Short Stories
Unexpected
‘Business is okay, Manager. The Swiss guy is back in town again. This time he’s only checking our export procedures. Everything is in order’. ‘Good to hear that, Kweku. Very soon you will we will be doing a lot of business in Swiss kroner’. ‘A big Amen to that. You have been very good to me, Manager. I’m really grateful’.
‘Herh, Kweku Manford’, Mr. Debrah said, ‘now that you are going to be earning foreign exchange, won’t it be fair if we stop paying you consultancy fees?’ ‘You dey joke sef. You’ve given me an idea, actually Now I will take my fees in Swiss kroner. Hey, you know the drill already. Get yourself something to drink, then we can have our meal’. ‘Before we do that, Kweku, I had a discussion with Herty, our new colleague, and I would like her to have a quick word with you. I believe a brief tete-a-tete will be useful’.
‘Okay. Madam, shall we step into the kitchen?’ Herty followed her, and she narrated the events leading from her transfer, as she had told Mr. Debrah’. ‘It’s okay. I’m really sorry to hear about the circumstances. But I understand how it could have affected you. But I hope you are settling in well now’.
‘Yes, certainly. I have nice accommodation, and the people at the branch are wonderful. In fact, I think the transfer is a great blessing. Esiam is a nice town’. ‘Thanks for that. Okay, so let’s put everything behind us, shall we? Enjoy your lunch, and I will be seeing you, since I come regularly to the bank’. ‘Er, when can I come here for a visit? This is a very impressive place’. ‘You are welcome anytime.
Just let me know when you want to come in. I will give you my number. You can call me any time’. As they went to join the others, Herty wondered how an obviously young man can achieve so much. And, she thought, what a handsome guy.
After a very enjoyable hour, they went back to the branch, and Mr. Debrah went to his car. Herty went to see him off and thanked him for lifting the burden off his shoulder.
The following day, Herty called him to ask how he was doing. ‘I’m doing very well, Herty. Have you decided when you want to come over?’ ‘Actually, I wanted to find out if I can come this evening, after work or a little later’. ‘It’s okay with me either way. Which one will be convenient for you?’ ‘Okay, I will come after work. I will get there around 5.30’. ‘Great. I will be expecting you’.
Before showing her round the factory, Kweku Manford drove her round the farm. ‘The farm is very big. How do you manage all this, and the processing factory? And how on earth are you able to combine all that with working as an IT consultant?’ ‘Let me answer your questions in reverse.
First, I was just doing IT. There was no farm. There’s one word in IT that I picked up early, which has helped me a lot. And that word is proactivity. Always look forward at what the trend is likely to be. That helped me to anticipate the needs of my clients. When they called, I was already prepared with the solutions.
Most people in the business try to equip themselves to solve problems. In my case, I anticipate challenges and find solutions. So I have been very comfortable in the business. After a while I decided to invest at home, where fruits and vegetables grow well. I started the farm, and started exporting on a small scale.
After a while I decided to set up a plant. I contacted a Swiss company and bought the plant from them. I told them from the word go that my purpose was to export, so they helped me establish a process that would suit their market. So that’s where we are now. Actually, this farm is small compared to what we process daily. I now have about twenty out-growers, farmers who grow and sell exclusively to me’.
‘But you are quite a young man. How did you pack so much activity into only a few years?’ ‘I don’t know? I was always interested in computers, so even when I was a university student I was trying my hands in software development. I assembled a few computers. I’m twenty-nine now. I’m not too young, am I? ‘Of course you are! I have a couple more questions to ask, but I’m afraid to ask them. Maybe I will ask them later, or I will hide under WhatsApp and ask?’
Ekow de Heer
Short Stories
GFA to hold maiden U-15 Girls Inter-Regional Challenge Cup at Prampram
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The Ghana Football Association (GFA) will hold the maiden edition of the U15 Girls Inter-Regional Challenge Cup at its technical centre in Prampram – the Ghanaman Soccer Centre of Excellence.
The Association earlier this month announced that it will be establishing four new age group national teams each for boys and girls to complement the existing ones.
These new national teams will be for developmental purposes to serve as feeder teams for the competitive national teams.
President of the GFA who doubles as Chairman of the National Juvenile Committee, Mr. Kurt. E.S. Okraku, announced that the U15 Girls Inter-Regional Challenge Cup will be held in June, 2024 at Prampram.
The competition will provide a platform for the national team coaches to identify top talents for further development and progression into the appropriate age group national teams.
The Football Association already has the KGL U17 Regional Championship for boys and the U15 Regional Challenge Cup for girls will be the first of its kind in the country.
The new national teams will have U-16, U-18, U-19 and U-21 for Boys and U-16, U-18, U-19, U-21, and U23 for Girls.
The Association is keen on transforming women’s football and making it competitive across all levels, which will have a positive impact on the National teams.
Players from each of the age groups will progress to the relevant next level year after year as they will camp, train and play games locally and Internationally as part of their development.
Short Stories
Fisherman and wife(Final Part)
The man trembled with fear at every joint. Outside there was a terrible storm. Trees and mountains were shaking. The heaven was completely black, and there was thunder and lightning. In the sea he could see black waves as high as mountains, and they were capped with white crowns of foam. He said:
Mandje! Mandje! Timpe Te!
Flounder, flounder, in the sea!
My wife, my wife Ilsebill,
Wants not, wants not, what I will.
“What does she want then,” said the flounder.
“Oh,” he said, “she wants to become like God.”
“Go home. She is sitting in her piss pot again.”
And they are sitting there even today.