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Ghana, Hub for Doing Business
from DAWN
hana, Hub for Doing Business — Vice-President Harris
News Desk Report
Ghana President Nana Akufo-Addo met with US Vice President Kamala Harris
That was in addition to some 1.2 million doses of the Moderna vaccine Ghana received
from the US on September 4, 2021.
“The US is proud to be a member of COVAX. We have already donated more than 1.2 million doses of the Moderna vaccine to Ghana.
“I am proud to announce that, shortly, we will be sending an additional 1.3 million doses of the Pfi zer vaccine. None of us is immune to the ravages of the pandemic,” she added.
Appreciation
While expressing appreciation to the US for its support over the years, particularly in the fi ght against the pandemic, President Akufo-Addo appealed for assistance to help deal with jihadist insurgency in the Sahel, saying: “The other main preoccupation for us is to collaborate eff ectively to defeat the Jihadist insurgency in the Sahel.”
He said the support could be in the form of retooling and building the capacity of the country’s Armed Forces and intelligence agencies to be able to deal with the threats and challenges the jihadists posed in the sub-region.
“Many of those leading the jihadist insurrections in West Africa are people who came from Iraq after they were driven out of that country, so I think if there is any information that can assist us to track down and deal with these people, it would be welcome,” he added.
On Ghana-US relations, President AkufoAddo expressed the hope that the collaboration would continue to “advance our mutual causes and strengthen the relations between our two countries”.
“We want to develop our nation as a democracy where freedom and respect for human rights and the rule of law are paramount to our governance system,” he said. www.graphic.com.gh/news/general-news/ghanahub-for-doing-business-vice-president-harris.html Image credit: thediplomaticinsight.com
By Salim Kikeke - BBC Africa, Dar es Salaam
TANZANIA'S PRESIDENT HAS SAID there were people who doubted she was qualifi ed to lead when she fi rst became head of state because she was a woman.
Some "don't believe that women can be better presidents and we are here to show them," Samia Suluhu Hassan told the BBC.
In March, the 61-year-old was sworn in after her predecessor died in offi ce.
She is currently Africa's only female political head of state. The Ethiopian presidency is a ceremonial role. "Even some of my government workers dismissed me at fi rst as just another woman, but they soon accepted my leadership," Ms. Samia said. "But this is not just in Africa, even in America, [Hillary] Clinton reached a place where we thought she was going to be the president but she couldn't," she added.
Ms. Samia, who was promoted from the the vicepresidency, advised that focusing on implementing development plans and prioritising people's needs was the best way to deal with critics.
She added that despite challenges, other countries could learn from Liberia and Central African Republic who have had female leaders.
President Samia replaced John Magufuli who died from heart complications, she announced at the time.
Magufuli was accused of cracking down on dissent and curtailing certain freedoms. His replacement was seen as someone who would bring a diff erent tone to leadership.
But the recent arrest of main opposition leader Freeman Mbowe on terrorism-related charges, has led some to wonder if President Samia is continuing the policies of her predecessor.
However, the Tanzanian leader defended the move saying Mr. Mbowe's charges were "not political" because he had been under investigation since September last year. "He was out of the country for a long time. I don't know why he fl ed but when he returned he started creating trouble with calls for a new constitution. "I suspect that, knowing the charges he was facing, he calculated that if he
was arrested he could claim that it was because he was pushing for a new constitution," the president said.
Mr. Mbowe was detained after he had said the last election was fraudulent.
President Samia said she would "leave to the courts to decide if he's guilty or not guilty. .
The Tanzanian leader also said she was ready
President Samia Suluhu Hassan was sworn in fi ve months ago
President Samia changed Tanzania's Covid-sceptic policy
to meet with opposition members and other stakeholders to discuss changes to the constitution "when the time is right" but she did not commit to when that would happen.
Critics say the country's independence constitution favours the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi.
The president has taken a diff erent approach to the pandemic than Magufuli, who was a wellknown Covid sceptic.
Ms. Samia said that there was an ongoing public campaign to increase vaccination uptake. The president said that she decided to get the jab publicly to reassure those who were worried about its safety. "But my main worry now is not vaccine hesitancy but availability of vaccines, we have received donations from the US and acquired some from Covax facilities, but they will soon run out," Ms Samia told the BBC.
The change in policy has been widely welcomed, because her predecessor sowed doubt about the existence of the pandemic and rejected measures such as social distancing and mask wearing. Instead he asked people to pray and use steam inhalation.
President Samia also defended her government on claims that she has continued to enforce laws that limit media freedom.
She said journalists "were free to work as long as they followed the country's laws".
She also said that she listens to criticism on social media by opposition members and activists adding that she has got used to it, but "it helps us know what people are thinking, if we ban it we won't have that platform". https://news.yahoo.com/tanzania-presidentsamia-were-show-144334629.html