup declared on 13 January 1972, even those amenities enjoyed by the army during the Nkrumah regime were no longer available. Knowing that austerity had alienated the officers, the Busia government began to change the leadership of the army's combat elements. This, however, was the last straw. Lieutenant Colonel Ignatius Kutu Acheampong, temporarily commanding the First Brigade around Accra, led a bloodless coup that ended the Second Republic.[2]

National Redemption Council years, 1972–79Edit

Despite its short existence, the Second Republic was significant in that the development problems the nation faced came clearly into focus. These included uneven distribution of investment funds and favouritism toward certain groups and regions. Furthermore, important questions about developmental priorities emerged. For example, was rural development more important than the needs of the urban population? Or, to what extent was the government to incur the cost of university education? And more important, was the public to be drawn into the debate about the nation's future? The impact of the fall of Ghana's Second Republic cast a shadow across the nation's political future because no clear answers to these problems emerged.[3]

According to one writer,[who?] the overthrow of the PP government revealed that Ghana was no longer the pace-setter in Africa's search for workable political institutions. Both the radical left and the conservative right had failed. In opposing Nkrumah's one- party state, Busia allegedly argued that socialist rule in Ghana had led to unemployment and poverty for many while party officials grew richer at the expense of the masses. But in justifying the one-party state, Nkrumah pointed to the weaknesses of multi-party parliamentary democracy, a system that delayed decision-making processes and, therefore, the ability to take action to foster development. The fall of both the Nkrumah and the Busia regimes seemed to have confused many with regard to the political direction the nation needed to take. In other words, in the first few years after the Nkrumah administration, Ghanaians were unable to arrive at a consensus on the type of government suited to address their national problems.[3]

It was this situation—the inability of the PP government to satisfy diverse interest groups—that ostensibly gave Acheampong an excuse for 13 January takeover. Acheampong's National Redemption Council (NRC) claimed that it had to act to remove the ill effects of the currency devaluation of the previous government and thereby, at least in the short run, to improve living conditions for individual Ghanaians. Under the circumstances, the NRC was compelled to take immediate measures. Although committed to the reversal of the fiscal policies of the PP government, the NRC, by comparison, adopted policies that appeared painless and, therefore, popular. But unlike the coup leaders of the NLC, members of the NRC did not outline any plan for the return of the nation to democratic rule. Some observers accused the NRC of acting simply to rectify their own grievances. To justify their takeover, coup leaders levelled charges of corruption against Busia and his ministers. In its first years, the NRC drew support from a public pleased by the reversal of Busia's austerity measures. The Ghanaian currency was revalued upward, and two moves were announced to lessen the burden of existing foreign debts: the repudiation of US$90 million of Nkrumah's debts to British companies, and the unilateral rescheduling of the rest of the country's debts for payment over fifty years. Later, the NRC nationalized all large foreign-owned companies. But these measures, while instantly popular in the streets, did nothing to solve the country's real problems. If anything, they aggravated the problem of capital flow.[3]

Unlike the NLC of 1966, the NRC sought to create a truly military government; hence, in October 1975, the ruling council was reorganized into the Supreme Military Council (SMC), and its membership was restricted to a few senior military officers. The intent was to consolidate the military's hold over government administration and to address occasional disagreements, conflicts, and suspicions within the armed forces, which by now had emerged as the constituency of the military government. Little input from the civilian sector was allowed, and no offers were made to return any part of the government to civilian control during the SMC's first five years in power. SMC members believed that the country's problems were caused by a lack of organization, which could be remedied by applying military organization and thinking. This was the extent of the SMC philosophy. Officers were put in charge of all ministries and state enterprises; junior officers and sergeants were assigned leadership roles down to the local level in every government department and parastatal organization.[3]

