YOUR COMPLIMENTARY COPY
Touching Africa, Touching The World!
FLYafrica ISSUE 3
FEBRUARY- APRIL 2019
KARMZAH
A NEW KIND OF SUPERHERO FILM
MEET ‘THE SCORSESE OF LAGOS’
Glove affair
WHY BUKOM IS A HOTBED OF BOXING TALENT
COMPETITION
WIN
A meal at Urban Grill
Contents
PAGE 20
LESLIE LUMEH
Artist inspiring budding young creatives
Leslie Lumeh Newhouse Center for Global Engagement Prof Ken Harper
Regulars
Features
3 Foreword
12 Accra Theatre Workshop
Africa World Airlines Head Office - SSNIT Emporium Ground Floor, Airport City Liberation Road PMB CT67 Cantonment Accra, Ghana Tel: +233 24 243 8888 Toll Free: 0800 200 200 Email: awaoffice@flyafricaworld.com www.flyAfricaWorld.com FLYafrica Magazine is published for Africa World Airlines by: Land & Marine Publications Ltd 1 Kings Court, Newcomen Way Severalls Business Park Colchester, Essex CO4 9RA United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0)1206 752902 Email: publishing@landmarine.com www.landmarine.com ADVERTISING: Matthew Jay, Sales Manager Tel: +44 (0)1206 752902 Cell: +44 (0)7714 448057 (WhatsApp) Email: flyafrica@landmarine.org The contents and opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the editor, or any other organisation associated with this publication. While every care is taken to ensure accuracy in preparing the magazine, the Publisher and Africa World Airlines assume no responsibility or liability for any inaccuracies or omissions. All submitted material is accepted on the understanding that the material can be edited, amended or abridged for publication. ©2019 Land & Marine Publications Ltd
Thank you for helping us set new passenger records
18 Gramps Morgan
5 WINafrica
Elisabeth Efua Sutherland’s inclusive art vision The reggae artist on a musical mission
20 Leslie Lumeh
FLYafrica competition
Liberia’s top artist inspires a new generation
6 EVENTScalendar
22 Karmzah
8 STARdestination Abidjan
26 Coastal hideaways
16 EATafrica
28 China Nicky
24 INVESTMENT market review
30 Film special Filmmaker Femi
A taste of Tamale
Banking sector crisis weighs heavily on markets
The first super-heroine with cerebral palsy Get out of reach by the beach How Big Sister star won over Sierra Leone Move over Tinsel Town…
32 Film special Kunle Afolayan
Nollywood hero with a big screen vision
36 Fantasy coffins
34 TECHcorner
Drones – reach for the sky!
Saying farewell in style…
38 Rhyme Sonny
Spoken word artist speaks out
40 Paragliding festival
AWA Information
4 AWAnews
Flying high in Kwahu
42 The boxers of Bukom
45 AWAroutes
Small community producing legends of the ring
46 TRAVELinformation 48 AWAcontacts
Subscribe to FLYafrica
Email: subscribe@landmarine.org
Cover image: www.raydemski.com
Book online
flyAfricaWorld.com FLYafrica
1
Foreword
Welcome
COVER STORY Bukom boxing
THANK YOU FOR HELPING US SET NEW PASSENGER RECORDS Dear passengers, On behalf of Africa World Airlines, I’d like to wish all our customers a very happy New Year and best wishes for 2019.
destinations, and seamlessly connect in Accra without having to reclaim your baggage or check in again.
The last quarter of 2018 was an exciting time for AWA as we took delivery of our seventh Embraer 145 aircraft. This allowed us to increase frequencies on many of our routes to offer a choice of multiple flight timings to our customers. Our team successfully carried 2,000 passengers in a single day in December – yet another milestone as we continue to expand Ghana’s largest airline.
Our ‘WOW! Wednesday’ promotion was another big hit with customers. This promotion offers tickets to domestic destinations at never-before-seen discounted prices.
AWA also moved into a new home at Accra’s Kotoka International Airport, with all our regional flights now operating from the state-of-the-art Terminal 3 facility. The new terminal provides an excellent passenger experience, enabling travellers to catch their international connecting flights with only a one-hour connection time. Concurrently, our domestic operations moved into Terminal 2, allowing us to offer a range of additional services and comfort to passengers travelling within Ghana. You can now purchase single tickets between any of our domestic
Looking forward to 2019, AWA will be taking delivery of yet another Embraer 145 in the first quarter of the year, which will take our fleet up to eight aircraft. This will enable us to launch services to Abidjan in Côte D’Ivoire, our ninth destination.
purchase AWA flights on single tickets together with flights operated by South African Airways, TAP Portugal, Ethiopian Airlines, Emirates, Qatar Airways and ASKY Airlines, with more partners coming soon. Our partnership with South African Airways has grown to include a comprehensive code-share agreement planned to begin in April. This will significantly increase the volume of passengers connecting between our airlines, thus helping AWA support the Government of Ghana’s vision of turning Accra into West Africa’s aviation hub.
In other exciting news, AWA plans to introduce in April a Premium Service product on our regional flights. Features will include a higher luggage allowance, business lounge access and dedicated check-in counters as well as an enhanced service on board that will feature food and beverages selected in partnership with some of Accra’s finest restaurants. Our interline agreements continue to grow, enabling passengers to purchase single tickets in conjunction with our partner airlines. You are presently able to
Book online
John Quan Chief Executive Officer Africa World Airlines
flyAfricaWorld.com FLYafrica
3
AWAnews Big flight discounts give AWA the ‘wow’ factor AWA is putting the ‘wow’ into Wednesdays with a series of ‘miss them, miss out’ deals offering huge discounts on flights. The WOW! Wednesday adverts appear, unsurprisingly, every Wednesday across AWA’s social media platforms and on its website. These sites will also carry early warnings of upcoming WOW! Wednesdays, with details of which flight is being drastically reduced in price.
Flights from Accra to Abidjan coming soon Africa World Airlines is set to launch its first direct flights from Accra to Abidjan in 2019. The flights are scheduled for the end of March with five flights a week serving the Côte d’Ivoire capital. This brings AWA’s network of regional routes to five with flights to Lagos, Abuja, Freetown, Monrovia and Abidjan. The latest move forms part of the airline’s strategy to grow its presence in West Africa. AWA has been operating in Ghana since 2012 with its fleet of Embraer 145 jets. The airline will announce the full scedule in the coming weeks. Check the website at www.flyAfricaWorld.com
Once Wednesday comes, you have a five-hour window, from 12 noon to 5 pm, in which to visit the website and book the advertised flight route for the day and time of your choice at the offer price. The WOW! Wednesday offer was introduced in November as a sign of appreciation to AWA passengers for their custom over the airline’s six years in operation. When one-way flights between Accra and Kumasi were offered for just GHS 49, they were snapped up by over 700 people in the five hours. The promotion has proved such a hit that AWA has decided to continue it into 2019. Other big savings served up by WOW! Wednesday since the offer began include single flights between Accra and Tamale for GHS 99 – these would normally cost between GHS 249 and 449 – and one-way flights between Accra and Takoradi for GHS 79.
HOW TO BOOK
Online:
Telephone:
Passengers can book flights online by visiting flyAfricaWorld.com and using the ‘Book A Flight’ function. You can then choose your flight, book your seats and select your payment method. AWA offers various methods of payment for customers in Ghana and Nigeria including debit/credit card, MTN Mobile Service (Ghana only), Quickteller (Nigeria only) and bank transfer. For detailed information, check out our website.
Telephone bookings can be made by calling
flyAfricaWorld.com 4
+233 24 243 8888 or our
Toll free number:
0800 200 200
Wednesday
WINafrica FLYafrica competition
Thank you for choosing
YO LOX P E R I E N C E S . C O M
Win a chance to dine at Urban Grill The fine dining scene in Accra is burgeoning and at its forefront is a string of stylish venues owned by the YOLO (‘You Only Live Once’) group. Among them is the dazzling Urban Grill, which may well serve the best steaks in Ghana. They are cooked over a charcoal grill to perfection and served amid the metropolitan glamour of the mirror-clad restaurant, which was designed by award-winning studio Graven Images. YOLO has teamed up with FLYafrica to offer two of its lucky readers a GH¢ 500 voucher to spend on a delicious dining experience at Urban Grill. To be in with a chance of winning one of these wonderful prizes, simply answer the three questions below and email your answers along with a picture of yourself holding a copy of FLYafrica to awacompetition@landmarine.org Answers can be found within the pages of this edition of FLYafrica. The deadline for entries is 20 March 2019. Good luck! QUESTIONS 1. What is the name of the mountain, the highest peak in the Kwahu range, which is the take-off point during the Ghana Paragliding Festival? 2. Which of Karmzah’s possessions is the source of her superpowers?
Happy New Year! Thank you for making us your airline of choice for year 2018
3. What is the name of the community in the west of Accra which is renowned for producing a string of world-beating boxers?
COMPETITION TERMS AND CONDITIONS: Closing date is 9 March 2019. Photographs should be sent along with your entry. One entry per person. Entrants must be 18 or over. The winning entry will be selected by Land & Marine Publications Ltd. This competition is not open to employees of Africa World Airlines, the Yolo group or Land & Marine Publications Ltd.
www.flyAfricaWorld.com
flyAfricaWorld.com FLYafrica
5
EVENTScalendar STAR EVENT Ghana’s Independence Day 6 March
Ghana was the first sub-Saharan country to gain independence, on 6 March 1957, and is seen as a leader in African democracy and development and as having played a key role in the decolonisation of Africa. The 62nd Independence Day will be marked by a traditional march-past and parade in Black Star Square. Other parades will be held simultaneously across the nation’s regional and district capitals. And there will be plenty more small-scale celebrations in bars, clubs and family homes, with decorations and costumes dominated by the red, yellow and green of the national flag. Start planning your celebration.
FREEDOM Independence Arch, Independence Square, Accra
6
19
Anton_Ivanov | Shutterstock.com
ON YOUR BIKE Sierra Leone to Liberia
MARKET Fresh catch
JANUARY – FEBRUARY African Culture & Wellness Festival 30 January to 11 February, Aburi, Ghana The tranquil setting of Aburi Botanical Gardens will host this super-healthy festival. It showcases the many manifestations of African fitness as well as a huge range of wellness treatments such as life management, meditation, food therapy and natural hair and skin care. There will be live music concerts and workshops by local and international artists and a food court serving a wide variety of nutritious delights from local vegan restaurants and catering services.
West Africa Cycle Challenge 28 January to 3 February, Sierra Leone and Liberia This charity event takes riders 300 miles from bustling Bo in Sierra Leone through lush green landscapes and welcoming local communities to one of Liberia’s most beautiful beaches, the palm-fringed Robertsport. The West Africa Cycle Challenge is organised by Street Child and all sponsorship raised by cyclists will go to the charity’s projects, some of which the cyclists will drop in on along the route. To sign up for the event, visit www.everydayhero.co.uk/ event/westafricacyclechallengejan19
Argungu Fishing Festival February, Kebbi State, Nigeria This spectacular, once-annual event is back after a 10-year hiatus. The highlight of the celebration marking the end of the growing season and the harvest is a fishing contest on the Matan Fada river. At the beginning of
the event over 5,000 fishermen and women gather close to the river and at the sound of a gunshot they all dive, using traditional nets, gourds made of calabash and even just their hands to catch fish. There is a US¢ 7,500 prize for whoever catches the biggest fish. Festivities last for four days and include canoe racing, wild duck hunting, barehanded fishing, diving competitions and plenty of drinking, singing and dancing long into the night.
MARCH National Decoration Day 13 March, Liberia The second Wednesday of March is National Decoration Day in Liberia, also sometimes referred to as Memorial Day. It was made an official national holiday in Liberia on 24 October 1916. On this day, people decorate the graves of their deceased relatives with flowers or wreaths and trim overgrown grass or plants near the grave site. The Liberian flag is flown at half mast to mourn for the nation’s fallen heroes and workers have the day off. In recent years the celebration has taken on a darker, more national tone of mourning with the mass graves of ebola victims.
Connect with AWA Facebook
www.facebook.com/flyafricaworld
@flyafricaworld
@flyafricaworld FLYafrica
7
STAR DESTINATION
Abidjan
Revitalised Abidjan is an all-round treat for visitors With the gleaming skyscrapers of its business district looming over lagoons and waterways, Abidjan can seem a little soulless from a distance, but at ground level it bustles with tropical life and character. Côte d’Ivoire’s biggest city is divided into many neighbourhoods, each with its own distinct character. Exploring them will reveal lively markets, street-food stops, welcoming bars and music venues, beautiful beach resorts and creative architecture. The city, which locals affectionately refer to as ‘Babi’, has had a rebirth of late with an urban renewal programme under way fuelled by a booming economy. This is a great time to visit Abidjan.
