Browsing Category
EDITORIAL
Cynthia Morrison Also Falling On Own Sword?
The Minister responsible for Gender, Children and Social Protection, Cynthia Mamle Morrison, is fast slipping into the ‘league of ministers’ whose public utterances had in one way or the other embarrassed the government of the day.…
Read More...
Read More...
Demolishing The National Cathedral
It is often said that State and Religion must at all times be separated, even though the two intrinsically go hand-in-hand. In Ghana, and in fact in many African countries, religion, culture and morals define us more than our travelling…
Read More...
Read More...
‘No Planet B’: Ghanaians Hit Streets In Global Climate Strike
From the heart of Accra in the Southern part of the country to Damongo, in Ghana’s Savanna Region, young climate activists last Friday, September 27, 2019, abandoned their daily routines and joined the rest of the world to demand immediate…
Read More...
Read More...
A September To Remember: Akufo- Addo Gov’t Torn Between And Betwixt?
All too soon, September, the month that separates the third from the fourth quarter of each year, is gone, but not without its own ‘wahala’ for both the government and the governed.
The month saw scandals, corruption allegations,…
Read More...
Read More...
Now That We Know (Final) Must We Always Blame The Police?
THE NEW PUBLISHER brings to its loyal readers the second (and possibly the final) part of its Editorial published in the Friday 20/9/19 edition on the DEAD Takoradi girls - Ruth Abakah, Priscilla Blessing Bentum, Ruth Love Quayeson and…
Read More...
Read More...
Beware Of ‘Security Experts’ In Political Gown
Recent reports that a bomb-manufacturing gang, which had been operating in the heart of Accra for the past fifteen months, was finally busted by the security agencies, must be a worrying news to many Ghanaians, because it had been quite…
Read More...
Read More...
Now That We Know (Part 1)
For the past one year, our national psyche had been plagued with reports of kidnappings and other ‘un-Ghanaian’ crimes.
The case of the ‘Four Takoradi Girls’, (Ruth Abakah, Priscilla Blessing Bentum, Ruth Love Quayeson and Priscilla…
Read More...
Read More...
Otumfuo Takes Traditional Leadership An Octave Higher
Otumfuo Takes Traditional Leadership An Octave Higher
Ghana’s traditional setup, which has been the beacon of the preservation of culture, has virtually remained static, even after six decades of independence, where they are merely seen…
Read More...
Read More...
Running Ahead Of Ourselves
Corruption is, without doubt, the most popular word in Ghana today. As a matter of fact, so embedded has the practice become in our social fabric that it seems to be defying efforts to fight it.
Political observers think the John Dramani…
Read More...
Read More...
Our Chiefs Also Need State Protection
The rate at which traditional leaders in Ghana are being attacked, and often murdered in cold blood, getting worrying; not only because they form the core of our national political fabric, but largely because their absence could derail the…
Read More...
Read More...