NRC:- early yearsEdit

During the NRC's early years, these administrative changes led many Ghanaians to hope that the soldiers in command would improve the efficiency of the country's bloated bureaucracies. Acheampong's popularity continued into 1974 as the government successfully negotiated international loan agreements and rescheduled Ghana's debts. The government also provided price supports for basic food imports, while seeking to encourage Ghanaians to become self- reliant in agriculture and the production of raw materials. In the Operation Feed Yourself program, all Ghanaians were encouraged to undertake some form of food production, with the goal of eventual food self-sufficiency for the country. The program enjoyed some initial success, but support for it gradually waned.[3]

Whatever limited success the NRC had in these efforts, however, was overridden by other basic economic factors. Industry and transportation suffered greatly as world oil prices rose during and after 1974, and the lack of foreign exchange and credit left the country without fuel. Basic food production continued to decline even as the population grew, largely because of poor price management and urbanization. When world cocoa prices rose again in the late 1970s, Ghana was unable to take advantage of the price rise because of the low productivity of its old orchards. Moreover, because of the low prices paid to cocoa farmers, some growers along the nation's borders smuggled their produce to Togo or Côte d'Ivoire. Disillusionment with the government grew, particularly among the educated. Accusations of personal corruption among the rulers also began to surface.[3]

Reorganisation into SMCEdit

The reorganization of the NRC into the SMC in 1975 may have been part of a face-saving attempt. Shortly after that time, the government sought to stifle opposition by issuing a decree forbidding the propagation of rumours and by banning a number of independent newspapers and detaining their journalists. Also, armed soldiers broke up student demonstrations, and the government repeatedly closed the universities, which had become important centres of opposition to NRC policies.[3]

Despite these efforts, the SMC by 1977 found itself constrained by mounting non-violent opposition. To be sure, discussions about the nation's political future and its relationship to the SMC had begun in earnest. Although the various opposition groups (university students, lawyers, and other organized civilian groups) called for a return to civilian constitutional rule, Acheampong and the SMC favoured a union government—a mixture of elected civilian and appointed military leaders—but one in which party politics would be abolished. University students and many intellectuals criticized the union government idea, but others, such as Justice Gustav Koranteng-Addow, who chaired the seventeen-member ad hoc committee appointed by the government to work out details of the plan, defended it as the solution to the nation's political problems. Supporters of the union government idea viewed multi-party political contests as the perpetrators of social tension and community conflict among classes, regions, and ethnic groups. Unionists argued that their plan had the potential to depoliticize public life and to allow the nation to concentrate its energies on economic problems.[3]

ReferendumEdit

A national referendum was held in March 1978 to allow the people to accept or reject the union government concept. A rejection of the union government meant a continuation of military rule. Given this choice, it was surprising[by whom?] that so narrow a margin voted in favour of union government. Opponents of the idea organized demonstrations against the government, arguing that the referendum vote had not been free or fair. The Acheampong government reacted by banning several organizations and by jailing as many as 300 of its opponents.[3]

The agenda for change in the union government referendum called for the drafting of a new constitution by an SMC-appointed commission, the selection of a constituent assembly by November 1978, and general elections in June 1979. The ad hoc committee had recommended a non-party election, an elected executive president, and a cabinet whose members would be drawn from outside a single- house National Assembly. The military council would then step down, although its members could run for office as individuals.[3]

Leadership coupEdit

In July 1978, in a sudden move, the other SMC officers forced Acheampong to resign, replacing him with Lieutenant General Frederick W.K. Akuffo. The SMC apparently acted in response to continuing pressure to find a solution to the country's economic dilemma. Inflation was estimated to be as high as 300 percent that year. There were shortages of basic commodities, and cocoaproduction fell to half its 1964 peak. The council was also motivated by Acheampong's failure to dampen rising political pressure for changes. Akuffo, the new SMC chairman, promised publicly to hand over political power to a new government to be elected by 1 July 1979.[3]