8
PORT CITY Modern skyline
Roman Yanushevsky / Shutterstock.com
NoyanYalcin / Shutterstock.com
Hailu Wudineh TSEGAYE / Shutterstock.com
TRAVEL: AWA’s network of destinations across West Africa is set to include its first direct connections to Abidjan, with flights from Accra to the Côte d’Ivoire capital to begin by the end of March. There will be five flights a week between the two cities.
can be found at Galerie Cécile Fakhoury. This 600 square metre gallery features sculpture, painting and photography.
SEE: The striking St Paul’s Cathedral in the Plateau district is a modernist masterpiece. Built in 1985, with the first stone consecrated by Pope John Paul II, it features a giant cross, connected by cables to the church behind, which it appears to be tugging into the lagoon. Fantastic views of Abidjan are to be had by climbing its tower. Also worth visiting is Parc du Banco. Don’t expect much in the way of wildlife, but this rainforest on the north-west edge of town is cool and shaded with pleasant walking trails, majestic trees and a lake. Rangers are on hand to give visitors a guided tour.
day. Standards of comfort and cuisine vary greatly, but maquis can be quite sophisticated, even outdoing some of Abidjan’s finest restaurants. Take your pick of some of the best examples at Mille Maquis, an energy-infused strip of different maquis in the Marcory district, offering fresh Ivoirian dishes such as braised fish, peanut soup and kedjenou, a meat stew with chopped onions, tomatoes and fresh ginger. If you’re after something fancier, try Le Croisette. This Frenchowned restaurant in the business district is renowned for its local seafood and elegant cuisine. For food on the run, Abidjan is peppered with stalls selling street snacks such as banana with chilli and onions and delicious fried spicy chicken.
DO: Head for the Treichville district and immerse yourself in its lively markets or seek out Abobo, to the north-west, where hundreds of fanicos (washer men, never women) scrub clothes clean in the middle of a stream at Africa’s largest outdoor launderette. The Yopougan district – the new hub for Côte d’Ivoire’s musical and dance culture – is the place for nightlife. During the day you’ll also find plenty of impromptu street performances of zouglou, a dance-oriented style of music that began in the country. A trove of African contemporary art
EAT: Abidjan locals love their maquis. These open-air restaurants can be found all over the city and serve as a great place to unwind after a busy
SLEEP: Abidjan has a good selection of hotels and lodges. The best are to be found in the wealthy suburbs of Cocody and Marcory as well as in the city centre. Eiffell’s Hotel, in Concordy, is a tranquil escape from the city and its terrace restaurant is a lovely spot for an evening meal. The Seen Hôtel Abidjan Plateau, in the heart of the city, is an ideal base for business travellers. It has five conference rooms, a restaurant, a bar and a gym.
OLD AND NEW Striking architecture
FLYafrica
9
BRINGING
ART
TO ALL IN ACCRA
Multi-skilled performance artist Elisabeth Efua Sutherland wants more Ghanaians to explore their imaginations through the Accra Theatre Workshop
P
erformance artist Elisabeth Efua
is to make the arts accessible to as many
can teach a child to use their imagination,
Sutherland is an actress, dancer,
people as possible, encouraging members
think critically, learn without assistance and
director, musician and sculptor and
of the public to write, design or perform,
have discipline and self-belief. A child with
has even embraced theatre technology
outside of work hours, for productions and
all those abilities can change the world. We
and software – a recent show featured
putting on yoga, movement and acting
need more of those.”
a 3D scan of Elisabeth triggered by the
classes. It is also part of the arts educa-
audience’s movement. Learning such a
tion programme the Nubuke Foundation
her far and wide. After studying at an inter-
broad range of skills has been driven both
– sharing its East Legon location – which
national school in Accra, where she showed
by what the 27-year-old calls a “curiosity
promotes visual arts, culture and heritage
promise in dance and science, she won a
about the world and about what mark you
for 10- to 14-year-olds from some of the
scholarship to study at DePauw University
can make on it” and the knowledge that,
capital’s neediest neighbourhoods.
in Indiana, in the United States, which has
as co-director of the self-funded Accra
a respected theatre department. She went
Theatre Workshop, the ability to carry out
Value
a range of roles on a shoestring is vital.
Elisabeth says: “It is my great hope that
for an MA in Contemporary Performance
people learn the value art can bring to their
Making. Her work was part of the group
others in Ghana to broaden their knowledge
lives – the added beauty, complexity and
show ‘Filter Bubble’ in Zurich, which show-
and outlook. Since its beginnings in 2013 –
peace. Many people as well nowadays are
cased artists under 25 and which led to a
it was launched by Elisabeth and director
so stressed out and they don’t realise what
residency at the Google Cultural Institute
Emelia Pinamang Asiedu – the workshop
a change in one’s sense of well-being the
in Paris. There have been further high-
has become a key component of Accra’s
arts can bring. We have run meditation
profile residencies at the Villa Empain and
growing, supportive and experimental
and movement classes to try to support
Boghossian Foundation in Brussels.
contemporary art scene. Among its aims
the public with some of these issues. Art
Elisabeth hopes the workshop will inspire
12
Elisabeth’s artistic leanings have taken
on to study at London’s Brunel University
Despite such far-flung success, it is here
because it’s tucked away in an institution or rotting in forgotten archives. I think it’s important to remind people and educate people in my own small way.” The storytelling lineage is personal for Elisabeth. Her paternal grandmother is the playwright, director, dramatist, children’s author, poet, educationalist, researcher, child advocate and cultural activist Efua Theodora Sutherland, who was integral in shaping modern Ghanaian theatre. Elisabeth has not only inherited her grandmother’s artistic versatility but also her ability to bring alive ancient tales for modern audiences. Efua modernised the dramatic structure of tales such as ‘Anansi’ STAGE SCULPTURES Wooden handiwork DANCING IN THE STREETS Masquerade
in the 1960s by borrowing from Western literature conventions while her granddaughter brought it into the 21st century. Elisabeth was still a child when Efua died, but her influence is keenly felt. “We stand on the shoulders of those who came before us,” she says. It is hoped Accra Theatre Workshop will
members, Tim and Caroline Good, who
inspire a new generation of writers and
were my undergraduate academic advisers.
performers. “I like to think we are showing
They will work together for two weeks to
alternatives in the work we do, our storytell-
create a theatre production drawing from
ing, and in just existing as an experimental
all their backgrounds to try to find common
theatre company and on a personal level
ground and common humanity.”
existing as a full-time artist in an environ-
The performances will take place at the
many people as an option to survive on,”
with Gallery 57 at the Kempinski Hotel,
says Elisabeth.
championed new and envelope-pushing
in Ghana that Elisabeth is most keen to make her mark. She sees her home city as
ment where it still does not make sense to
Accra Theatre Workshop, which has, along
work in the city. Elisabeth has seen her work
Milestone
performed at all three venues, but while her
The workshop reached its five-year anniver-
performance pieces strive for originality,
sary this year, a milestone it celebrated with
they are consciously steeped in the coun-
reimagined versions of some of its most
try’s heritage.
popular productions, such as the experi-
‘Akε yaaa heko / ‘One Does Not Take It
mental dance performance ‘Dreamscape’;
“so full of potential, so vibrant, amazing
Anywhere’, at Gallery 57, was a collabora-
an evening of live storytelling entitled ‘Last
people, incredible energy” and wants to
tion with renowned fantasy coffin maker
Dance’; and ‘Messia’, a new full-length
support artists at different stages of their
Paa Joe featuring dance and live music and
dance project choreographed by Elisabeth
careers by providing opportunities for train-
considered traditional funerary customs
and featuring live accompaniment by the
ing, experimentation, showcase and perfor-
in contemporary Ghana, while in ‘Anansi’s
Afro Maestros Orchestra.
mance. In 2012, while still in college in the
Wife /Akua’s Daughter’, Elisabeth rewrote
US, Elisabeth funded Summer Shakespeare
the famous Ghanaian folk tale ‘Anansi’ from
that Accra Theatre Workshop “will always
in Accra, a performance-based programme
his wife’s perspective and added technolog-
continue to push and grow and re-examine
for young people, which drew volunteers
ical flourishes such as 3D projections and a
our work. We’re an experimental company
from DePauw to help out. Lack of funding
video collage that responds to body heat
and we want to push the envelope. It’s what
led to the programme being suspended
and motion speed, making it an interactive
we do.”
for many years, but this year will see a new
audience experience.
collaboration between Elisabeth’s alma mater and budding young Ghanaian actors.
Students
“Culture is, to me, the most important thing,” says Elisabeth. “We have such a beautiful and rich range of traditions in Ghana. Unfortunately, we are losing some
Elisabeth says: “We will be hosting a group
of the details in terms of the way some of
of students from DePauw who will work on
these events are celebrated because our
a cross-cultural exchange with some local
history is rarely recorded or written down
students led by myself and two faculty
and when it is it can be hard to access
The revisited shows, Elisabeth says, show
Find out more For the latest on Accra Theatre Workshop productions, visit the Facebook site. To find out more about the workshop’s services, email accratheatreworkshop@gmail.com FLYafrica
13
EATafrica
A taste of Tamale Northern Region’s capital is full of restaurants serving farm-fresh food sourced from Ghana’s breadbasket If the fertile Northern Region is Ghana’s breadbasket, Tamale is its kitchen. Restaurants here are blessed with a constant supply of produce from the surrounding farmland, so their food is fresh and almost always very good value. It’s a big town – the fastest-growing in Ghana – and there’s plenty of choice for diners, who can choose from West African delicacies; a range of international cuisine; and food and drink you’ll only find in Tamale, such as the non-alcoholic millet or maize brew called Toose. Here are some of our favourite foodie haunts to try.
Luxury Restaurant Charcoal-grilled guinea fowl is a Northern Region delicacy and this popular dining spot is one of the best places in town to try it. It is often served on skewers as kebabs and the yellowish meat is low in fat with a taste closer to game like partridge or pheasant than chicken. Other favourites served include jollof rice and entrées such as toasted
certainly has a fiery menu, with curries to rival the northern region’s climate for heat. Ghanaian options include red red, a spicy rice dish, while flavourful Indian dishes on offer include fish shahi paneer, chicken biryani and Malay curry. WHERE TO FIND IT: Gumbihini Road
baobab and other exotic fruits.
Wooden Bakery Coffee Shop, Bar and Restaurant
WHERE TO FIND IT: Jisonayili
People flock here in the day
Road, opposite King David Bar
for some of the best coffee in
meatballs. The drink selection includes fruit cocktails made of
TEL: +233 507 463 655
Swad Fast Food
16
during its 10 years in Tamale. It
PERFECT FRIED CHICKEN Delicious
town, which goes wonderfully with its home-made croissants, doughnuts and other pastries. In the evening you can get
Located just off the high street,
tasty Lebanese dishes, burgers
this Indian food-focused eatery
and pizzas served to you on an
has built up a huge renown
expansive terrace just off the
HEALTHY EATING Fresh and tasty
TAMALE Sellers at a food market
recommended and you can buy a range of Ghanaian malt beers to wash it down. WHERE TO FIND IT: Hospital Road TEL: +233 372 024 898
Koyla Bon Appetit If you’re not sure what kind of food you’re after, it might be wise to head for this restaurant in Education Ridge – Tamale’s school-strewn suburb – as it sells just about everything. Choose from Indian and Chinese to Ghanaian dishes. Favourites include curry dishes and fried chicken along with a wide variety of wines, beers and cocktails. WHERE TO FIND IT: Education Ridge Road, TamaleKumbungu Road fivepointsix | Shutterstock.com
TEL: +233 243 107 786
main road to the airport with fine views over Tamale. Sharing the view is a garden bar, which also attracts a crowd of evening drinkers. WHERE TO FIND IT: R.C. 841 Airport Road (adj Mash Plaza), Gumani TEL: +233 372 028 943
Sparkles Restaurant After browsing the arts and craft stalls of the Centre for National Culture you should pop into this restaurant, located inside. It serves great-tasting banku and tilapia as well as a choice of classic Italian plates such as lasagne and pizza. There’s also an extensive drink menu, including
locally brewed beer, and the attractive outdoor lounge area with its piped music is a relaxing place to enjoy your order. WHERE TO FIND IT: Hospital, Salaga Road TEL: +233 207 090 065
Crest Restaurant As its name suggests, this restaurant is on top of a hill, giving a bird’s-eye view of Tamale. You can sit inside or go up on the rooftop where the best views are to be had and the ocean breeze offers a welcome respite from the heat. The food is as impressive as the view, with some of the tastiest curry dishes in town. The chicken and fish curries are both
Speed Link Restaurant It you want to get a true taste of Tamaleh then head for Speed Link Restaurant. The quality of chefs and food here belie its fast food status. You can sample seafood Ghanaian style, with shrimp and tilapia especially popular. Other favourite dishes include jollof rice and vegetarian fried rice. WHERE TO FIND IT: Bolga Road TEL: +233 209 387 480
Mike’s Bar and Restaurant With its terraced area shrouded by mango trees, Mike’s Bar is a tranquil spot to hang out with friends for an evening drink, but it also has a fine food menu. Guest can choose from Ghanaian dishes, a range of pizza toppings, salads, sandwiches and desserts. WHERE TO FIND IT: Behind Barclays Bank, off Salaga Road TEL: +233 26 202 7799 FLYafrica
17
GRAMP’S
musical
MISSION Reggae star inspires fans to take pride in their African heritage
Q. You were brought up in a musical family. Can you tell us about your earliest musical memories? A. Some of my most memorable memories are when me and my brothers and sister were first training, performing as the backing band for my father on several shows across the United States and Jamaica. I remember playing at the public library and at school talent shows. Those are some of my fondest memories. Even as I think back now, I remember all the training that my father set up for me and my brothers to receive while we were growing up. Teachers such as Thelonious Monk, Jackie Mittoo, Clifford Branch and Bert Reid. Some taught me the keyboards, some worked on my vocal abilities, others helped me study special cord inversions. I could never forget my past. Q. Tell us about being Gramps Morgan and your achievements so far. A. Well, that’s a funny question. I’m happy to be me and I’m happy about some of the things that I have accomplished. I’ve travelled the world and performed in front of millions of people throughout my years playing with my family, Morgan Heritage, as well as playing as a solo artist. Some of my greatest experiences have been performing on tour with India Arie, John Legend and Buju Banton. One of my favourites was when we opened up for Lenny Kravitz in Europe. Playing with artists like these and watching them perform, you learn something every time. Q. The ‘Africa Jamaica’ single and your role as ambassador at the Ghana Jamaica Homecoming Festival (a project celebrating the cultural heritage of Africa) suggest you want to raise awareness of Africa as the spiritual home of Afro-Caribbean and
Roy ‘Gramps’ Morgan has had musical success as a solo artist and with four of his 29 siblings, the children of reggae legend Denroy Morgan, in the Grammy awardwinning reggae group Morgan Heritage. Recently the band has teamed up with Ghana’s Stonebwoy and Tanzania’s biggest musician of the moment, Diamond Platnumz, for the single ‘Africa Jamaica’. Here he talks about his earliest musical memories, bringing together East and West Africa with his latest release, and why everyone should try gardening.
