Posts Tagged ‘Fair Trade’

As I lowered myself down onto the half eroded ‘seat’ I felt an air of defiance  masking over the countenance of my chicken wielding , fish mongering, Circle bound via bush road tro tro companions.  Loaded to the brim with Ghana’s working masses the ‘bus’; which once upon a time may have passed for a [...]

Have you ever been flashed before?  And I’m not talking about someone running past your pub window and showing you a naughty bit of flesh…I’m talking about an African flash.  The other day I was springing down Accra’s trendy Oxford Street ducking and diving between the advances of the street hawkers and the stampede of [...]

The basic economic dilemma facing all nations is that of the scarcity of resources.  In Ghana’s case the scarcest of resources is that of the limited availability of “Hard Cash”.  So when Ghana was fortunate enough to be gifted with $14million from FIFA, as reward for the spectacular efforts of our champion Black Star football [...]

Is there a time for happiness?  Is happiness something that needs to be earned?  Or is it a gift dispatched from the heavens, reserved solely for the deserving? Is happiness always the light at the end of the tunnel?  And if so how long is the tunnel?  What happens if my path is already lit [...]

I am constantly being asked the question…”So what is there to do in Ghana??” My mind is then set into action trawling through memories from the past year, those of; Paddling my hand carved wooden canoe, through crocodile infested marshlands on my way to the strikingly isolated Nzulezu village on stilts. Bushwhacking Kakum’s thick West African [...]

Who would’ve thought that in a game which spans sometimes even in excess of 90 minutes that the last kick of the game could be so important. Slovakia and Paraguay are two nations who know only too well the significance of this. In the final few matches in the round of 16 the Slovak’s faced [...]

There was a tramp…a man so poor that he had no shoes on his feet…he had little food in his belly….he had only one ragged shirt to his name….he felt so  deprived that one day he decided that his life was no longer worth living…. In the distance he saw thick vines hanging from a [...]

When high-school students in Soweto started protesting for better education on 16 June 1976, police responded with teargas and live bullets. They surprised their oppressors, the Apartheid government by demonstrating against legislation that insisted that; “Natives [blacks] must be taught from an early age that equality with Europeans [whites] is not for them. Black people [...]

Cultural Exchange between an Imported Ghanaian, American Student, and Japanese Peace Corp in Accra   The most irritating thing in the world: to have an itch that no matter how hard you scratch is never satisfied.  Those of you out there with itchy feet (the urge to always be on the move and discover new places) I [...]

Just the other day I was in town, hurrying along ducking and diving my way through the hoards of people at 37 tro tro station (one of the largest bus stations in Accra). In between the hawkers shrills of “PPPPPURE Water!” I heard someone hissing at me in attempt to catch my attention. Although I [...]

“The Electricity Company of Ghana provides quality electricity services to support economic growth and development in the country.” Extract from the ECG Mission Statement As I sit here in the dark, I wonder if the sweat currently streaming down my forehead will act as a sufficient barrier to protect me against the onslaught of mosquitoes [...]

Why did the Chicken cross the road? To get to the other side! Arguably one of the most classic jokes of all time. Hilariously funny to those of us raised in the framework of a Western society; as where on earth would you ever see a Chicken roaming free enough to enjoy the liberty of [...]

As I mentioned in my last entry, I believe that in order to Initiate a Change in Ghana we need to create effective forums for public expression.  If you feel passionately about something, you’ve got as much right as anyone else to climb on a box and share your views. You’d be in good company [...]

“Today, ‘good governance’ is understood to include among others participation, rule of law, government effectiveness, efficient public service delivery, conflict management, transparency, accountability and anticorruption, efficient revenue mobilization, effective management of resources, property rights and rule-based governance, efficiency of public expenditures, and unbundled regulatory burden.” Baffour Agyeman-Duah, From Fifty Years in Perspective, in Governance In [...]

Have you ever done something that contradicts all basic Human instincts? Well the gauntlet to defy the general fabric of our being was laid before me; when I had to actively will myself to take a running jump off a big cliff! Following this train of thought not only did I emerge the victor by [...]

Last weekend after happily chomping my way through a serving of fufu and goat light soup I called the waitress of the chop bar (local eating spot) to bring me a toothpick.  After delaying for some ten or twenty minutes she eventually returned with a handful of made in China toothpicks.  I was surprised to [...]

A topic of great hostility between the youth in Ghana and the presiding government is the suggestion that there are; “NO JOBS IN GHANA!” Each and every day as I weave my way to work through the backstreets of Osu, I often pass herds of young men, idly loitering on street corners. More often than [...]

Who wants to get Rich? Church Prostitute part I, II, & III? The 10th year celebration of the rule of a prominent chief?  Or a series of funeral announcements and obituaries? Founding father and visionary Dr Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah as far back as 1957 was scrupulously aware of the significance in educating the masses.  This [...]

“Ghana has a reputation as the friendliest country in West Africa…Taken as a whole, Ghanaians do seem to be remarkably affable and friendly both among themselves and in their dealings with tourists.  It is difficult to imagine a country where women have less to fear on a gender-specific level, and women travelling alone will often [...]

Wangari Maathai, Nobel Peace Prize winner in 2004; “for her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace” recalls, in her memoirs Unbowed that when she was a child growing up in the Kenyan highlands; ‘People carried beautiful, colourful baskets of different sizes and types made from sisal and other natural fibers to and from markets [...]

“Today is my birthday!” Well not my literal birthday as I am notably older than a few hours. But today is the first day in my life that I have awakened and had the overwhelming urge to write about me; my trials, my triumphs, my stresses and my inspirations. I guess today is the first [...]