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Showing posts from February, 2026

Life Without an Ambulance in Dormaa Central:A Society negotiating With Fate

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  Every district reveals its priorities not only through what it builds, but through what it leaves missing. Some communities write their story in classrooms. Others in highways. And some, quietly and painfully, in emergencies that arrive with no answer. Dormaa Central’s present chapter can only be called delay. The absence of an ambulance is not merely a logistical gap. It is a message. It tells residents that when life turns fragile, they may be left to negotiate survival alone. Few things test public confidence faster than a medical emergency met with silence. For nearly a year, the district has functioned without a working ambulance. Illness does not pause for procurement. Accidents do not wait for paperwork. Crisis keeps its own clock, yet response here has remained stalled. A town without an ambulance is a town bargaining with fate. Public infrastructure becomes most visible when it disappears. Roads matter when they collapse. Electricity matters when it fails. Ambula...

A Name That Still Haunts Libya: Why the Gaddafi Legacy Is Turning Deadly Again

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  History never truly sleeps. It waits for the right moment to knock again.” Libya has been pushed back into the global spotlight following reports of the assassination of the son of the late Muammar Gaddafi. More than a decade after the fall of the Gaddafi regime, this single act has reopened old wounds, revived unanswered questions, and reminded the world that Libya’s past is still very much alive in its present. This killing is not just about one individual. It is about unfinished business. Why would this happen now? First, Libya remains deeply divided. Power is still fragmented among rival governments, armed groups, and foreign interests. In such an environment, names carry weight. The Gaddafi name, whether loved or hated, still symbolizes authority, resistance, and unresolved power struggles. For some, it represents a threat. For others, a possible rallying point. Second, there is growing talk of political repositioning in Libya. Any attempt by figures linked to th...

Medaema SC Aims High: Targets FA Cup or Ghana Premier League

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Medaema Sporting Club is gearing up for a big season!  According to Mr. James Bawa, the team's Comunications member, the team went to Cote D'ivoire for preseason with the aim of winning the FA Cup or the Premier League. The team's Coach Mr. Ibrahim Tanko has been preparing the team well, and the president's message is clear: play good football and get points. This Saturday, they'll face Samertex 1996 SC in an FA Cup game, and  they're taking it seriously as that of Aduana on 14-02-2026 in premier League game. The team's focus is on getting the FA Cup or the Premier League, and they're treating every game as a must-win. The club's got big ambitions, and we're willing to do what it takes to achieve them. As the communication team official put it, we're in the modern world, and players will go where they're valued in terms of finance. We should be not resting on past glosses either – no top-four team is a threat, except maybe Samertex FC.  O...

Tradition vs Nation? DormaaHene Sparks Debate Over Flags and Unity

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  In Ghana, symbols matter. They carry memory, identity, and authority. So when the DormaaHene openly questioned the growing habit of using non-national flags at public events, especially ceremonies attended by the President, it struck a nerve. His message was simple but firm: tradition is important, but national unity must never be blurred. In a time when symbols can quietly divide or unite, his call for standardization deserves serious attention. The Concern Raised The DormaaHene expressed clear displeasure over the increasing use of flags other than Ghana’s national flag by some traditional leaders during official functions. According to him, such practices create confusion about authority and representation, particularly when the Head of State is present. For a country built on shared history and collective struggle, the national flag remains the highest symbol of sovereignty. His concern is not an attack on chieftaincy or cultural identity. Rather, it is a reminder that tr...