African-American communities. Why is it so important to you? A. While growing up as a child, my father instilled these qualities in me to let me know who I am, where I come from, not only as black people but as Rastafarians, to always remember Africa. This was part of my childhood. It wasn’t something new that I discovered as I turned an adult. It has always been a part of me. So since I have now started travelling more frequently to Africa, I find it my duty to build the bridge from
18
the diaspora to Africa to make people be aware not only black people but all people to know the strong spiritual foundation and what we have to share with our minerals, herbs, farming and many more entrepreneurial opportunities that can help to build Africa. Hence comes the Ghana Jamaica Homecoming project. I truly pray that corporate Ghana gives me as much support as possible to make some of my visions become reality. It cannot be done without them. Everyone needs to play their part. Q. For ‘Africa Jamaica’ you also brought together West and East Africa with both Stonebwoy and Diamond Platinumz on the track. How did that go? A. While doing the Africa hitmaker single we really accomplished something that has never been done before, bringing together one of the strongest artists from East Africa
‘With the Africa hitmaker single we brought together one of the strongest artists from East Africa and West Africa on one song’
and West Africa on one song. This is truly history. There were no problems, zero egos,
children know that there are many different
as well as all Africa and teach children that
not one battle and we are truly thankful that
options other than becoming an athlete or
there is value in farming. I am also interest-
we were able to accomplish this. It is a sign
a musician. There are options that are not
ed in educating many of the governments
to show what we can do together when we
presented to many communities around
across Africa about hemp and its healing
unite – conquer the left, conquer the right.
the world and I am just doing my part by
properties. In the United States, Canada
bringing that awareness to the forefront.
and Europe and even now South Korea this
Q. Do you link your music with your
plant is now being used as a medicine. I
philanthropic ventures? I have heard you
Q. You are also an entrepreneur. You have
have a dream for Africa and hope it comes
describe your music as ‘healing music’ and
your own 60-acre farm in Trelawny and a
true sooner than later, before it’s too late.
you set up a charity to bring relief to the
line of health food products and sauces.
needy in various parts of the world.
It seems having that connection with the
Q. Where do you like to go to relax and
land and growing your own food has been
have fun away from the busy life of a
A. I am truly proud about my charity
transformative for you and you want to
music star?
organisation Gramps Music Orchestrating
encourage others to try it. A. Well, some of my most favourite places
Miracles (GRAMPS M.O.M) and truly, yes, it is part of my music and the message
A. As a child I always saw my grandfather
in the world to relax are in Africa and the
that I share in my music is how I truly feel
[Cleveland Morgan – Roy was given the
Caribbean, but I have recently found a place
in real life. I have done projects in Ethiopia,
nickname ‘Gramps’ as a baby because of
called Saskatchewan in Canada. It is so
Trinidad & Tobago and Anguilla support-
his resemblance then to his grandfather]
beautiful. I fell in love with fishing there.
ing education as well as farming to let
working in a small garden in his backyard. I was always amazed by the look on his face while he was farming the land. I saw a peace, I saw a connection, I saw there was a special connection with him and the earth and I wanted to experience that. So when me and my family moved to Jamaica in 1995 we were living on a farm property. That’s where we built our home and I felt so good while preparing the land. I felt a special connection to God and nature and
HOME On the farm
that feeling made me want to share that awareness of farming to my generation and many generations to come. Gramps Morgan Farms is my sauce company, which is a
HOT N SPICY Home-made
line-up of jerk sauce and jerk BBQ sauce. I am truly excited to start farming in Ghana
To Watch the ‘Africa Jamaica’ video visit Morgan Heritage’s YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/user/ MorganHeritageTv To find out more about Gramps M.O.M visit the Twitter page @grampsmom To purchase some of Gramps Morgan Farms jerk and scotch bonnet sauces, visit squareup.com/store/ grampsmorganfarms
FLYafrica
19
Liberia’s top artist inspires a generation
new
Liberia Visual Arts Academy finds ‘the light within’ budding young creatives
L
two other teachers, Frank Dwuye and Isaac Doubor, who specialise in the
eslie Lumeh is Liberia’s most
academy’s team of recruiters or will
digital arts, illustration, graphics and
celebrated artist, with his work
have submitted a portfolio of their
mixed media.
exhibited all over the world,
work that has impressed the LivArts
but he has come home for his latest
Self-taught
staff.
project, which aims to inspire a new
Which programme at the
generation of artists in his country.
academy the accepted pupils
kind when Lumeh was growing up
embark on is dependent on
in the 1970s. His dexterity with the
(LivArts) is the first of its kind in
their age. Those aged eight to 15
brush for his watercolours and with
Monrovia and offers free lessons in
are enrolled on the Kids Power
the palette knife for his vivid oil
art to Liberian youths aged from
Programme, a year-long series of
works was self-taught, though he
eight to 21. Lumeh set the school
weekly classes which aim to enhance
did study for a diploma in archi-
up in 2010 and today it runs classes
creative thinking and develop
tectural drafting from the Booker
in two locations in the capital – the
concentration and basic hand-eye
Washington Institute in Kakata.
Alliance Francaise compound in
coordination through drawing, paint-
the Sinkor district and iCampus in
ing, and collage.
The Liberia Visual Arts Academy
Snapper Hill – outside of normal school hours.
Classes
Those aged 16 or older will take part in the two-year Certificate Programme. This provides students with an opportunity to develop visual
Art is not part of the national curricu-
arts and professional skills. Year
lum in Liberia and the weekly classes
one teaches the fundamentals of
offer a rare chance for school-age
drawing, painting and photography.
youngsters to explore their creativity,
In year two, students apply these
something Dambala-born Lumeh
skills in group projects and commer-
believes is vital for the future of his
cial design applications. The projects
beloved homeland.
not only teach basic techniques but
Most of the pupils, especially the younger ones, will have had little experience in drawing and paint-
20
complemented by the academy’s
also train students to find jobs as designers and illustrators. Lumeh is there in the classrooms,
ing, but the academy will have seen
passing on the skills honed over
something of interest in all of them
a 24-year career working in oils,
to merit their place. They will either
acrylic, charcoal, watercolours and
have been talent-spotted by the
gouache. His traditional skills are
There was nothing of the academy’s
COLOURFUL Street market
Still, his work has always a fascination and sensitivity to people and
Leslie Lumeh Newhouse Center for Global Engagement Prof Ken Harper
Classes offer a rare chance for school-age youngsters to explore their creativity, something Dambala-born Lumeh believes is vital
everyday life – concerns that made
art gallery, Art of the Heart, in 2008
him an ideal cartoonist for ‘The
and became president of the Liberia
Liberian Observer’, the country’s first
Association, an organisation devoted
independent newspaper, a post he
to the advancement of art in the
has held since 2005 – and when his
country.
career began to take shape he was
Lumeh’s works do have a childlike,
very willing to offer the mentorship
unaffected quality that suggests his
that was denied him to others.
lack of formal training, but they are
As well as his work with LivArts,
filled with detail that repays close
during time spent in United States
study and the naivety gives some of
he gave lessons on book illustration
the more unsettling elements – child
to children at the Children’s Reading
soldiers, peeping home security
Center in Palatka, Florida.
guards – even greater menace. His
He began showing his work in 1993
skill with the brush gives his water-
but soon after was exiled in Abidjan
colours of rural scenes a lush fluid-
during Liberia’s civil war. He contrib-
ity and his human figures, though
uted to various creative projects
simply rendered, are all wonderfully
launched in Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone
suggestive of life and character.
and Gabon and became an artist of note in West Africa. Returning to his
Projects
native country he set about rebuild-
One of Lumeh’s most recent and
ing an artistic identity in the wake of
prestigious projects was his involve-
the war. He opened Monrovia’s first
ment in ‘Lumieres d’Afriques’, a trav-
How to be a part of LivArts Both Liberians and foreigners aged eight to 21 are eligible to apply to the academy, regardless of gender, creed, religion or physical handicap. There are two ways to enrol at Liberia Visual Arts Academy: 1. Recruiters determine whether the applicant qualifies for the LivArts scholarship programme 2. Applicants submit a portfolio to be reviewed by LivArts staff There is a US$ 10 program registration fee, but tuition is free. Both programmes have one field trip each term. Successful applicants will be notified by phone or email. For information on how to help fund the school, email donateLivarts@gmail.com
elling exhibition which showcased
CLASSES
the work of one artist from each of the 54 nations of Africa. His work ‘The Light Within’, a monochrome urban environment illuminated by the people who walk its streets, who seem to glow in colour from within, was chosen. Lumeh has said the work was an attempt to illustrate the “unique individual spirit within every person”, a universal quality he tries to mine in every one of his pupils at LivArts.
FILLED WITH DETAIL Local scene
LivArts is running classes at two locations in Monrovia: on Wednesdays from 2 pm to 3.30 pm on 15th Street, Payne Avenue, Sinkor (Alliance Francaise compound) and on Saturday from 10 am to 12 pm at iCampus 150 Carey Street, Snapper Hill. For more details, email livart2010@gmail.com or call 0888 894 488 or 0886 430 483. FLYafrica
21
Karmzah
Meet the first superhero with cerebral palsy Ghana-based software engineer and author creates comic book to inspire young people with disabilities
T
here have been superheroes with disabilities before – the wheelchairbound Professor X in ‘X-Men’ and
the visually impaired Daredevil among them – but a super-powered crimefighter with cerebral palsy is a first. And she
KARMZAH Comic book superhero
comes from Ghana. Karmzah, a superheroine who walks using
comics provided an image of escape and
brainchild of software engineer, disability
inspiration from schools which were such
rights advocate and author Farida Bedwei.
“disability-unfriendly terrain” that she was
Karmzah’s adventures appear in a comic
home-schooled for much of her childhood.
produced in partnership by Farida and Leti
“As a disability-rights advocate, I am
Arts, a media company known for its digital
always looking for effective ways of getting
comics and mobile games featuring African
my message across,” says 39-year-old
superheroes and heroines based on historic
Farida. “As a child, I loved my superheroes
local figures.
and I used to fantasise about having powers
Relatable characters
to defeat bad guys. I reckon the average
AUTHOR Farida Bedwei Images courtesy of Leti Arts
child – disabled or not – also has similar
The first instalment was released digitally on
notions and as such if we had more superhe-
the Afrocomix app by Google Playstore on
roes with disabilities it would go a long way
6 October, World Cerebral Palsy Day. Farida,
to ‘normalise’ it in our societies for future
designed to appeal to young people and to
who developed the lifelong condition affect-
generations.
give them an inspirational figure they can
ing muscle control and movement when she
“There are a few superheroes with
identify with and root for. There will be four
was 10 days old, says coinciding the launch
disabilities, but none of them have cerebral
issues in a year, Farida tells me. Each will be
with the annual celebration was important
palsy. There are more children with cerebral
uploaded in instalments on the Afrocomix
in changing perceptions about what is now
palsy than any other disability in the world
app and then made available in print. The
the leading cause of childhood disability in
– an estimated 17 million. Considering the
first issue was released in November 2018
the world.
number of children and adults with varying
with its print version hitting stores in late
disabilities worldwide, there is the need for
December. Issue 2 is due out in February.
