Accra East Region ECG loses GHS2 million monthly from sub-standard meters

The Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) loses an estimated GHS 2 million monthly within the Accra East Region operational area due to sub-standard meters.

The estimated 20, 000 inferior meters in circulation in the region had been identified to have come from neighbouring Togo and were totally different from meters coming from the Ministry of Energy and ECG.

Mr Jonathan Asante, Regional Commercial Manager, Accra East, said: ‘Within our region we estimated about 20,000 of such meters. If each household is consuming about 100 units, that’s 2000 kilowatt hour and even if you are selling a unit of the power GHS1, you are looking at about GHS2 million each month.’

He said this when a team made up of personnel from the Accra East Regional office and the Dodowa District Office disconnected a community at Oyarifa Anointing Down for an illegal electrical distribution.?

The seemingly new community which had not been mapped by ECG, had some customers using the sub-standard meters whiles others tapped into the national grid without any meters authorised by ECG.

Mr Asante said the manufacturer of the meter tried to imitate Ghana’s Self Help Electrification Project (SHEP) meter, thus, labelling them as property of Ministry of Power.?

‘These meters come here without the knowledge of ECG, Energy Commission is not aware and so if the standard of cable used is low then It can create fire outbreak. We seized over 40 pieces of such meter recently from the community and also handed over some suspected dealers to be the police,’ he said.?

‘Some people are facing prosecution. We have intercepted some of these meters our region and even in Central, Ashanti and Volta Regions but as typical of Ghanaians they are covering their sources,’ the Manager said.??

Mr Asante said the strategy was to confiscate the meters, know their consumption, debit the customer’s new accounts and make them pay all they had consumed, including penalty before they get any ECG new meters.

Some affected customers in an interview with the Ghana News Agency (GNA), said, they had the inferior meters through their elected Assembly Members who charged about GHS500 for the cost and installation.

Mr Peter Cudjoe Geh, Assembly Member for Ayi-Mensah Kweiman Electoral Area, confirmed he assisted some community members to acquire the meters though he did not know they were sub-standard.?

‘I will be available to assist in any ECG investigations on the meters. The community members came with a need of a meter and there is a colleague who gets the meters somewhere,’ he said.

Responding to when Assembly Members had become ECG officials distributing meters, Mr Geh said that he had been one of their services rendered to their electorates, adding that a former MP distributed meters eight years ago.

The Accra East Region, as part of the nationwide revenue mobilisation exercise, had generated more than GHS104.3 million since the start of the exercise March 20 within eight districts..

The districts are Makola, Legon, Akuapim Mampong, Roman Ridge, Teshie, Kwabenya, Dodowa and Adenta.

Source: Ghana News Agency

PM Abiy Receives President Mohamud

Addis Ababa:-Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has received President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud of Somalia, who arrived in Addis Ababa this afternoon.

Abiy posted on his Facebook that he received Mohamud of Somalia who is in Ethiopia for a two-day working visit.

President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud was warmly welcomed by Adem Farah, Vice President of the ruling Prosperity Party and Foreign Affairs State Minister Mesganu Arga at Bole International Airport.

Source: Somali National News Agency

World Vision improved feeding programme saving lives

Malnutrition has been and continues to be one of the drawbacks of development in developing countries.

Apart from blurring the future of otherwise, vibrant future workforce, it also compels governments to spend a chunk of their earnings into curative activities and consumables at the neglect of infrastructure among other needs.

To help ameliorate their plight the World Vision Ghana has introduced improved feeding programmes in selected communities of the country, under improved feeding for the first 1000 days project..

To avoid its perennial occurrence, some rural communities in the Kassena-Nankana West, Kintampo South, and Sekyere East Districts have used indigenous agricultural practices for decades to produce a wide range of high-quality food such as maize, millet, cassava, pepper, tomatoes, and plantains.

These have helped sustain household food security and livelihoods for decades now.

However, malnutrition (underweight children) and anemia in pregnancy resulting from insufficient intake of micro and macro- nutrients were prevalent.

This often cause malnutrition-associated childhood illnesses and severe anemia in pregnancy, which sometimes lead to infant and maternal deaths or complications in pregnancy and childbirth.

In the Kwabia community in the Kintampo South District, for example, Akurugu Evelyn 26, a mother of 3, nearly lost her first two children to death due to malnutrition.