Despite Akuffo's assurances, opposition to the SMC persisted. Because Akuffo implemented a number of austerity programs which intensified the food shortages and the toll on the people, the call for the formation of political parties intensified. In an effort to gain support in the face of continuing strikes over economic and political issues, the Akuffo government at length announced that the formation of political parties would be allowed after January 1979. Akuffo also granted amnesty to former members of both Nkrumah's CPP and Busia's PP, as well as to all those convicted of subversion under Acheampong. The decree lifting the ban on party politics went into effect on 1 January 1979, as planned. The constitutional assembly that had been working on a new constitution presented an approved draft and adjourned in May. All appeared set for a new attempt at constitutional government in July, when a group of young army officers overthrew the SMC government in June 1979.[3]

References

Works citedEdit

McLaughlin, James L. and David Owusu-Ansah. "Historical Setting" (and subchapters). In A Country Study: Ghana (La Verle Berry, editor). Library of Congress Federal Research Division (November 1994). This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.[1]

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Last edited 2 months ago by Caeciliusinhorto

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Thursday, 5 May 2016

BEWARE OF DANGEROUS PETS. FAKE FRIENDS ARE JUST THE SAME

She Slept With Her Snake And Then The Vet Told Her Something Shocking.
This is a true story about a woman from India who lived in the Middle Ages and had a pet snake, python, which she loved so much. The snake was 4 meters long and looked healthy. However, one day her unusual pet just stopped eating.
This lack of appetite in the snake continued over a few weeks. The desperate woman tried everything she could and offered anything that a snake would like to strangle and eat. Nothing worked, and finally the woman took her loving pet to the veterinarian as a last resort.
The vet listened to the woman carefully and asked, “Does your snake sleep with you at night, wrap around you closely and spread out throughout its length?”
The woman was surprised and with a lot of hope she said, “Yes! Yes! It does it every day and it makes me so sad because I see something asking of me, and I cannot help it feel better.”
Then, the vet said something shocking and most unexpected. “Madam, your pet is not sick; it is just preparing to eat you.” Yes, the python wasn’t sick but it has been preparing to eat her instead!
“Every time, it is creeping and “hugging” you, wrapping around your body, it is checking size to weigh how a great meal you are and how it must be prepared before the attack. And yes, it does not eat, in order to have enough space to digest you more easily,” the vet said.
This story comes with a #moral – Even people close to you, whom you are very affectionate with, can, have mean intentions. You need to identify the snake around you and their true intent. Hugs and kisses are not always honest.
Don’t fear the enemy that attacks you, but the fake friend that hugs you

Tuesday, 5 April 2016

HUMAN FLESH AS PACKAGED CONCERNED BEEF FROM CHINA FOR AFRICAN CONSUMPTION

I tell you the truth, our society has gone down accepting anything so much such that, even by seeing these pictures and the likes, as well as the videos,  people do not believe than to continue in our old merciful state.
Otherwise why haven't we revolt as a nation to have it condemned massively

Thursday, 31 March 2016

AN APPEAL WE CONSIDERED DUE TO CONFESSION STATEMENT

Fauziya Sajana & Heather Dadson

MY RESPONSE TO YOU

 

Indeed passing on information for a feature! Are you guys for real? When do you intend to draw the line? I am done and totally done with this so please spare me the continuing association with something I'm sure even the principal actors would want to wish away. I had debated a response many times but I think you guys are just taking the piss by getting a feature writer or journalist involved in a corporate and personal matter. This is minute in the scheme of stupidity that has engulfed this country so channel your energy there. 

Months ago when you chose to expose the sex scandal at EXP GHANA, I mused at why any person or group of persons will make it their business to delve into the private life of an individual in such detail and tenacity. I mused not only because it was no news since I already had written and audio confessions on the matter. A few details that surprised me were also corroborated by the subject herself. I chose the option to stand by her and to provide a shoulder for solace. Today you are seeking to place me in the limelight of a supposed innocent stumble on an EXP corporate matter. Are you guys for real?