Farida, who was born in Lagos but spent much of her easy childhood in Dominica
more characters they can relate to in the
before her family settled in Ghana, has said
world of animation.”
in interviews that she encountered a good 22
deal of prejudice growing up. Superhero
crutches imbued with magical powers, is the
Telling the tale in comic format is
The first issue tells how Morowa, a feisty Ghanaian architect with cerebral palsy, inherits her super powers. “She becomes
for a one-year computer course at the St Michael Information Technology Centre in Accra to study software engineering. After stints at Soft, a software company in Ghana, and Rancard Solutions as a senior software architect, she helped set up the software company Logiciel where she developed gKudi, a cloud software platform that has revolutionised the universe of micro-lending in Ghana by making small loans available on demand while cutting out fraud and stream-
‘The nice thing about fantasy is that it is unrealistic, so the possibilities are endless’ strength and possibilities and to see their
lining the activities of these institutions. She is involved with Girls in ICT, inspiring women to pursue careers in computing, and partners with ShareCare to cater for disabled people and those with cerebral palsy. Such achievements have won her a series of awards, including the 2013 CEO Most Influential Women in Business and Government Award Financial Sector.
aids – be they wheelchairs, crutches, glasses
African heroine
or hearing aids – as ‘cool’.
Farida has also written a novel, ‘Definition of
Farida, who is now based in Accra, says:
a Miracle’, fictionalising her life story. When
“The nice thing about fantasy is that it is
she sat down to write ‘Karmzah’ Farida
unrealistic, so the possibilities are endless.
always knew she wanted an African heroine.
So why not turn the perceived weakness
“We have few superheroines from this part
into a strength by giving power through the
of the world,” she says. “I am elated that the
aids she uses. Those of us who have to use
first ever superheroine with cerebral palsy
these aids, at one point or the other, resent
came from no other place but Ghana.”!
them. So in Karmzah, her world is transformed because of her crutches. She has extraordinary strength and fighting skills because of them. Who wouldn’t want those
CHARACTERS Muzu and Selassie
crutches?”
Capabilities, not disabilities While people with disabilities are often portrayed as helpless victims, Karmzah is always coming to the rescue of her hapless able-bodied friends. Farida says: “The focus is on their disabilities, not their capabilities, and that perception will only change when we start focusing on their strengths, not their weaknesses. If Morowa loses hold of her Karmzah when she accidentally breaks a
crutches, she reverts to her ordinary self
jar brought back from a dig,” says Farida.
and can no longer fight, run or fly as she
“Unbeknown to her, the jar has been the
does with the superpowers.”
home of an ancient medicine man who,
Farida has much in common with
once freed, becomes Karmzah’s ‘handler’.
Morowa beyond the shared use of
When the jar breaks open, the power – in
crutches. They both, she says, have “a
the form of smoke – gets on her crutches
penchant for arguing and a sarcastic wit”.
and when Morowa holds them it gets into
Farida is also just as much an inspirational
her as well.”
figure as her cartoon alter-ego. She showed
The hope is that Morowa’s story will help
an aptitude for computers from a young age
make young people with disabilities begin
and, refusing to be held back by the limits
to look on their condition as a source of
in motor activity of her condition, signed up
Issue 2 of Karmzah will be released by the end of March and the print version of the comic is available at Koala Shopping Centre in Accra as well as online at booknook.store and amazon.com FLYafrica 23
INVESTMENT market review Brought to you by: Strategic African Securities Limited
Banking sector crisis weighs heavily on markets At the end of January last year, Bloomberg reported that the Ghana Stock Exchange Composite Index (GSE-CI) had gained 19 per cent in dollar terms, the most among benchmarks tracked by the company globally. The GSE-CI did race to an all-time record high by the end of April, but performance for the rest of the year was underwhelming. The stock market grew more volatile from mid-year as troubling events in the banking sector dominated headlines all year. Both the GSE-CI and the SAS Index, our stock market benchmark, sadly gave up all the gains made in the first four months and a little bit more over the second half of 2018 to 24
close the year down 0.3 per cent and 1.5 per cent respectively. These two indices had returned 52.7 per cent and 53.4 per cent respectively in 2017. Market breadth was decidedly negative for the year. Decliners topped advancers two to one as a total volume of over 200 million shares and a total value of over GHS 650 million changed hands in trading. Banking stocks, which had driven big market gains in 2017, declined
Selected Market Indices Source: SAS Research, 1st Jan. – 31st Dec. 2018
45.00%
20.00%
-5.00%
Jan
Dec
GSE-CI
SAS I
SAS FI
across the board last year, with the GSE Financial Index, a benchmark for financial stocks, shedding 6.8 per cent of its value. Shares of Republic Bank, which rose 85.3 per cent in 2017, halved to GHS 0.69 in 2018 and
Enterprise Group shares, which appreciated 54.2 per cent in 2017, dropped 39.5 per cent in 2018 to GHS 2.24.
Fixed income securities offered an attractive alternative to the volatile equity market
Ghana Stock Exchange (GSE) Number of Listed Securities
43
Total Market Value
GH¢61.14 Billion GH¢ Million 16,404.24 15,159.30 9,709.47 3,850.84 2,829.93
at GHS 8.00 as the company
On a relative basis, the fixed
Top 5 Companies by Market Value Tullow Oil Anglogold Ashanti MTN Ghana Ecobank Transnational Standard Chartered Bank Ghana
continued to report declining
income positions in 2018 for
Source: GSE, SAS Equities Desk, 31st December 2018
revenues and profits.
our investment clients yielded
Fan Milk share price lost 54.8 per cent of its value to close the year
The top price gainers for the year were PZ Cussons, SIC, Mechanical Lloyd and Unilever. Analysts may argue that record primary market activity during the year sucked significant liquidity out of investors’ hands, which was not available for aftermarket trading in the second half, resulting in the flat performance of share prices generally. The two-month initial public offering of MTN Ghana shares in the mid-year alone raised GHS 1.15 billion from Ghanaian and non-Ghanaian retail and institutional investors. The market’s performance in 2018 represents a sharp correction to year-end 2017 price levels. For savvy investors, however, value and profits can still be found in the equity market. These investors will focus on searching for beaten-
on average more than 20 per cent and made a significant contribution to overall or diversified portfolio returns. In the government securities market, yields hardened across the curve in the second half of the year. The yield on the 91-day Treasury bill opened the year at 13.33 per cent and closed at 14.59 per cent. The yield on the two-year Treasury note increased from 17.50 per cent to 19.50 per cent. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note opened at 16.35 per cent and the last average quote for the year was 17.50 per cent. In the first half of 2018 declining long-term rates in the market
Market Activity Top Advancers PZ Cussons SIC Insurance Mechanical Lloyd NewGold ETF Unilever Ghana
Open 0.20 0.10 0.06 38.80 12.84
Close Change 0.41 105.00% 0.19 90.00% 0.10 66.67% 54.00 39.18% 17.78 38.47%
Top Decliners Fan Milk Ghana Republic Bank Ghana Aluworks Limited Enterprise Group Trust Bank The Gambia
Open 17.7 1.39 0.16 3.7 0.35
Close 8.00 0.69 0.08 2.24 0.23
Source: SAS Equities Desk, 1st Jan. – 31st Dec. 2018 GH¢ Exchange Rates Currency US Dollar Pound Sterling Canadian Dollar Japanese Yen S/African Rand Euro Chinese Reminbi Naira
Avg Open Avg Close Change 4.42 4.82 -9.16% 5.97 6.17 -3.42% 3.52 3.54 -0.57% 0.04 0.04 -11.59% 0.36 0.33 6.49% 5.30 5.51 -4.09% 0.68 0.70 -3.45% 69.40 63.77 0.08
Source: Bank of Ghana, SAS Research, 1st Jan. – 31st Dec. 2018
rewarded investors who had exposures to term government
Money Market Rates
bonds, but this scenario
AIBOR 91 Day Tbill 182 Day Tbill 1 Yr Note 2 Yr Note
reversed from mid-year as interest rates started to rise.
down stocks that are cheaply
While fixed income offered
valued but have historical and
generally higher annual yields
potentially high prospective
for investors in the market in
fundamental and investment
2018, some non-bank financial
Bond Yields
growth rates, with the hope of
institution (NBFI) issuers of fixed
benefiting from a meaningful
deposit instruments reported
recovery in share prices.
liquidity challenges during the
3 Yr Bond 5 Yr Bond 7 Yr Bond 10 Yr Bond
Historically, long-term-oriented
Change -54.80% -50.36% -50.00% -39.46% -34.29%
year.
investors in the stock market who
The Cedi weakened against
hold diversified portfolios have
the major trading currencies
accumulated attractive market
during the year, but gained on
returns. For example, a holding
the South African Rand and the
investment in the SAS Fortune
Naira. Headline inflation was
Fund between 2013 and 2018
read at 10.3 per cent for January
yielded a compounded annual
and most recently at 9.3 per
growth rate of 23.5 per cent.
cent for November 2018.
Open 19.20% 13.33% 13.78% 15.00% 17.50%
Close Change 16.12% -3.08% 14.59% 1.26% 15.03% 1.25% 15.50% 0.50% 19.50% 2.00%
Source: Bank of Ghana, SAS Fixed Income Desk, 1st Jan. – 31st Dec. 2018
Avg Open Avg Close 16.57% 19.50% 16.30% 16.50% 15.98% 16.25% 16.35% 17.50%
Change 2.93% 0.20% 0.28% 1.15%
Source: SAS Fixed Income Desk, 1st Jan. – 31st Dec. 2018
Find out more Strategic African Securities Limited, 14th Floor, World Trade Centre, Independence Avenue, Accra Tel: +233 302 661 990 / 770 / 900 / 008 Email: info@sasghana.com, research@sasghana.com www.sasghana.com FLYafrica 25
GET OUT OF REACH
by the beach Ghana’s best coastal hideaways
Beach holidays are a popular escape in Ghana and there are plenty of remote getaways along the country’s more than 500 km of coast. Whether you’re after a low-key eco resort or a five-star slice of paradise, you are catered for in Ghana. Here are three remote beach resorts to help you recharge with some ‘vitamin sea’.
SUNSET The bar at Meet Me There African Home Lodge
Blue Diamond
Lou Moon Lodge Perched on a peninsula near Axim, in Ghana’s Western Region, and shrouded by dense forest, this exceptionally beautiful boutique resort is the perfect getaway.
taking a seafaring excursion to meet the local fisherman or just to unwind in this tropical beach paradise with a good book – the resort has its own library – or with a massage at the spa.
Lou Moon Lodge has only 11 rooms in its main building and a sprinkle of bungalows perched on the tip of its private island. Built entirely from local materials and designed to harmonise with the natural environment, the family-friendly lodge nestles on the shore of a private cove offering rare protection from the ocean waves and creating an idyllic natural swimming pool, safe for swimmers of all ages.
Whether or not you go out with the local fishermen, their catch of the day will be a large part of the fantastically fresh French-inspired cuisine prepared by head chef Yvonne Ganlonon. Wherever possible, all the vegetables and herbs she uses will have been grown in the lodge’s garden. The meals can be taken in the restaurant and bar, with its views of the garden, or a romantic meal can be set up on the beach.
There are plenty of activities on offer, such as walking or jogging in the lush tropical grounds, kayaking or paddle boarding, playing beach volleyball or 26
Lou Moon Lodge, Axim Tel: +233 26 424 1549 Email: book@loumoonlodge.com
This serene hideaway is only 80 km from Accra on the Cape Coast Road, but the city’s bustle will be a distant memory once you’ve sunk into one of the many hammocks hung between palm trees that fringe the resort’s 500 metres of private beach. If you feel you have to unwind still further, the resort’s fantastic spa offers, among a huge range of treatments, Balinese massages, renowned for bringing bring a sense of well-being, calm and deep relaxation. The resort is spread over eight hectares with 11 chalets and one conference room for business groups after some team-building escapades. There’s also a swimming pool, restaurant and bar on site.
