By Kay Codjoe Ghana has a habit of swinging between extremes. We either praise leaders too quickly or condemn them too fast. We rarely stop in the middle to look at the facts, to test the evidence, to ask what is working and what is not. So when people speak […]
Articles
A VINDICATED ZOOMLION?“Cleaning Up Politically or Cleaning Ghana? The Costly Populism Behind AMA and YEA’s Sanitation Gamble”
By Nana Kofi Barfour | nbobonsu@gmail.com Imagine a humid Monday morning in Accra, a young man called Joseph stands at the middle of UTC, Accra-Central with a broom in hand probably taller than himself. Joseph has been unemployed for more than two years and now, under the Accra Metro Assembly’s […]
Ghana Moves Toward a Greener Future as IDRTU Advances Nationwide EV Bus Initiative
By Stephen Apolima ACCRA, GHANA — Ghana’s transition toward sustainable transportation is taking a significant step forward under the leadership of Alhaji Alhassan Ushawu, the Deputy Director in charge of Operations for the International Drivers Road Transport Union (IDRTU) of the Trades Union Congress (TUC). Working alongside international partners from […]
Economic Witch-Hunting and the Price of Progress:Ghana’s Silent Betrayal of Its BuildersThe Story of Alex Apau Dadey—The Visionary Who Dared to Build Beyond Politics
By Nana Kofi Barfour | nbobonsu@gmail.com In an age when nations rise on the backs of visionaries, Ghana seems caught in a paradox: the celebration of mediocrity has become a value. While that is not enough, we are silently dismantling its makers. Few stories capture this paradox better than that […]
The Sanctuary of Survival: Rewriting Darwin’s Legacy in the Language of Care and Healing
By Fuvi Kloku And Dr. Mamie Kutame The enduring spirit of humanity often reveals its greatest strength not in fierce competition, but in tender compassion. This profound truth rings clearest when one steps back from the precipice of loss and looks upon the path of recovery, guided not by personal […]