 

Within a week of the story breaking out, Aziz thankfully managed to set up an interview and whisk Nana Yaa from EXP GHANA to their client, WILMAR, in Tema temporarily for obvious reasons and rightly so after hearing the detail of the relationship. I also made numerous enquires at an enormous expense to track you without luck.

 

My view was altered a few weeks ago. I deem it necessary to clear the air in order to heal from the lies, deceit and betrayal. You may call me names but I have learnt a lesson to make God first, myself second and anything else last after the very person who caused so much distress and uncontrolled pressure said “I can die for all she cares and I need psychiatric evaluation”.

 

The detail in your exposure describing Nana Yaa and I could only have come from someone very close or someone who has monitored our conversations, chats and trips in excruciating detail. The aspect of having money I cannot confirm but I'm sure my actions borne out of love show me clearly as having no brains. I also stand accused for being the one responsible for exposing matters I didn't know about in such painful and disgraceful detail.

 

I will shy away from regurgitating already known details which can be taken as fact apart from the use of the emergency pill against pregnancy which was confirmed having been taken 10 times in the 2 year sexual relationship with Aziz and not every month as well as the other guys whom she was purported to be having other amorous affairs with. We had discussed in detail whether the Ernest Hammond who is a civil engineer in Tema, Evans Coker in UK and the Alfred who is a client’s representative working at Tigo were on the list of affairs for which I received vehement denial and assurances of how it could never happen under the sun

 

A few weeks ago when I found out that she had gone to visit Ernest with her bosom friend, Mercy Apaloo of EXP GHANA, I wondered whether it was one of her schemes to find Ernest a girl as I had been told concerning Abena. Two weeks later the story was different when I got to her house to find her in bed with the same Ernest Hammond whom she had denied along with unprintable comments.

 

I neither have a problem with the escapades with Aziz except for the indiscretions nor do I have a problem with Nana Yaa wanting to sleep with every Tom, Dick and Harry for any reason. I forgave her after that episode. All I sought was for healing, some restoration of her self-respect, esteem and decorum. She may do as she pleases - not that it matters to her but for the record. To wit, Nana Yaa has a dog to show for every relationship and on a much lighter side Aziz’s male dog again crossed my bitch to litter 13 puppies as a resounding message. On the aspects of financial malfeasance and other matters I will not wish to comment without sounding contradictory except to say that I know Nana Yaa to be more honourable than to steal from her employers unless she was coerced to do so for many other reasons. She will also not indulge in the obvious. I feel stupid saying this because I least expected her sexual conduct. Let me rather keep mute over this. Who am I to contradict alleged evidence that can put me to shame?

 

Thank you for copying my wife on this saga. I'm also keeping her in copy of this response. I apologise to all and sundry for any indiscretions though committed out of the purity of my heart but please let this be an EXP saga henceforth. Take it as my confession statement and let sleeping dogs lie. I will also implore Aziz and Nana Yaa to do same since it will serve their best interests than to allow the supposed gory videos and audios to be made public. On authority; if our phones were tampered with then at least the nude posts to Aziz and I will be in your custody. With your surveillance and expertise I guess you do not require further details. Perhaps, I should have done this much earlier. I thought it was an EXP issue but it appears progressive enough for me to ask you to either make your demands clear or hold your fire since you have denigrated hard earned reputations enough.

 

All that is meant well ends well. Surely this hasn’t. Her family confirmed their elation it is over but did not expect it in the acrimonious way it has. The rest is history and I have recovered every single tangible asset as ascribed in the earlier email as a matter of principle for the disrespect, lies, deceit, betrayal and disloyalty. Just as I can die for all she cares, you can call me names for all I care and that concludes my story. I am grateful to you and your team, on hindsight, for the exposure whatever the motivation. However, I'm not pleased with the faceless and protracted manner it is taking and for what reason.