Images courtesy of Boštjan Selinšek
LIGHT AND AIRY Rooms at Meet Me There African Home Lodge
Meet Me There African Home Lodge If the revivifying effects off the resort have you in the mood for exploration, the picturesque fishing village of Apam is only 20 minutes away – in fact, you get a magnificent view of it from the beach, where there are hammocks along the shore. Apam is also known for its colonial castle and church and there is an opportunity, for a few extra cedis’ encouragement, to grab a ride in a fishing boat. Blue Diamond, Gomoa Abrekum Tel: (+233) 206 042 265 or (+233) 246 675 500 Email: blue.diamond.beachresort@gmail.com
This idyllic eco retreat sits on the edge of a still saltwater lagoon between the rural fishing villages of Dzita and DzitaAbledomi in the Volta Region. The lodge has strong ties with these impoverished communities. While guests are introduced to the rural way of life with a wide range of interesting trips and activities, the money they pay for their stay is invested by the not-forprofit lodge in programmes to improve healthcare, sanitation and education for local communities. Activities include visiting a local market or taking a boat trip along the Ada coast and estuary, where the sea merges with the River Volta, stopping at remote villages on the way. Back at the lodge, guests can choose from a range of very reasonably priced
traditional accommodation, from yurts to thatched suites with breathtaking views of the unspoilt coast. Guests can fall asleep to the sound of crashing waves and wake up to the traditional songs of local fisherman. The lodge’s traditional offerings continue at mealtimes with dishes such as hearty chicken and groundnut soup served with kenkey; while the vibrant beach bar, complete with a jetty that juts out into the lagoon and straw parasols shading wooden armchairs from the sun, has a creative drinks list that includes refreshing cucumber cocktails. Meet Me There Eco Home Lodge Tel: (+233) 541 838 387 Email: dougaljc@hotmail.co.uk
FLYafrica 27
How Big Sister star China Nicky won over Sierra Leone
By Mark Edwards
Rags-to-riches tale of the winner of the country’s first 24-hour live TV reality show
W
hen Haja Mariama
chosen China Nicky as ambassador
Kamara – known as
for this year’s Ecofest music festival,
China Nicky to her
while Sierra Leone’s leading mobile
friends because of her oriental look
phone company, Africell – one of the
and love of American rapper Nicki
partners of Big Sister – is paying her
Minaj – applied to be a part of Sierra
Le 6 million to be its latest ambas-
Leone’s first 24-hour live reality TV
sador. Part of the agreement will
show, Big Sister Salone, she had to
involve the tech giant supporting the
get a friend to pay the Le 100,000
illiterate China Nicky’s education.
entry fee, such were her financial
The budding actor’s admittance
difficulties.
to having had no formal schooling
Now the up-and-coming actress
and her efforts to better herself were
and comedian is a millionaire
key reasons behind why she drew so
after storming to victory on the
much support from viewers.
show, winning the hearts of Sierra Leoneans the world over who fell
Comments
for her bravery and optimism in the
While Big Sister Salone garnered
face of early family tragedy and
plenty of disparaging comments
hardship and loved her crazy dance
during its run about fame-hungry
moves and struggles with the Krio
contestants and their underwhelm-
language.
ing attributes, it was launched with
China Nicky entered the Big
grand aims for female empower-
Sister Alone household with 11 other ferociously loyal fan group, the
off the show each week by the public
Rashul Gang, named after their
until just three remained, vying for
hero’s mispronunciation of the Krio
Ella Koblo Gulama Drama’ with the
the top prize of Le 10 million and a
word ‘rahul’, which had the judges
concept of upholding the values
new car. The show attracted millions
and audience in hysterics at the Big
of one of Sierra Leone’s most cele-
of viewers, with thousands of votes
Sister audition.
brated heroines. Madam Gulama
cast by fans each week. China Nicky
There are plans to feed the fans’
may well have achieved them. The show was themed as ‘The
was a strong character who paved
was a clear favourite, winning each
hunger for more China Nicky now
the way for many women in politics
week’s vote outright.
Big Sister is over – don’t panic, 12
after she became the first elected
new contestants will take part next
female member of parliament in
has become a phenomenon in the
year. The Minister of Tourism and
Sierra Leone and sub-Saharan
country. She even has her own
Culture, Dr Memunatu Pratt, has
Africa in 1957.
In just a few short weeks she
28
ment. With China Nicky’s victory, it WINNING BIG China Nicky
contestants, with three being voted
Images courtesy of AYV Media Empire
Whether Madam Gulama would
of the deaths of both of her parents
have approved of the twerking
and fend for herself, she gained
competition set up for the house-
respect in the house and across
mates or the backbiting that went
Sierra Leone.
on between the women is doubtful,
The resilience she has shown
but seeing a woman of China Nicky’s
throughout her young life – training
impoverished background given her
as a seamstress and hairdresser to
time to shine would appeal to her.
support herself and following her
Certainly, Zainab Sheriff, the host
dreams to become an actress – were
of Big Sister Salone, believes the
evident in Big Sister Salone. She
show lived up to its remit. She saw
ignored the mockery, made friends,
it as presenting a cross-section of
worked hard, spread an motivational
Sierra Leonean womanhood, with
message and had fun. Her victory
many contestants learning valuable
was never in doubt.
lessons during their stay. The artist and model, who rose to
Inspiration
fame as the winner of ‘Big Brother
Despite this widespread adulation,
Africa’ in 2012 and is also chief exec-
there have been a few dissenting
utive of ZedZee Multimedia, a Big
voices on social media arguing that
Sister Salone partner, said: “All sorts
China Nicky winning the Big Sister
of women – the good, the bad, the
contest glorifies illiteracy and that
ugly, the fantastic, the amazing, the
it would discourage more educated
quiet, the wild – were put together in
girls from opting to take part in
one house [to] see who comes out as
future editions of the show.
the best. It doesn’t matter how quiet
This seems unfair. While China
you are, the house will change you to
Nicky is unashamed of her past,
be able to speak up. It doesn’t matter
throughout her stay in the house
how wild you are, the house will
she spoke of her desire to educate
calm you. You will understand that
herself and make the most of her life.
your colleagues need to be heard,
She has the chance to do just that
FAME BECKONS All dressed up
champion in China Nicky, but one
too. It doesn’t matter how intelligent
with her new role as Africell ambas-
you are, you will know that there is
sador. Part of the agreement involves
education and offers inspiration to
something you don’t know. It doesn’t
the mobile phone company support-
escape their predicament.
matter how dumb you are, you will
ing her return to formal education.
understand that there is something you know that the next person doesn’t know.”
Progression
Yes, the less privileged and unschooled of Sierra Leone have a
who espouses the importance of
With Africell expected to provide BRAND AMBASSADOR Contract
the Big Sister Salone winner with a return air ticket to London for television appearances in the UK, it seems membership of the Rashul Gang is set to go global. Sierra Leone has a
There was quite an arc of progres-
new star and it will be fascinating to
sion for China Nicky during her
see what she does next.
month in the Big Sister Salone house. On arrival she found herself the target of discrimination from a few of the well-educated housemates due to her struggles with the language. Still, she rose above it and when she revealed how she had to drop out of school at a very young age because
Africell is paying Nicky Le 6 million to be its latest ambassador
FLYafrica 29
cia l
Fil m
spe
MOVE OVER TINSEL TOWN… Filmmaker Femi embodies golden age of Nollywood
Acclaimed Nigerian filmmaker Femi Odugbemi knows how to make a hit on the big screen and small screen and his expertise has been recognised by Hollywood, where he was recently invited to join the Oscars judging panel. Mark Edwards finds out where his love of cinema began and why he thinks the future for Nigerian cinema is so bright.
W
hen filmmaker Femi Odugbemi
countries, inspiring others with a glimpse of
was a boy growing up in
West African storytelling, life and culture.
Fadeyi, a low income area of
He is optimistic this will happen and sees his
Lagos, he would dive into the dark of the
recent invitation to the voting membership
local cinemas almost daily and be trans-
of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
ported to other worlds and cultures.
Sciences – which he describes as a “great
“All we did was play football on the
its membership to more professionals of
finish playing football, go to see an Indian
colour and race” – as a sign that Hollywood
or Chinese karate film, come back to the
has Nollywood in its sights when it is
neighbourhood and act out the love scenes
looking for the best in new world cinema.
of Bollywood films or the choreography of the Chinese karate films. We were
Challenge
immersed in a culture of cinema. I knew so
The 55-year-old, who studied film and
much about Indian and Chinese cultures
television production at Montana State
even though I couldn’t point to these coun-
University in the United States, says: “The
tries on the map. But I knew how they lived,
Academy is saying to all of us, ‘bring it on’.
how they dressed. I knew the songs and the
It is important that we take the challenge.
names of the heroes of these films are still
If we focus on excellence and if we find
etched in my subconscious till this day.”
those stories that will inspire and engage
Here Femi’s love affair with cinema
the world, we will offer a unique creative
began along with the first stirrings to make his own ideas come alive on the big screen.
30
honour and a positive response to open up
streets and watch movies,” he says. “We’d
identity. “Being a voting member of the Academy
Today the award-winning filmmaker, script-
makes you part of a prestigious confer-
writer and producer – with the hit Nigerian
ence of professionals, too, so it is a valuable
soap opera ‘Tinsel’ and recent telenovela
networking door to the world of cinema
‘Battleground’ among his many successes
that was [previously] distant from us in
– is still smitten. Now he hopes it will be
our neck of the woods. So it says that the
Nigerian films that are screened in far-flung
world is challenging us to come to the table
GO FEMI Nollywood meets Hollywood
with our ideas and our creativity and our stories. Hopefully, in the course of this new opportunity, I will learn more and do more to project the best and brightest of our industry.” With Nollywood, which has overtaken Hollywood as the world’s second-biggest film industry and pumps out around 50 fulllength movies a week, Femi says Nigeria has a distinct dramatic voice to share with international markets. “Nollywood has grown organically into its own unique story-telling style. With it, we have something interesting to show the world,” he says. “It has proven much more than entertainment, it is a counternarrative to the post-colonial images of ‘African cinema’. There are many young emerging storytellers who now have the
Future stars of Nigerian cinema
training and talent and are navigating their creative and artistic explorations with far more confidence and dexterity than their
Femi Odugbemi reveals the young Nigerian filmmakers who are exciting him with their work. “The cinema in Nigeria is hugely exciting and this emerging generation of storytellers have the talent and power to create it,” he says.
predecessors.”
Generations One concern the filmmaker – who served on the Steering Committee of the Motion Picture Council of Nigeria, the nation’s highest regulatory body for the film industry – has with generations to come is that so few Nigerians have access to the big screen cinema that filled the young Femi with
EXCITING TIME Femi says there is a new wave of film talent in Nigeria
Kemi Adetiba
wonder. Despite Nigeria having the largest population of any African country, it has less than 100 cinemas and most of these are large multiplexes with ticket prices that exclude all but the wealthiest visitors. The largely straight-to-video output of Nollywood does little to counter the trend. Femi has been vocal in advocating more modestly priced community cinemas which are reachable for most inner city dwellers, but he believes changes are coming. “There are a lot of entrepreneurs who see huge opportunities in the growing numbers of Nollywood audiences and who are building cinemas across major cities of Nigeria,” he says. “So I am confident in a short while there will be far many more film exhibition spaces of all shapes and sizes across our major cities.” Hopefully this will mean more emotional connections with films for young viewers who will never forget where cinema took them and how it made them feel.
OSCARS JUDGE A ‘great honour’, says Femi
“I think that the themes of her work have depth and subtext that can be culturally provocative. I am looking forward to her new film, ‘King of Boys’, but I have followed her journey from music videos to short film to big features and I see an interesting artistic ambition and progression.” Stanlee Ohikhuare “I think the works of Stanlee Ohikhuare [the self-taught director of surreal, imaginative works such ‘The Fast of Souls’] exude audacious fantasy with a measurable degree of artistic juxtaposition.” Jadesola Osiberu “She did excellent work with [the 2017 romantic comedy] ’Isoken’ and a few others.” FLYafrica
31
cia l
Fil m
spe
Nollywood HERO WITH A WIDESCREEN VISION
Kunle Afolayan’s big-budget films are leading a revolution in Nigerian cinema
K
unle Afolayan has been compared
and 2016’s ‘The CEO’, a thrilling fusion of
Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards, taking
to Martin Scorsese by ‘The New
‘The Apprentice Africa’ and ‘The Hunger
nine awards. In the same year Afolayan was
York Times’, though he shoots
Games’, are among the 10 top grossing films
named Nollywood Man of the Year and a
of all time in Nigeria.
