Utah man kills family, leaves suicide note

A Utah man who fatally shot his wife, her mother, and the couple’s five kids after he was investigated for child abuse left a suicide note saying he ‘would rather rot in hell’ than continue enduring what he called controlling behavior by his wife, investigators wrote in a report released on Friday.

The claims in the suicide note left by Michael Haight, 42, stand in stark contract to conclusions by investigators in the 57-page report that overwhelmingly portray Haight, and not his wife, as controlling and abusive. The report cites the family’s communications before the killings and interviews from community members conducted after the January tragedy.

‘This is nonsense and I can’t handle it for one more day. We will not be a burden on society. I kept asking for help and you wouldn’t listen,’ Michael Haight, 42, wrote in the note included in the report released by the city of Enoch.

‘I would rather rot in hell than to put up with another day of this manipulation and control over me,’ Haight wrote.

Haight’s attorney, Matt Munson, did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.

The report builds off documents released after the murder-suicide that detailed how Haight removed firearms from the home, was investigated on suspicion of child abuse, and searched online for ‘gunshot in a house’ in the lead-up to the shootings.

It paints a picture of Haight as a volatile husband concerned about maintaining a facade of perfection throughout the southern Utah community in which the family lived, where the majority of residents are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The report also details how bedding was laid over all but one of his children’s bodies in bedrooms throughout the home. Body camera footage released along with the report shows a tidy home.

Investigators also interviewed a neighbor who said she was awakened on the night before the eight bodies were discovered when she heard multiple ‘bangs’ that she assumed were fireworks.

The report describes the circumstances leading up to the killings, which took place two weeks after Haight’s wife, Tausha Haight, filed for divorce.

People close to the Haights interviewed by investigators whose names were redacted in the report said that Michael Haight had lost his job at Allstate Insurance in nearby Cedar City, Utah and was seeking to start an independent agency.

Source: Somali National News Agency

Somali President visits recently returned soldiers at Hiil-Weyn camp

The President of the Federal Republic of Somalia, H.E Hassan Sheikh Mohamud visited the Hiil-Weyn camp between Mogadishu and Balcad, where the Somali National Army soldiers who recently returned from training in Uganda are stationed.

The President was accompanied by the Minister of Defence, Abdikadir Mohamed Nur, the Mayor of Mogadishu, Yusuf Hussein Jim’ale, and the Somali Police Commissioner General Sulub Ahmed Firin.

The soldiers, who got military-police training, are intended to contribute to the security of Mogadishu and stop the Al-Shabaab terrorist activities.

The President instructed the military officers to do their duties with vigilance, control, security, and peace of mind. He also urged them to set an example for the other forces in maintaining peace in the country.

President Hassan emphasized that the army’s primary responsibility is to protect the safety, dignity, and lives of Somali citizens. He instructed the military to maintain discipline and follow the rules of the army.

Source: Somali National News Agency

Kenya Tourists’ Numbers Up By 600, 000

Kenya has recorded a sharp increase in the number of tourists over the last five months, following an aggressive campaign to help the sector recover from the effects of the Covid-19 lockdown.

Tourism Cabinet Secretary (CS), Peninah Malonza, said the number grew from 870,000 in October 2022 to 1,487,000 in March 2023, adding that the figure was expected to triple over the next two years.

‘My work is to bring numbers and within the five months I have been in office we have been able to boost the numbers by 600, 000,’ she said.

Through various interventions, the CS said the Ministry has projected to grow the numbers to 5.5 million by the year 2025 to shore-up revenues from the sector.

To achieve the target, the CS said the government has rolled out an elaborate plan to diversify tourism products across the country to woo international and domestic visitors.

Speaking Friday during the official opening of the Fish Fiesta 2023 festival in Kisumu, Malonza said the Ministry was reviewing the Tourism Policy to open up more avenues to grow the sector.

Kenya has been sold by the beach and wildlife. Now it’s time to move from the beach and parks to promote other areas such as the Lake Victoria and other inland lakes across the country, she added.

The government was also exploring opportunities in adventure tourism, culinary tourism, gastronomy, cultural tourism, education tourism, medical tourism, conference tourism, agro-tourism and leisure tourism.

At the same time, through partnership with the Council of Governors (COG), plans were underway to develop unique products in the new areas to boost tourism across the country.

‘We are in talks with the Council of Governors over this and the Kenya Tourism Board (KTB), will pick this up and help the county governments, to market these products,’ she said.

This, she added, was urgent to ensure that tourism benefits are spread across the country to boost revenue and create job opportunities for the youth.

‘When we get to 5.5 million visitors, Mombasa alone cannot handle this number. That is why we are looking at Kisumu and other areas,’ she said.

The Fish Fiesta 2023, which is a flagship product to market Kisumu as a tourist destination is set to open up the Western Tourism Circuit, with more visitors expected to visit key attractions in the area.