 

Posterity will be the judge. Let us not pass judgement even on this response because it may mean a lot more for all than meets the eye in my wisdom. Heather and Fauziya do not go this tangent to name, shame and whatever. Enough has been done and said already and there is absolutely no point in any further and extraneous exposure. It has not been a matter of ignoring you but the shame and anguish for a dastardly act cannot be met by pomp and pageantry. It rather makes one bury ones head under the wings like an ostrich. On the ethics, values and norms or otherwise, I think again enough has been said and done. Drop it. I am sure you can find more nude pictures and videos than we can imagine. Humans want to eat their cakes and have it – LEAVE THEIR JOBS ALONE. I pray this gives you comfort and satisfaction for a job well done and acknowledged.

 

Thank you for your indulgence and may God have mercy on you for your ills and bless you for reconsidering and hearing my humble plea.

Monday, 28 March 2016

COMMUNICATION IN MARRIAGE

INTRODUCTION

DO YOU KNOW THAT COMMUNICATION IS REALLY THE LIFELINE IN MARRIAGE?

SEE THIS!
communication is one of the extraordinary delights of marriage, when it's working. Nothing, not even sexual fulfillment will bring as much enriching intimacy into your relationship.
But it's more than a luxurious pleasure. Call it the lifeline of a love-line of a love-filled marriage ---- the means by which indispensable supplies are transported from husband to wife, and from wife to husband

LIFELINE-LINE SUPPLIES
If you have good communication in your marriage, the lifeline will provide these supplies;
* The knowledge and understanding of one another which you need for intimate closeness
* The interchange of information and ideas you need to work together as a husband-wife team.
* The capacity to work out your differences and resolve your conflicts.* The continuing "in touch" contact you must have to grow together in the same direction, and to be there to suffer each other during the changes and difficulties in life

Monday, 21 March 2016

THE SACRAMENT OF THE HOLY ORDER (PRIESTHOOD) Heb 4: 14-16, 5: 1-4

[Lesson 28: The Sacrament of Holy Orders (Priesthood)] [https://www.olrl.org/Lessons/Lesson28.shtml] (From Web Browser - small, fast and clean)