Quartz Africa Innovator alongside luminar-
his movies on the mean streets of Lagos. The Kwara State-born director shares the
Both made more than NGN 60 million at
creative energy and artistic control of the
the box office – impressive, considering that
Oscar-winning American auteur, but wants
Nigeria, so reliant on home-view Nollywood
to make his high-production, high-octane
discs, has only 25 cinemas. “The days of
Family heritage
blockbusters in Nigeria.
relying on DVDs are over—it was a piracy
Afolyan’s life story has the makings of a
nightmare,” says Afolayan. “Now, this busi-
film itself. He is the son of renowned film
ness is about the cinemas and TV.”
director and producer Ade Love, but rather
The country has the second-biggest film industry in the world, known as Nollywood – a term also coined by ‘The New York
The 44-year-old director’s films have
ies of the continent such as musician Akon and footballer Didier Drogba.
than follow his three siblings into his father’s
Times’ – which releases as many as 50
garnered critical claim. ‘October 1’ dominat-
profession, Akolayan opted to take an
original Nigerian films each week, mostly
ed the 2015 Africa Movie Academy Awards,
economics degree and got a job in a bank.
on CD.
taking home three awards including Best
He only started to make films after taking a
Film. The film also swept the board at the
course at the New York Film Academy.
‘The Figurine’
‘October 1’
Afolayan’s big-screen debut sees him in front of and behind the camera in this thriller about two friends who find a mystical sculpture that bestows good luck for seven years but has dark consequences after that.
This dark psychological thriller focuses on a police officer posted to a remote town in Western Nigeria to find a serial killer and have the mystery solved before the national flag is raised on Nigeria’s Independence Day.
Low budget Amid this rapid-fire, low-budget production line, Afolayan stands out. He makes films that transcend the often formulaic plotting, boasting superior technical quality with a budget to match. And they are screened at cinemas in Nigeria alongside major international releases. Among his five theatrically released feature films, two – 2015’s ‘October 1’, about Nigeria’s journey to independence in 1960,
Five of the best The films of Kunle Afolayan
32
AUTEUR Kunle Afolayan behind and in front of the camera
It seems Afolayan is keen his own children are taught a similarly broad skills set. A recent interview revealed he enrolled his son as an apprentice at a car mechanics workshop to give him a trade and divert his
‘October 1’ was exposed to the world when it bagged a Netflix deal that saw it subtitled in 10 languages and streamed around the world
focus from his mobile phone and tablet. The father-of-three’s background in
out into television, too, which has broad-
tale about a cursed artefact.
economics has been put to good use. In his
ened his appeal even further. ‘October 1’
10 years as a filmmaker he has directed five
was exposed to the world when it bagged
between his new Nollywood and the old by
films. Amid the prolific Nollywood scene
a Netflix deal that saw it subtitled in 10
featuring veteran Nollywood actors such
such a meagre output is unheard-of, but it
languages and streamed around the world.
as Binta Ayo Mogaji, Zack Orji, Tina Mba,
speaks of Afolayan’s emphasis on quality
Last year’s ‘The Tribunal’ was also released
Adebayo Salami, Lere Paimo and Lanre
over quantity and the difficulty in financing
first on television before getting a cinema
Hassan (Mama Awero) in key roles.
major products when the cinema theatre
release in Nigeria and Ghana.
infrastructure is not yet there. To deal with these financial concerns,
Links to old Nollywood
Afolayan also makes clear the link
Still there is much to distinguish Afolayan’s work from traditional Nollywood beyond the projection onto the big screen.
Afolayan has diversified and looked to
Despite doing much to shake up the
He is not afraid to address contentious
markets beyond Nigeria. His production
Nollywood film industry, Afolayan’s work
issues, such as the persecution of albinos in
company, Golden Effects, teamed up with
contains many themes familiar to fans
Nigeria. The culture of modern-day Africa is
South African TV company Africa Magic to
of the genre, which is deeply rooted in
also dissected in ‘The CEO’, which amplifies
release three films, the last being courtroom
Nigerian cultural traditions and superstition.
the cut-throat ambition and rivalry on which
drama ‘The Tribunal’ in 2017. Afolayan also
His latest film, ‘The Bridge’, a romantic
reality TV thrives.
has a range of credits as an actor in his own
tale that turns very dark indeed, addresses
films and those of others. This year he even
the rivalry between the Yoruba and Igo
making should set Afolayan up for a film
launched an African-inspired clothing line
tribes, two of the largest ethnic groups in
career to rival that of Scorsese in longevity
called Kunle’s Kembe.
Nigeria, while his award-winning debut,
and influence as he pushes back the fron-
2009’s ‘The Figurine’, draws on an old folk
tiers of the film industry in Nigeria.
‘CEO’
‘The Tribunal’
The big-screen director has branched
‘Phone Swap’ A stylistic switch for Afolayan as he swaps thrillers for a romantic comedy about a fashion designer and a businessman who accidentally switch mobile phones at a busy airport and are forced to carry out each other’s assignments. A huge box office hit.
This glossy thriller plays out like a sparkling melange of ‘The Apprentice Africa’, Agatha Christie and ‘The Hunger Games’. A telecoms firm with footprints across Africa picks five top executives to compete for its vacant CEO role on an island boot camp. Grammy Awardwinning actor Angelique Kidjo stars as the camp leader, Dr Zimmerman.
Such endless creativity and fearless film-
This gripping courtroom drama centres on a washed-up lawyer who takes on the case of a senior banking officer who believes he has been wrongfully dismissed due to his appearance (he’s an albino). The intelligent drama features albino actor Damilola Ogunsi, who impresses in his first screen role. FLYafrica 33
TECHcorner
Reach for the sky! Your guide to choosing the perfect drone Drones – or Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems as nobody outside of Ghana’s Civil Aviation Authority calls them – are starting to appear in West African skies. As long as you register your drone with the authority, you can start using one of these ‘fun to fly’ pieces of kit to obtain high definition bird’s-eye film footage – or just to take a memorable selfie on Labadi Beach. Here is our pick of the best on the market. Best beginner drone PARROT BEBOP 2 FPV PACK
Thanks to its three modes, children from seven years and up can easily learn to fly this drone. Mode 1 provides maximum stability while they learn the ropes. They can advance to Mode 2 for medium speed and to Mode 3 for bells, whistles and tricks that include 180 degree flips. Headless Mode (which is not the result of an unfortunate accident with the drone but means it is far more straightforward to control) makes it even easier for beginners to grasp the basics. Add the cool image of flashing lights and you have yourself a massive hit.
The GPS-equipped Parrot Bebop 2 comes packed with tech that makes it incredibly easy to fly, including First-Person View goggles that give you an exhilarating drone’s-eye view. You can use just an Apple or Android device or, for an even more satisfying flight experience, the dedicated Skycontroller tablet dock. The Bebop 2 flies for up to an impressive 25 minutes per charge and is very stable. It comes with an emergency cut-out feature that stops the rotors as soon as they come into contact with an obstacle, which should help prolong its life. It’s also light enough to survive the occasional crash.
Price: US$ 50
Price: US$ 399
Best drone for children UDI RC U27
34
Best indoor drone POKE FPV MINI UFO QUADCOPTER
Best all-round drone DJI MAVIC AIR
If you’re hunting for the best indoor drone with HD camera, this fits the bill. This is one of the best indoor drones in the middle-tier price area. It’s agile, nimble and durable enough not to be written off by minor collisions. Your start-up kit includes a battery, remote control and the drone itself. You can also choose to purchase your own 5.8 GHz video receiver and screen, but it will work fine as it is if you download the free app CameraFi on your smartphone. It’s available on both iOS and Android. Once set up, you’ve got one of the best indoor FPV quadcopters. A stand-out feature is the one-button return. Simply press the button and your drone will autolocate the remote and fly back to it. The UFO-shaped drone looks great, too, especially when you turn on the blue and red LED lights for flying in the dark.
The Mavic Air is a true pocket rocket that excels in every department. It’s light and small with four folding rotor arms, making it the most portable 4K cameraequipped drone currently on the market. The quality of video footage is matched by its ability to take very detailed 12 megapixel photos. It can also take four styles of panorama image and it does this all by itself. Simply select the panorama function and the drone hovers in one spot and takes a series of images from different angles (with no pilot input) which it them stitches together to produce a seamless widescreen vista. The Mavic Air can also be controlled with palm gestures or a mobile phone, but the supplied hand controller provides the most satisfying way to operate it. It also lets you fly much further – up to 4 km away and back again on a battery that lasts around 21 minutes. Best of all, though, are the obstacle avoidance sensors on the rear as well as to the fore and below the craft. This makes flying more confidence-inspiring than ever.
Valentin Valkov | Shutterstock.com
Price: US$ 799
Price: US$ 427
Best selfie drone DJI SPARK The cute and portable Spark is the smartest selfie drone in existence right now, available in five lush colours. It comes with front obstacle avoidance and is rock steady when flown indoors or out. You’ll get very acceptable 1080p video and 12 megapixel photos from its camera, which is equipped with a two-axis mechanical stabiliser for relatively smooth video footage. The battery provides around 16 minutes of flight time, decent for a drone of this size. While not designed for high-quality videography, it still shoots excellent footage. It’s also reassuringly tough as nails, so should you not spot that you are directing it full speed into a tree, chances are it will emerge unscathed. Another good reason to consider snapping one up right away. Price: US$ 848 FLYafrica 35
Saying farewell in style… How a carpenter’s bright idea in 1951 led to a Ghanaian tradition
Funerals are solemn occasions: true or false? Well, in Ghana they’ve found a way to bring lightness and even humour into the very process of burial. It’s all thanks to the idea – born many years ago in the coastal town of Teshie, part of Greater Accra – of making coffins in fantastical colours and shapes that reflect the character and career of the deceased. Images courtesy of Eric-Adjete-Anang. Photos by Michael D Wilson
T
he Ghanaian tradition of
the shape of a boat, while a farmer
making fantasy coffins in
specified a giant onion. Originally
colourful shapes can be
popular among the Ga people of the
traced back to colonial times. In
Accra region, the ‘abebuu adekai’
1951 a young carpenter called Seth
or ‘proverb boxes’ have become
Kane Kwei made a palanquin (a
a Ghanaian tradition. Today, there
type of sedan chair) in the shape of
are nearly 10 workshops in Ghana
a cocoa pod for a tribal chief who
specialising in such coffins, but the
was due to take part in a local festi-
Kane Kwei Carpentry Workshop is
val. Sadly, the chief died before the
where it began.
festival, so it was decided to bury him in the palanquin. Not long after that, Kane Kwei’s
Today, the original workshop in
grandmother died. Growing up near
Teshie is managed by 33-year-old
the airport, she had always been
Eric Adjetey Anang, grandson of
fascinated by aeroplanes, but had
the founder. He works alongside his
never had a chance to fly in one.
father, Ernest Anang Kwei, and his
Remembering how the cocoa pod
brother Reginald, plus six apprentic-
coffin had impressed the crowds
es. The business has now expanded
at the chief’s funeral, Kane Kwei
to include a separate workshop in
decided to commemorate his grand-
Kumasi. The two workshops produce
mother by making a coffin in the
anything up to 300 coffins per year.
shape of an aeroplane so that she could ‘fly’ into the afterlife. Within a few weeks, local people
36
Grandson
Eric was born in Teshie and grew up in the compound where the family workshop is located. “At eight
had begun to ask for bespoke
years old I began helping around the
coffins and the idea quickly caught
workshop, learning the tools of the
on. A fisherman wanted his to be in
trade that has supported by family
Coming to America
BESPOKE Eric creates to order
The unique designs of the Kane Kwei Carpentry Workshop have caught the attention of American academics and artists and in recent times Eric Adjetey Anang has been in demand at a number of venues in the United States. Last October he spent two months as an artist in residence at the University of Iowa. In the summer he was a guest of Maine College of Art and he recently hosted workshops at Tennessee Tech University. Eric is married with two children and his son Joshua loves helping him in the studio.
‘At eight years old I began helping around the workshop, learning the tools of the trade that has supported by family my entire life’ my entire life,” he says. After senior
traditions has resurged, the shop is
high school, he could have started
slowly reclaiming its glory days.”
university but chose to join the family business as an apprentice. “When my grandfather passed
Most of the coffins are bought by Ghanaians and 70 to 80 per cent of them are used in the traditional
away, the shop had started to go
way for burial. But, of course, the
downhill as bills piled up and former
‘proverb boxes’ are works of art,
apprentices embarked on their own
too, and many people – including
businesses,” says Eric. “I decided
overseas customers – buy them
to pour my heart into the shop and
as artefacts for display and other
see if I could turn it around. At age
purposes. Some of the export coffins
20 I took over the shop because
are specially built in harder woods
I was determined not to let my
so they can be displayed in colder
grandfather’s name die. It has been
climates.
a worthwhile investment. Over time, as Ghana’s economy has improved, tourism grows and interest in our
AMERICA Eric in Tennessee
FLYafrica 37
Image courtesy of EATV
Speaking out Smooth-talking artist Rhyme Sonny is a major player in the resurgent spoken word scene in Ghana. By Mark Edwards
T
here’s rhyme and reason
and been a regular on Ghanaian
behind Bedwei Kwaku
television.