‘My first and second children suffered from acute malnutrition resulting in frequent illnesses and stalled growth and development.

This also affected my productivity and health too’, she said.

‘Today, I am happy my third child did not suffer from similar conditions; neither did she (Evelyn) suffer from anemia or childbirth complications she experienced with her previous pregnancies.

‘Thanks to the new knowledge on nutrition gained from participating in World Vision’s Improved Feeding for the First 1000 Days Project, ‘Anytime I went to the clinic, it was for a routine child welfare clinic exercise: weighing and sensitization on pregnancy, baby healthcare and hygiene. I did not experience anemia, and my delivery was safer too.

‘I am experiencing the joy of motherhood, seeing my child always looking healthy and happy. His growth and development have been exciting’, she added.

Evelyn is consistent in applying nutrition and feeding practices, child healthcare, and hygiene lessons learned from health professionals through World Vision.

‘We are happy the issues of malnutrition and anemia in pregnancy have been justly addressed by World Vision’s IFP project’, she said.

As an organization dedicated to improving the lives of children and women, World Vision Ghana implemented Improved Feeding Practices (IFP) for the First 1000 Days Project in 70 communities in the Kassena-Nankana West, Kintampo South, and Sekyere East Districts, where malnutrition and anemia in pregnancy cases were high.

Using an innovative approach, the project addressed challenges by introducing new skills and knowledge in supplementary feeding, child healthcare and hygiene through advocacy and training.

‘I left child healthcare to my wife solely previously. That has since changed because of the orientation I received from World Vision. Now I support my wife to manage our children’s health, hygiene and education. I take our child for weighing, and I am not ashamed of it any longer’, said Awuni James.

Men’s participation in child healthcare and pregnancy management is a significant change the IFP project has achieved.

Aside from this, a significant improvement in the quality of health service delivery in all partner health centers, and in household feeding practices and an increase in the intake of macronutrients by children and pregnant mothers have resulted in better child growth and birth outcomes.

These achievements were realized because of nutrition skills training and intense advocacy for the consumption of orange-fleshed sweet potatoes (OFSP), poultry products, Koko Plus, and green leafy vegetables.

In addition to this, the project also provided certain medical equipment and capacity building for some health staff.

This boosted their efficiency and enhanced the delivery of health services to babies and pregnant women.

And through radio campaigns, the project reached out more than 11000 women and men with nutrition and child health messages.

All of these have significantly resulted in an increased intake of nutritional supplements among children aged 6-23 months, improved quality child healthcare delivery, and contributed to better nutrition practices, as well as increased antenatal care (ANC) attendance rates by pregnant women, promoted exclusive breastfeeding practices, and improved household feeding practices in the project communities, all of which have led to better child health and birth outcomes.

The IFP project is funded by the Japan Social Development Center through the World Bank.

Source: Ghana News Agency

Italy to present plan for Africa in October – Meloni

Premier Giorgia Meloni said Friday that her government intends to present a plan for Africa named after Eni founder Enrico Mattei in the autumn after arriving in Addis Ababa for a two-day visit to Ethiopia.

‘We are working on a series of initiatives regarding Africa,’ she said as she arrived at her hotel.

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‘The next Italy-Africa intergovernmental summit, which takes place every two years, will be in the autumn and it could be the occasion to present our Mattei plan.

‘In the meantime we are working in cooperation with the African countries because you cannot think you know the best solutions without dialogue with those who are directly concerned’.

Meloni has been calling on Europe to boost aid and develop stronger cooperation with Africa as part of a strategy to reduce the number of migrants seeking to cross the Mediterranean.

The agenda in Addis Ababa includes meetings with Ethiopian Premier Abiy Ahmed, who was in Rome in February, and African Union Commission (AUC) Chairperson Moussa Faki Mahamat.

Italy considers the ‘stability and integrity’ of Ethiopia to be a priority for national interest due to its position on the migratory route from the Horn of Africa to North Africa and Europe.

The country hosts 823,000 refugees and 4.2 million internally displaced people. The humanitarian crisis and conflict in neighbouring Somalia are reportedly to be the subject of a bilateral meeting with Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and of a separate meeting with Ethiopian and Somali representatives on Saturday.

Before leaving, Meloni will also visit the Galileo Galilei comprehensive school in the Ethiopian capital, the largest Italian school outside the country with approximately 900 pupils.

Source: Somali National News Agency