Thursday, 17 March 2016

RIGHT SIDE SLEEPING IS KILLING

[Why Sleeping On Your Right Side Could Be Killing You | StethNews] [http://www.stethnews.com/1111/why-sleeping-on-your-right-side-could-be-killing-you/] (From Speed Browser - small, fast and clean. Try it: https://goo.gl/dF7NWn)
Avocados naturally treat leukemia, but FDA and officials deny existence of 'anticancer' foods Sunday, July 19, 2015 by: J. D. Heyes Tags: Avocados, leukemia, anticancer foods Avocados 19K Delicious5 diaspora PrintEmailShare (NaturalNews) A new study has found that a lipid found naturally in avocados can be used to fight acute myeloid leukemia, or AML, but to hear the federal Food and Drug Administration tell it, there is no such thing as an "anti-cancer" food. While avocados have widely been credited with providing a number of health benefits – they are packed with vitamins and are great for the skin – now, according to research conducted by Prof. Paul Spagnuolo of Canada's University of Waterloo, they appear to shatter the FDA's claim. As reported by the UK's Independent: AML is a rare form of blood cancer which is most common in people over the age of 65. According to Cancer Research, around 8,600 people are diagnosed with leukaemia each year, 2,600 of which are diagnosed with AML. Around 90 per cent of people diagnosed with AML over the age of 65 die within the first five years. Dr Spagnuolo has developed a drug derived from the lipid, using a compound called Avocatin B, which targets leukaemia stem cells, which "drive the disease," and therefore attack the root cause of the cancer. His findings have been published in the oncology journal Cancer Research. "The stem cell is really the cell that drives the disease," Spagnuolo said, according to a University of Waterloo press release. "The stem cell is largely responsible for the disease developing and it's the reason why so many patients with leukemia relapse." FDA denial "We've performed many rounds of testing to determine how this new drug works at a molecular level and confirmed that it targets stem cells selectively, leaving healthy cells unharmed," he continued. The researcher said that avocatin B "eliminates" the source of AML, and because of its targeted nature, it is less toxic to the rest of the body. While the lipid is years away from being harnessed in a useable clinical form, Spagnuolo is nonetheless preparing for clinical trials. As noted by the university's press release: There are multiple potential applications for Avocatin B beyond oncology, and the drug is just one of several promising compounds that Spagnuolo and his team have isolated from a library of nutraceuticals. Most labs would use food or plant extracts, but Spagnuolo prefers the precision of using nutraceuticals with defined structures. "Extracts are less refined. The contents of an extract can vary from plant to plant and year to year, depending on lots of factors – on the soil, the location, the amount of sunlight, the rain," said Spagnuolo. "Evaluating a nutraceutical as a potential clinical drug requires in-depth evaluation at the molecular level," he added. "This approach provides a clearer understanding of how the nutraceutical works, and it means we can reproduce the effects more accurately and consistently. This is critical to safely translating our lab work into a reliable drug that could be used in oncology clinics." What about these other anticancer foods and spices? And yet, the FDA and other science "experts" won't admit that there indeed are "functional foods" that have anticancer properties. Avemar,[PDF] which is extracted from wheat germ via a patented process, is considered to be one such functional food. The compound has been shown to be an effective anticancer agent in clinical trials in cell, animal and human studies. In addition, as Natural News has reported, watercress can reduce the incidence of breast cancer, as can arugula, which originates from the Mediterranean but has made its way to North American shores in the last few decades, cocoa, because it's loaded with powerful phytochemicals found naturally in the cacao plant -- the source of cocoa and just one of many medicinal Amazon herbs -- and turmeric, a common spice that has been used in Indian cooking for thousands of years. But none of them are recognized by the FDA as being anticancerous. Sources: http://www.independent.co.uk http://www.independent.co.uk http://research.avemar.com[PDF] http://www.truthwiki.org/avocado/ http://www.truthwiki.org/Medical_Fascism/ http://www.truthwiki.org/cancer/ http://www.truthwiki.org/turmeric Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/050452_Avocados_leukemia_anticancer_foods.html#ixzz43E1vxvLI

Friday, 11 March 2016

A National Holiday, A National disgrace

A National Holiday, A National disgrace

This is how a Kenyan newspaper, The Daily Nation reported it.

“Ghana made a farce of its Independence Day celebrations after government officials confused Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta to be their own head of state in the official programme.”
“The brochure for the event had other embarrassing errors, including spelling mistakes and wrong facts about Ghana’s economic status and location on the world map.”
“Images of the brochure distributed to guests during the 59th Independence Day celebrations in the capital city, Accra, have gone viral and exposed the Ghanaian government to ridicule,” it added.

Saturday, 5 March 2016

MARCH, (MONTH OF LENT)

MARCH, (MONTH OF LENT)

M -meditation
A  - adoration
R- restoration         
C - Christ likeness     
H - humble life

Even if we close all doors of friendliness to humanity, I plead with you, let's consider these and  be at pease with all.

If Christ having everything and lacking nothing yet died for us all then we can still manage life in our approach to God in prayer.

No matter what, our egocentrism will never help being just, than setting us Back and keeping us within our own world and understandings thinking that all is well

Peace and love to you all.
Lent and Easter  greetings  I leave with you.
Amen

Peterkin Kin-Adano

Thursday, 14 January 2016

Pretty Lady Allegedly Murdered By Desperate Guys For Rituals In Port-Harcourt

 needs to be careful of whom he or she visits especially the ladies who travel to meet guys they barely know. This pretty girl was reportedly murdered by desperate guys for ritual purposes on Wednesday (Dec 23, 2015) in Port-Harcourt, Rivers state..