The CS noted that Kisumu was important in the country’s tourism agenda, adding that the National government will work hand in hand with the County government to promote various products and attraction sites in the area.

Besides promoting Lake Victoria as a key attraction site, the government was equally exploring possibilities of introducing a luxury cruise ship from Kisumu to Kampala to connect the two cities and woo visitors from Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.

This coupled with direct flights from Kisumu to Mombasa will enhance seamless flow of visitors through Kisumu to Mombasa, further opening-up the Western Tourism Circuit.

Other programs, added Malonza, included reviving marine transport and marketing Impala Sanctuary and Ndere Island National Park to complement efforts by the government to promote tourism.

Kisumu Deputy Governor, Dr. Mathew Owili, urged the National government to allocate funds for the completion of the Afri-Cities Conference Center in Mamboleo which has stalled.

The Sh.1.2 billion 6, 000 capacity Convention Center was to host last year’s Afri-Cities Conference, which was held in Kisumu, but the contractor abandoned the site citing nonpayment.

Dr. Owili said the County government had embarked on an aggressive campaign to market Lake Victoria as a key attraction site.

The campaign dubbed, Kisumu My Pride, targets to reposition the lake and Kisumu as a whole as a tourists’ hub.

However, Lake Victoria was faced by many challenges among them plastic pollution, but the Deputy governor noted that the renewed focus was also set to save the lake, which is a source of livelihood for millions of Kenyans.

The Fish Fiesta 2023, which ends on Sunday will see visitors treated to various exhibitions on the Traditional Luo culture and music, boat racing, tug of war and the search for Mr. and Miss Tourism, Mr. Flex, Mr. Strong among others.

The cookery event has drawn participants from all the Sub counties in Kisumu.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Excise Duty Amendment Bill 2022 is health promoter – Academy

Hajia Hamdaratu Dauda Wumbei, the Chairperson of the Ghana Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, says the Excise Duty Amendment Bill 2022 will protect public health by reducing the consumption of health-harming products.

She said the intake of sugar-sweetened beverages, alcohol and tobacco caused non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, and diabetes.

Sugar-sweetened beverages were too many on the market and causing overweight and obesity among children and adolescents, the Chairperson said.

‘If measures are not taken now the children would become incubators of NCDs in future,’ she said.

Hajia Wumbei said this in an interview with the Ghana News Agency on the sidelines of a news conference organised by the Ghana NCD Alliance, in collaboration with the University of Ghana School of Public Health, Ghana Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, and the Ghana Public Health Association.

It aimed at highlighting the health benefits of the Excise Duty Amendment Bill, passed by Parliament on the night of March 31, 2023. The Bill is now awaiting Presidential assent.

Hajia Wumbei said, the Bill’s intention was not to destroy businesses or cause unemployment but to control the consumption of health-harming products through price increases, which would affect the purchasing power of the consumer, leading to a reduction in consumption.

She gave the assurance that members of the Ghana Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics were readily available to support industry players with new recipes to meet the demands of the public.

Ms Annabel Yeboah-Nkrumah of the University of Ghana School of Public Health said the cost of NCDs treatment was huge, which the poor in society could not afford, hence the need for prevention through tax increases on products that cause the disease.

‘Ghanaians should not look at industry players who are only thinking of their profit but rather the poor and the human lives that are lost through their products. People are on lifelong medication, which is affecting the finances of their families,’ she said.

She urged parents to avoid buying sugar-sweetened beverages for their children to protect them from NCDs.

Source: Ghana News Agency

SDG Four: Educational dreams of 8-year-olds, 19 others rekindled

The dreams of Blessing Afriyie Panyin and Grace Afriyie Kakra, 8-year-old twin sisters have been kindled anew as they enrolled at the Baatsona TMA Pre-School in the sprawling Baatsona Community in Tema West.

The 8-year-olds have desired to be a part of a school community, sit in a classroom, like their privileged peers to read and write and aspire for greatness.

The smart and ambitious twins – Panyin wants to be a beautician and Kakra, a professional teacher with the promise to give back to children who do not have access to education.

For much part of their lives, they watched other children in their neighbourhood move to and fro the Baatsona TMA Pre-school, some 200 meters from their vicinity, while they played and wandered pointlessly.

It has been a long and tortuous journey, because for them, as much as they wished to dress modishly in their uniforms with black pairs of shoe and white matching socks and walk hurriedly to school, it could only take divine intervention and providence.

The twin connection

Walking into a future that calls their wandering soles with dreams, fashioned by divine hands, Panyin and Kakra would meet Ms Victoria Amudzi, a seamstress who will become their saving grace and caregiver.

Ms Amudzi, herself a twin, found their situation rather worrying, having been in a similar predicament some years back as she struggled to have an education.