Sonny’s rise to the top of
plenty of plaudits in his career, but
in Ghana. His talent surfaced at
nobody is as sure of his talents as
Opoku Ware School in Kumasi,
the poet himself. His wonderful
where he wrote rap verses for his
poem ‘How Did It All Start’ explores
schoolmates to perform. As an
how the poet found his calling and
adult, friends called him the ‘King
built a lasting renown that will go
of Rhymes’ as he began to transfix
“farther than the Picassos and the
audiences with the biting wit and
Shakespeares”. His new album, which
rhythmic flow of his poetry.
has 22 spoken word tracks and took
He combined this moniker with his
Image courtesy of GeeQ Photos
38
eight engineers and four years to put
actual name for his stage persona,
together, is called ‘G.O.A.T.’ (Greatest
Rhyme Sonny, and has notched up
Of All Times).
more than 300 shows in the past 10
ON STAGE Performing
Rhyme Sonny has received
the burgeoning spoken word scene
years, including appearances at the
Confident
MTN Music Festival and the AU Arts
“G.O.A.T is one of my best works,”
Festival in honour of ex-president
says Rhyme Sonny. “You have to
JA Kuffour. He has also released a
be confident in your abilities to
book of poetry, ‘My Word String of
become the Greatest Of All Times.
Rhymes’, organised poetry festivals
Confidence is key but it must be
drawn from hard work. You can only
Aidoo, Kofi Anyidoho and Abena
be confident if you know your worth
Busia and the enterprising new
and the power and creativity behind
generation of Sonny and his contem-
the words and works you share.”
poraries is elevating the art form
Such self-belief has fortified
Rhyme Sonny’s work acknowl-
in spoken word poetry, a genre that
edges its links to such heritage with
is experiencing a renaissance in
the talented wordsmith eloquently
Ghana but doesn’t command the
flitting between Twi, the dialect of
financial rewards afforded to rappers
his Ashanti roots, and English in
or musicians.
his poems. The poet also tackles
man – he attended the University of Ghana in Legon, Accra – so could
Image courtesy of GeeQ Photos
once again.
Rhyme Sonny in navigating a career
Rhyme Sonny is an educated
traditional themes of faith and family in his work. “I love my mother tongue and I
have pursued more obviously lucra-
knew I can go places with it,” he says.
tive careers; but he believes in his
“It gives you an identity and brings a
calling and the power of the spoken
fresh breath to the arts.”
word and is an unstinting champion of contemporary poetry in Ghana.
Inspired
Image courtesy of GeeQ Photos
‘I love my mother tongue and I knew I can go places with it. It gives you an identity and brings a fresh breath to the arts’
However, the always dapper
Shakespeares” has included gigs
poet is very much an artist of his
outside of Ghana, performing in
times and his works also cover more
Nigeria, Cameroon and the UK.
modern concerns such as drug
Whether such legendary status
When Rhyme Sonny began on
abuse and Aids. He is not afraid
comes quick or slow, it will not
the circuit he was inspired and
to subvert the art form, adding
dampen Rhyme Sonny’s belief in
supported by Ghanaian spoken
elements of music, dance and
himself and others in Ghana’s spoken
word artists such as Mutombo The
technology. His collaboration with
word community. “We have an inner
Poet and DK Osei-Yaw. Now, as
Tawiah DeSoulPoet on one of his
passion burning of which the smoke
an established artist, he mentors
most revealing works, ‘My CV of Sin’,
will definitely come out some day,”
a growing community of poets
was an interactive piece of perfor-
he says.
as the co-founder of the Poetry
mance art.
Exchange, founder and president
“My first love was music,” he
To keep up with announcements on Rhyme Sonny’s latest shows in
of People of Equal Thoughts and
says. “When I started active spoken
Spirits (POETS) and the creator of
performance I was converting my
‘The Rhyme Show’, a weekly spoken
songs into poems. I can say this
word and music open mic event at
could be the reason why my flow has
Accra’s Badu Lounge.
become rhythmic, but also the style
For footage of his live perfor-
I adopted which dwells mainly on
mances, visit his Facebook page.
“When I started I had never heard anyone do spoken word in Ghana,” he says. “When I looked for venues
Ghana, visit his Twitter page @rhymesonny or go to instagram. com/rhymesonny
rhymes is naturally musical.
to perform at I came into contact
Poetry
with other poets and artists. I drew a
“Having envisaged how I want
lot from their standard and I realised
some of my performances to go,
I was fully baked and could match
for example with a choir, orchestral,
up to the competition. I respect and
dancers, bands and more, I have
appreciate talent so much and I am
been able to achieve all of these.
always ready to push poets to levels
Placing my poetry in the midst of
Rise above your peers
that I am not and pull them to my
these art forms has challenged me to
level as well.”
become a better performer.”
And do away with your fears
Ghana has a rich heritage of
SELF BELIEF Rhyme Sonny is driven
His journey to better himself and
spoken word artists such as Efua
hone his craft until he is remem-
Sutherland, Kofi Awoonor, Ama Ata
bered beyond the “Picassos and
The making of a poet (An excerpt from ‘How It All Started’ by Rhyme Sonny)
One day, I heard a voice clearly in my ears Saying Sonny, wipe away your tears
It will add more years to your years And your name will go farther than the Picassos and the Shakespeares. FLYafrica 39
Flying high in Kwahu Paragliding festival now one of Ghana’s top Easter events
E
very Easter crowds of people from Ghana’s Kwahu tribe who have spread across the country and beyond in their lives return to their mountainous homelands in the Eastern Region for three days of celebrations. The events have always meant a lot to the Kwahu people, who are committed to the Christian faith and flock to the Kwahu Hills – the highest habitable point in Ghana, dotted with 12 towns – to mark the celebrations. Ghanaians have always loved their Easter celebrations, but beyond the members of the million-strong tribe, the revelry in Kwahu drew little interest to this mountainous area – so remote it is known as Asaase Aban or ‘the natural fortress’. That all changed 13 years ago when the Easter celebrations were literally taken to new heights by
40
a business idea which the Kwahu people, renowned for their thrift and entrepreneurial know-how, could not pass up. Now, as well as the carnivals and street jams on the ground the skies are also alive above the mountains as paragliders swoop and soar overhead. The Easter event, now known as the Ghana Paragliding Festival, has the backing of the Ghana Tourism Authority (GTA) and is seen as the best place in the country to celebrate the holiday, attracting visitors from across Ghana and the world. Paragliders come from far and wide and it’s easy to see why. The thermals around the take-off point, Odweanoma Mountain – at 2,500 metres the highest point of the Kwahu range – provide excellent flying conditions from mid morning until late in the day and the views
across the green hills, plunging ravines and tumbling waterfalls of Kwahu once you’re up and soaring are spectacular.
World-class paragliding Pilot Charles ‘Chuck’ Smith has been flying at the festival for many years and coordinates the international team of tandem pilots for the event. He says: “There is nothing like the Ghana Paragliding Festival anywhere in the world. The flying at Kwahu is wonderful. The launch site lends itself to be flyable all day long. The Ministry of Tourism recently expanded and improved the launch area and now it is world-class.” Chuck says pilots from Nigeria, South Africa and Togo, from Belgium, France, Germany, Romania and the UK, and from India, Japan, Peru and the United States have taken part in the event over the
HIGH IN THE SKY What a view
‘The paragliders are beautiful to watch as they soar majestically in the air. The children of Nkawkaw surround the football field where we land’
KWAHU CELEBRATION Traditional dress
Ground-level attractions years. The past two Easter events have seen Jonathan Adjin Quaye from Accra take to the skies – the first Ghanaian to be certified as a paragliding pilot. Many of these pilots fly tandem paragliders, so there is room for one paying passenger to experience free flight. A 15-minute flight costs around GHC 150. This ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ opportunity is a huge draw for festival visitors. Over the course of the event more than 200 people will get their chance to fly. Certainly, for the Kwahu people to get a chance to see their homeland, a place that holds deep significance for them, from an entirely new, exhilarating perspective is something special. Even those not personally taking part enjoy seeing the gliders launching and flying. Chuck says: “The paragliders are beautiful to watch as they soar majestically in the air. The children of Nkawkaw [capital of Kwahu West Municipal
District] surround the football field where we land. They always greet us with cheers of joy. We often drop little toy parachutes or footballs from the sky overhead for them to catch as an Easter gift to enjoy.”
Community aid Such interaction with the community by the paragliders is integral to the principles of the festival, which has evolved into an opportunity not only for participants to experience the beautiful culture and landscapes of Ghana, but also for participating pilots and passengers to represent the goodwill of the flying community by raising donations to aid local community development efforts. The efforts of several pilots over the years, with the help of the Cloudbase Foundation, have raised funds for a local orphanage in Kwahu.
There are plenty of ground-level attractions during the festival as well. If you want something to rival the adrenaline rush of paragliding, you can go on a hike to the Nkofieho Caves of Life. It is said they once served as a hideout for warriors fleeing wars waged by the Asante kings and you’ll appreciate their evasiveness when you have to plunge into thick forest and climb up a steep section of Odweanoma Mountain to reach them. In the towns there are live music events, organised football matches, street carnivals and markets selling traditional clothing and jewellery to cater for the vast numbers of people who visit the region each year.
Find out more For more information on the festival, visit www.ghanaparagliding.com or call the Ghana Tourism Authority on +233 30 268 2608 FLYafrica
41
SPARRING Ernest Amuzu and Wahab Oluwaseun
The boxers of Bukom What is it about this small, underprivileged fishing community that produces so many legends of the ring?
B
Another boxer to learn his craft in Bukom gyms was Azumah Nelson, probably the greatest African boxer of all time, renowned for his strong jabs and quick feet in the ring. From his humble upbringing, Nelson, who was nicknamed ‘The Professor’ as he
ukom is a community in
fighter who won many international
often taught his opponents a lesson,
the west of Accra near
bouts at a time when Ghana was
went on to win three world titles in a
James Town that is inhab-
still under British rule. Back then,
long career that including legendary
ited by the Ga people. The Ga gave
the colonials introduced boxing
bouts with Puerto Rico’s Wilfredo
the district its name, which means
to communities along the coast,
‘a well’, and Bukom has turned out
building gyms and encouraging
to be a well-spring of world class
Ghanaians to fight.
Ghana has a rich boxing herit-
PROUD TRADITION A fisherman in Bukom
World title
age and much of it centres on the
The spirit of boxing remained after
small, underprivileged community
independence in 1957. Bukom boy
of Bukom. This fighting hotbed has
David Kotei turned pro at 16 and
nurtured six of the country’s nine
went on to be known in the ring
world champions in the sport.
as ‘DK Poison’, becoming the first
The history of Bukom’s boxing
Ghanaian to win a world title, reign-
success began with Roy Ankrah, a
ing as world featherweight boxing
Gómez and Salvador Sánchez from Mexico. Today, boxing is as big as ever in Bukom. Thousands of boys and young men see a chance to rise
Danilo Marocchi | Shutterstock
boxing talent over the years.
42
champion between 1975 and 1976.
from poverty to stake a claim on boxing’s world stage, just like Kotei and Nelson and other local heroes such as former welterweight world champion Joshua ‘The Hitter’ Clottey and Olympic medallist Ike ‘Bazooka’ Quartey.
FIGHT NIGHT Temporary ring set up for young boxers
COACHING Ebenezer Quartey, advises boxer Michael Pappoe
HEROES Braimah Kamoko aka ‘Bukom Banku’ sparring with George Ashie aka ‘Red Tiger’
JUMP TO IT Bastie Samir (left) training alongside his boxer colleagues
The gyms that blooded these
muscled fishermen dragging their
“From our childhood on, fighting
global stars are still in operation and
pirogues – fishing boats usually
is part of our lives. So when we
training the next generation of fight-
laden with a catch of squid, barra-
saw Azumah Nelson or other guys
ers. More than 30 boxing schools
cuda, mackerel or flounder – onto
boxing, we started doing boxing,
are squeezed into the tightly packed
the beach and marvel at the way
too, and it looks like fighting is in our
streets of Bukom. No other place in
they balance on the rolling waters as
genes, it flows in our veins.”
the world has this quantity of boxing
they cast their nets to understand
schools and none has produced so
how this could be a good grounding
Heywood Okine concurs. “In Bukom,
many world champions in the past
for success in the ring.
you learn to fight before you learn
75 years.
Talented
Boxing is more than just a sport here; it’s a way of life. Many of the
Ghanaian sports journalist Sammy
to walk.”
