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Gov’t urged to accelerate efforts to decentralise health delivery services

• Charles Nnamdi Ihekire
• Charles Nnamdi Ihekire

 The Chief Executive Officer of Cassona Global Imaging Limit­ed, a leading distributor of advanced medical imaging technologies in Ghana and across Africa, Charles Nnamdi Ihekire, has urged the govern­ment to accelerate efforts at decentralising health delivery services across the country to meet the health needs of the populace.

He expressed concern about long travel distanc­es particularly among rural folks to access healthcare, a situation which remains a major setback to Ghana’s attainment of universal health coverage (UHC).

“The centralised health services and equipment often at regional and tertiary levels of care is unsustainable and costly and Ghana must adopt ways to improving the current situation,” he urged.

Mr Ihekire was addressing a forum by his company to discuss ways to improve Gha­na’s healthcare system as part of activities to commemorate Ghana’s 68th independence anniversary.

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He emphasised the crit­ical need for Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) to drive development in the health­care system.

“No man is an island. We all have to come together to build the healthcare system in Ghana and that is the ap­proach of Cassona to partner government to make health­care affordable,” he stated.

The CEO further called for attention to be paid to the primary level of healthcare, particularly for women and children, for a healthier popu­lation.

He underscored the need for infrastructural develop­ment, citing transportation networks as a crucial example to ensure sustainable health­care development.

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“The government must build the infrastructural de­velopment particularly invest in diagnostic equipment which is essential in healthcare de­livery and that is why PPP is the way to go,” he noted.

Meanwhile, Mr Ihekire an­nounced that an operational headquarters of the company was currently under construc­tion in Labone, Accra and expected to be completed in June.

The facility would fea­ture a diagnostic centre with state-of-the-art equipment, including Computed Tomog­raphy (CT), ultrasound, x-ray, and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) machines.

 By Abigail Annoh

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 MoMo vendor 24 murdered at Kwadaso

Mobile money shop
Mobile money shop

 A disturbing crime has shaken the Kwadaso Onion market communi­ty in Kumasi, leaving family and friends grieving the loss of a young life.

Identified only as Junior, a 24-year-old mobile money vendor, was found murdered in his room on Saturday, March 8, 2025.

According to eyewitnesses, Junior had returned home the previous day with a substantial amount of money, over Gh¢20,000.

It was suspected that the killers might have been motivated by the large sum of money in Junior’s posses­sion.

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A police source that confirmed this to The Spectator, said investigation has been launched into Junior’s mur­der, but so far, no arrests have been made.

The Kwadaso community is reeling in shock, calling for justice and an end to the atrocity that has claimed the life of a young and promising individ­ual.

Junior, is believed to be a native of Ejisu Onwe, and was known to his col­leagues and friends as a hardworking and diligent individual who worked at the Kumasi Race Course.

His tragic death serves as a stark reminder of the risks and challenges mobile money vendors faced.

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The incident comes barely a month after Patricia Nimako, a 27-year-old Mobile Money (MoMo) vendor, was shot and killed at Krofrom, Kumasi in the Ashanti region by an unknown assail­ants.

The suspected armed robbers fled with the deceased cell phones and an amount of GH¢10,000 on Thursday, February 13, at approximately 3:00 p.m.

The two armed robbers reportedly stormed the kiosk where the deceased was operating and without any provo­cation shot her dead.

There has not been any arrest yet by the police.

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 From Kingsley E. Hope , Kumasi

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Former Dean, 68, in same law class with daughter  Wonders, the sages say shall never end.

• Professor Daniel Bagah (left) and daughter Portia

Some people say life is all about nursing and adding value to it to build and gain an incorporated image in society.

It is also said that age is just a number and must not serve as a barrier to people who seek to pursue their long-cherished dreams by going into new areas to acquire knowl­edge.

With this in mind, a former Dean of Business, Education and Law at the University for Development Studies, Wa Campus, Professor Daniel Bagah, 68, a foundation layer of UDS and former Upper West Region’s Council of State member has enrolled to ven­ture into the legal field to study law at SDD-UBIDS this academic year.

The surprising thing about Profes­sor Bagah going to read law is not about his age, but that he is sitting at the backline of his third daughter in the same class for lectures to the admiration of the young ones in lec­ture halls and some of the lecturers he handled at the university.

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When Professor Emmanuel K. Derbile, Vice Chancellor of the SDD-UBIDS announced the name of Professor Bagah among the ‘freshers’ for the 2024-2025 academic year to pursue LLB, there was an uproar among the students and some lectur­ers alike about the news.

Talking to Professor Bagah in an interview, he said the legal field had been his long-cherished dream, which was about to elude me but time has come for him to venture into new areas to acquire new knowledge.

“I believe in getting to new areas of knowledge and throughout my studies, my first, second and third degrees, I have not been able to do law, which is a new area for me. My age is nothing to me, it is my inten­tion to challenge the young lecturers and students to emulate me and go into the legal field to know of their human rights and the rights of other people.

“For the few days that I have been lectured, I have realised that I had trampled on so many people’s rights ignorantly, even during communica­tion with others l wrong them,” he said.

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Professor Bagah, therefore, advo­cated basic law to be taught at all tertiary schools in Ghana to open the mindsets of the students to know about their rights and the rights of others, as well as defend the country patriotically.

He appealed to the people of northern Ghana to take advantage of the Law School to improve their lives since the school is the first law school in the north.

Miss Portia Bagah, 24, said her degree was in Estate Management and her dad had been an inspiration in her life, encouraging her to pursue the law programme.

She said the presence of her father in class serves as motivation and challenge to her and not a setback like others might be thinking. –GNA

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