Rita Ama Nutsugah, the daughter of Ms Amudzi says, ‘they always showed up at our house on school days. They have so many potentials and my mother, being a twin like them, said she will provide for them.’

She indicates that despite her family’s financial constraints, Panyin and Kakra, whose single mother is well and alive but financially handicapped too, defied the odds to enrol them in school.

Like the twins, some 19 others in the Baatsona community, including Samuel Amu Mensah, all enrolled at the Baatsona TMA Pre-school, have the benefit of basic school education under the Process and Plant Automation Limited (PPA) Future Leaders Fund Scholarship Award.

SDG Four and Education Outlook

According to the UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS), in 2020, about 265,188 children were out of school – an increase in the 2019 figure of 35,432.

Globally, about 258 million children and youth are out of school for the year ending 2018, according to the UIS.

The total includes 59 million children of primary school age, 62 million of lower secondary school age and 138 million of upper secondary age.

Providing quality education for all is fundamental to creating a peaceful and prosperous world. Education gives people the knowledge and skills they need to stay healthy, get jobs and foster tolerance.

Goal Two of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Four states that ‘By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys have access to quality early childhood development, care and pre-primary education so that they are ready for primary education.’

According to the United Nation (UN), an estimated 147 million children missed more than half of their in-class instruction over the past two years due to school closures caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

That generation of children, the UN says, could lose a combined total of $17 trillion in lifetime earnings in present value.

Conversely, the generation of Panyin and Kakra, who have lost eight (8) years of their lives without education (in-class instruction) with or without COVID-19, perhaps, could lose a cumulative total of $ 68 trillion in lifetime earnings in present value.

The targets of the SDGs on education would remain an illusion if measures were not put in place to improve access to quality basic education as countries strive to achieve universal primary and secondary education by 2030.

The TAGG Intervention

‘This year, rather than two new entrants joining Primary One, we were moved to create an additional slot to include a twin sibling of one of the candidates as they are faced with the same challenges.’ Mr Kweku Asmah, Group Chief Executive, The Automation Ghana Group (TAGG), excitedly announced at 8th annual Process and Plant Automation Limited (PPA) Future Leaders’ Fund Scholarship Award presentation in Accra.

Since the launch of the PPA Future Leaders Fund Scholarship Award in 2015, the PPA, an electrical engineering solutions provider and part of The Automation Ghana Group, has been dedicated to the cause of giving pupils identified as being at risk of dropping out of school a new lease to life.

The concept of an educational fund was born out of a desire to invest in education at the very basic level as a means to contribute to the improvement of lives of especially the future generation.

Within the vicinity of the company is a community that has a relatively low standard of living, hence the need to introduce a benevolent initiative, Future Leader’s Educational Fund, that will benefit society in the long term and improve lives through education.

The company, as part of its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), shoulders the burden of such pupils at the verge of dropping out of school due to the inability of their parents to cater for their school levies and other school supplies until they complete Junior High School (JHS).

Mr Asmah says, ‘with the advent of the Free Senior High School (SHS) policy, we hope all our JHS graduates make it to the SHS level of education.’

He observes that education, like other critical sectors of the economy, is key to promoting national development as it provides the needed manpower to boost the growth of the public and private sector.

According to the Chief Executive, scientific and technological innovations have become increasingly important in a globalised and knowledge-based economy and increasing science literacy to grow the next generation of innovators is important.

In the last Academic year, the company enrolled 24 pupils from Kindergarten One to JHS three with five of the pupils who sat the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE), performing creditably.

The Infinity Club, a strategy to promote Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM), has resumed earnestly after a long break due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with 24 pupils enrolled from Primary four to JHS two.

The main aim of the club is to ignite the interest of students in science and technology using science sets to enable the students to come up with innovative ideas for their personal development and possibly consider the area of technology for their career development.

For the 2023 Academic year, the company awarded scholarships to 21 pupils from KG two to JHS three.

Thanks to TAGG, the likes of Panyin and Kakra, and the 19 other pupils, whose hopes were dashed, would have an opportunity to a basic school education with paid school levies, school uniforms, school bags, shoes, textbooks, and school stationery.

Way Forward

Basic education is indeed fundamental for personal and social development irrespective of the location and welfare status of all in society.

The condition of the 21 pupils who are currently in school and other previous PPA Scholarship beneficiaries begs the question; how different would their lives have been if they never went to school and never had the opportunity to learn how to read and write?

For Panyi and Kakra, a significant issue that prevented them from having an early education was cost even though other factors may have competed to deny them equitable access.

The cost barrier, Ms Nutsugah, caregiver of the twins, says, is important for policymakers to address, and adds that, it is one of the many other equally important factors, including the provision of grants, that shapes access to basic education in Ghana.

Source: Ghana News Agency