FOCUS Abraham Osei Bonsu at Bukom Boxing Gym
young boxers who frequent the
There have been many attempts to
roofless gyms and roadside sparring
fathom why so many talented boxers
sessions are homeless, often sleep-
hail from this district, no doubt in
ing at the gym and rising to train all
the hope of replicating the model
day. The gym community of boxers
elsewhere, but none has yielded a
and trainers becomes their family
definitive answer.
and nurtures them.
Certainly, life in Bukom, one of
IN TRAINING Wahab Oluwaseun (of Nigeria)
Charles Quartey, head coach at
Jamestown’s poorest neighbour-
Charles Quartey Boxing Foundation,
hoods, is hard and you need to be
an open-air boxing gym in Bukom
tough to progress. The Atlantic
that counts Pan African Super
Ocean is a main source of income
Featherweight Champion Oluwaseun
and you only have to see the densely
Wahab among its fighters, says: FLYafrica 43
WORKOUT Abraham Osei Bonsu works the punching bag
Bukom’s boxing greats Roy Ankrah: Held featherweight, bantamweight, lightweight and welterweight Gold Coast titles during a professional career that ran from the 1940s to 1960s. After retiring from the ring, he coached the Ghana Olympic boxing squad. David Kotei: When he was crowned world featherweight boxing champion in 1975 he became the first Ghanaian professional boxer to win a world title. Nicknamed ‘DK Poison’, he won 40 fights, 24 by knockout. Azumah Nelson: Widely considered the greatest African boxer of all time, Nelson held the WBC featherweight title once and the WBC super featherweight title twice. He is now training his son, Azumah Nelson Junior, who has set his sights on becoming a greater legend than his father. Joshua Clottey: Held the IBF welterweight title from 2008 to 2009. Renowned for his defensive prowess – most controversially displayed in a 2010 loss to Manny Pacquiao – he never lost a bout via knockout.
Those who excel in the sport are hugely respected, but Bukom’s boxing community is hugely
29-fight career. The 4,000 seater arena, which
supportive of all its fighters.
was opened by President John
Roadside sparring sessions will often
Dramani Mahama in 2016 and also
draw a huge crowd of supporters.
houses an Olympic pool and a school
Everyone has a favourite local cham-
for needy children, has provided
pion and will go to all his fights and
Bukom – and, indeed, Ghana – with
even turn up to support him during
a much-needed showcase for the
training.
cream of its talent.
One of the most colourful local stars today is Braimah Kamoko,
Dreams
known as Bukom Banku, who has a
The chance of earning a bout there
rock star following in the commu-
will doubtless fire up the young
nity, in part due to his efforts in
boxers training among the labyrinth
training new boxers. His fight last
of tin roof shacks in Bukom and
year against another local hero,
putting their hopes and dreams into
Bastie Samir, drew record crowds
every punch.
to the Bukom Boxing Arena. The
44
37-year-old the first defeat of his
Bramaih Kamoko (Bukom Banku): Rose to prominence by winning a bronze medal as a heavyweight at the 1999 All Africa Games. Won the WBO Africa Light Heavyweight title in 2011 and the WBO Africa Cruiserweight title in 2012. His 28-fight unbeaten record came to a dramatic end in 2017 when he was knocked out by fellow Bukom boy Bastie Samir. A rematch has been much talked about, but has yet to happen.
Ray Demski Canadian photographer and cinematographer Ray visited Bukom last year as a Nikon European Ambassador to take pictures of the boxers and their community. He kindly allowed FLYafrica to use his stirring images to accompany this feature. Ray specialises in action and adventure photography, using his own athleticism to find new angles and points of view. His commercial client roster includes the likes of BMW, Adidas, Audi and Red Bull.
Upcoming fights are fairly well
disciplined Samir’s training regime
publicised in Bukom, but if you
included sparring with four fighters
want details on a bout, contact the
at once. As a consequence, the
Greater Accra Boxing Association
solo Banku didn’t offer too much
on +233 302 760 892 or visit its
of a challenge and he handed the
Facebook page.
RAY DEMSKI Photographer and adventurer
To see the film he made of his time in Bukom, visit https://vimeo.com/265585242 To see more example of his work, go to his website at www.raydemski.com or visit his Instagram page at @raydemski
AWAroutes
Freetown Sierra Leone
Nigeria
Tamale Côte Ghana d’lvoire Monrovia Kumasi Liberia
ROUTE PLANNED ROUTE
Abidjan
Abuja Lagos
Takoradi
Explore West Africa with Africa World Airlines LIBERIA
GHANA
Accra
Takoradi
Monrovia
Kotoka International Airport
Takoradi Airport
Roberts International Airport
Capital city of Ghana with an estimated population of 2.27 million. Economic and administrative hub for Greater Accra region and home to Ghana’s government administration.
Port town combined with Sekondi to form Sekondi-Takoradi, capital of the Western Region.
Capital and most populous city of Liberia with more than 1 million inhabitants.
NIGERIA
Freetown Lungi International Airport
Kumasi
Lagos
Kumasi International Airport
Murtala Muhammed International Airport
Located in Ashanti Region and one of Ghana’s biggest metropolitan areas with a population of 2.07 million.
Nigeria’s largest city and the most populous in Africa. Major financial centre and home to one of Africa’s biggest ports.
Capital of Sierra Leone and the country’s economic, financial, cultural and political centre.
Tamale Tamale Airport Capital of Ghana’s Northern Region and hub for administrative and commercial activities.
SIERRA LEONE
Abuja Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport Capital of Nigeria and one of the fastest-growing cities in the world. Administrative and political centre of Nigeria.
Book online
flyAfricaWorld.com FLYafrica 45
TRAVELinformation Before your flight
1.
2.
3 .
4.
5.
Allow enough time to arrive at the airport at least two hours before the flight departure time and no later than 40 minutes before departure.
Unaccompanied minors Children aged six to 12 must travel as an unaccompanied minor (UM) on AWA. Only children mature enough to
If you are a special needs passenger, arrive at the airport in ample time to allow the airport staff to process documents.
travel with limited supervision
Make sure you have the correct identification for check-in, such as a voter’s ID card, National Health Insurance card, driver’s licence or any form of government identification before you travel on AWA’s domestic routes and a valid passport on regional routes. A visa is required for non-ECOWAS passport holders. Without a valid physical government-issued ID you will not be checked in.
receiving a UM at final
are allowed to travel as a UM. Details of parent/guardian destination must be provided by a parent/guardian during reservation. Proof of age such as a valid passport, birth certificate or National Health Insurance card must be presented at check-in.
Check that your bags are within the correct weight and size limits for your product class (see table below).
AWA ground staff will assist the UM with check-in, transfers and boarding.
Check your seat assignment, which will be given to you at the airport.
Once on board, a flight attendant with observe and/
During your flight
6.
7.
8.
periodically.
Enjoy complimentary hot beverages, served on some routes, as well as fresh fruit juice and snacks including croissants, biscuits and fish/meat pies.
UMs are only allowed to travel on non-stop or same-
The parent/guardian receiv-
Pay close attention to the safety procedures outlined by the cabin crew and take note of your nearest exit.
plane services.
ing the UM should arrive at the gate 30 minutes prior to
AWA does not accept
scheduled arrival and present
responsibility for a UM’s
valid photo ID to an AWA
actions. The parent/guardian
representative. AWA will not
agrees to hold AWA blame-
release a UM to anyone other
less for any injuries to UM
than the designated parent/
caused by or out of UM’s own
guardian.
negligence.
Sit back, relax and enjoy FLYafrica magazine! AWA reserves the right to
Baggage allowances
46
or communicate with the UM
Checked baggage
Hand luggage
Excess baggage
Should the UM’s flight be
transport UMs on flights that
disrupted or should the guard-
may have been diverted or
ian or parent fail to meet the
cancelled due to weather or
UM on arrival, AWA is author-
operational disruptions.
ized to take necessary and
Domestic Regional 23 kg
30 kg
One piece up to 5 kg and 1 handbag/laptop bag GHS 5/kg
US$ 3/kg
book stating the duration of
to AWA representatives of the
pregnancy at the date of travel.
person’s condition upon ticket purchase.
A new mother is permitted to fly 48 hours after a normal
Pre-boarding to find a suit-
delivery, provided that she has
able seat. Passengers with
a certificate from her obstetri-
disabilities are not permitted to
cian stating she is fit to fly.
sit in the emergency exit rows.
Babies under 14 days old are not permitted to fly.
Receipt of checked-in wheelchair or other assistance device upon disembarking or
Passengers with reduced mobility
at baggage claim. AWA is not insured, permitted
AWA provides assistance to
or equipped for staff to carry
passengers with special needs
any passenger who is unable to
during the reservation process,
assist himself or herself onboard
check-in, during the flight
an AWA aircraft, even if he or
and at final destination. AWA
she is able to walk but needs a
will ensure provision of the
trained and accredited bearer.
following: AWA is not equipped to Transport of passengers
reasonable action under the
agrees to reimburse AWA for
Pregnant women Expectant mothers are permitted to fly until the 28th medical certificate. From the 28th to the
seated on the lap of an adult
34th week of pregnancy, an
over 15 years of age. However,
expectant mother is required
a passenger may choose to
to provide a medical certifi-
purchase a seat for the infant
cate from her obstetrician
as long as there is a proper
stating that the pregnancy is
child restraint device.
progressing without complications and stating the expected
Only one child is permitted
delivery date.
to sit on an adult’s lap. An additional seat must be purchased
or contained gas either in the
safety-related regulation that
passenger cabin or as cargo/
requires us not to do so.
baggage. AWA is not equipped to
chairs or other assistance
transport passengers who
devices for personal use at
require stretchers, incubators,
no charge, in addition to
respirators or other devices
enplaning and deplaning.
that may rely on aircraft power
Attention should be brought
supply.
week of pregnancy without a
AWA requires all children under two years old to be
other hazardous materials and/
unless there is a specific
Transport of wheel-
any expenses incurred.
Infants and toddlers
with disabilities of any kind
and more comfortable flight.
circumstances. In the case of the latter, the parent/guardian
transport medical oxygen or
Expectant mothers more
if one adult is travelling with
than 34 weeks pregnant are
two infants.
not permitted to fly with AWA.
AWA recommends that
For pregnancies less than
a child over 20 kg in weight
28 weeks, passengers should
should use a seat for a safer
possess an ante-natal card/
Fleet information Embraer ERJ-145LR Length:
29.87 m / 98 ft 0 in
Height:
6.76 m / 22 ft 2 in
Wingspan:
20.04 m / 65 ft 9 in
Capacity: Engines:
50 passengers Rolls Royce AE 3007-A1 Turbofans
Range: Maximum speed:
2,870 km Mach 0.78
Number of aircraft: 8 FLYafrica 47
AWAcontacts
Get in touch Local Offices Accra – Head Office SSNIT Emporium Ground Floor, Airport City Liberation Road PMB CT67 Cantonment Accra, Ghana SOCIAL MEDIA
www.facebook.com/ flyafricaworld
@flyafricaworld
Tel: +233 24 243 8888 Toll Free: 0800 200 200 Email: awaoffice@flyafricaworld.com Opening hours: 07.00-19.00 (Mon-Fri) 08.00-14.00 (Sat)
Kumasi
Tel: +233 30 297 4918
Takoradi Instagram
@flyafricaworld
Tel: +233 57 770 2854
Tamale
Tel: +233 30 297 4919
Email Contacts
Regional Offices Lagos
Airport Office Roberts International Airport, Lower Margibi County, Monrovia, Liberia
Airport Ticketing Office Room 2030, 2nd Floor (Airline Floor), D Wing Murtala Muhammed International Airport Ikeja, Lagos
Tel: +231 886 691 623 +231 881 108 682 +231 881 108 666
Tel: +234 1 342 7130/2
Town Office 1st Floor, Kabah Building Benson/Mechlin Street Monrovia, Liberia
Email: sales.lagos@flyafricaworld.com
Abuja Airport Ticketing Office Public Concourse, Terminal C Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport Abuja Tel: +234 8171 481 189 +234 8171 481 480
Opening hours: 08.00-17.00 (Mon-Fri)
Tel: +231 775 450 010 +231 776 578 812 Email: sales@air-mc.com Opening hours: 08.00-17.00 (Mon-Fri), 08.00-14.00 (Sat)
Freetown
Email: abuja.sales@flyafricaworld.com
Airport Office Lungi International Airport
Opening hours: 08.00-16.00 (Mon-Sat)
Tel: +232 79 630 103
Concerns concerns@flyafricaworld.com
Town Office 5 Usuma Close, off Gana Street, Maitama, Abuja
Town Office 21/23 Siaka Stevens Street Tel: +232 79 630 103; +232 88 852 773
Charters charters@flyafricaworld.com
Opening hours: 08.00-17.00 (Mon-Sat)
Opening hours: 08.30-17.30 (Mon-Fri)
Book online 48
Monrovia
flyAfricaWorld.com