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FASHION: All The Photos From 2013 Africa Fashion Week London-Day 1 | Feat. Clisha, Sa4a Designs, Bello Designs, Adopted Culture, Mtofo Designs & Others…

This year’s prestigious Africa Fashion Week London-AFWL 2013 kicked started yesterday at Old Truman Brewery in Shoreditch-London. The first day of the 3 day event (1-3 August, 2013) showcased the beautiful work of some of the most talented Africa fashion designers… To be frank, Africa designs have surely come to stay…. Africa fashion designers- Clisha, … Read more

It Is Happening Tomorrow In London…Ghana Party In The Park | You Can’t Miss It

The annual and biggest family outdoor event in UK-Ghana Party In The Park will return tomorrow– Saturday, 3rd August, 2013 (12noon-late) at Trent Park, Cockfosters Road-Cockfosters. And you cannot afford to miss the fun experience… As usual, the event which brings patrons from across the UK and Europe: Germany, France, Holland and Ghana will feature … Read more

Clergy Calling On Ghanaians To Fast And Pray For Peace – I Say ‘We Don’t Need Fasting Nor Prayers’

Three Christian groups have called on their members and also urged Ghanaians to fast and intensify their prayers to ensure the sustenance of peace and tranquillity in the country, especially after the Supreme Court delivers its judgement on the election petition. I may be right or wrong to say that majority of Ghanaians do not … Read more

New Music: ‘Y3DA W’ASI’ By Sarkodie, Obrafour, Kwaw Kese, Edem & Tinny

Ahead of a concert to be staged for Hammer of the Last Two- Celebrating Hammer Concert, some of the biggest Ghanaian musicians who were nurtured by Hammer (real name Edward Nana Poku) have come together to record a tune for him-‘Y3da W’ase’. The song-‘Y3da W’ase’ which will serve as the theme song for the Celebrating … Read more

WE ARE OUR OWN ENEMIES: Bisexual Pastor Severally Sodomizes 14-Year-Old Boy In Ghana; Boy Is Now HIV Positive

pastor‘Do as I say but not as I do’ is always the pastors escape route. The teenage girls are now ‘free’ from the grips of rapists and pastors because it seems the latest trend now is men sodomizing teenage boys – it’s all part of homosexuality. A man of God who abuses the trust vested in him by raping is not called by any God!

According to Joy report, a head Pastor of New Jerusalem Fellowship Church at Tema Community 4, Pastor Prince Mark popularly known as Malvin Brown is in the grips of the Tema Regional Police for allegedly sodomizing a 14-year-old boy severally.

The Public Relations Officer of the Tema Regional Police Command, Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Olivia Turkson said the pastor confessed to forcibly penetrating the boy in the anus once and spilling his semen on the boy.

Police quoted the pastor as saying “it was difficult penetrating his [the boy’s] anus – I did it only once and I spilled my semen on him.”

But according to ASP Turkson, the boy told police the pastor penetrated him more than five times and on different occasions in the pastor’s house, where the boy also lived. The boy and his parents are members of 32-year-old Pastor Mark’s congregation so the parents trusted the pastor with their son when he requested for the boy to go live with him.

The boy had gone to visit his parents when they discovered he was bleeding from the anus. He told the parents upon interrogation that Pastor Mark had sodomized him. 

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Charitable Advertisements On TV: Drawing Sympathy For Money or Demeaning Africa?

poverty-in-africa

Have you realised how some ‘African begging charitable’ adverts run on TV (I can’t say about other countries, but Europe)? It is always very sick looking kids with flies hovering around them with an equally depressed looking mother who appears to have lost all hope in the world, with the ‘announcer’ saying how ‘Kofi’ will go to bed hungry if £2 is not given OR how people are drinking filthy water etc. .

Quite unfortunately, as if by design, these adverts starts running when you’re eating or just about to eat – whether to draw enough sympathy or to quickly make you lose your appetite if you’re the very empathetic type. I really had not ‘bothered’ much about these adverts until my sister-in-law (non-Ghanaian, non-African, non-white) went down to Ghana as a volunteer to work/assist a charity organisation which exclusively supports children.  Among other things, she asked me a very mind-boggling question:

Why respective African governments allow some ‘charitable’ advertisements to run on TV in Europe which does not portray what is happening in real life? Because, according to her, what she often saw on TV is what she had in her mind’s eye before she embarked on her journey but alas, her expectation of working with ‘hungry, dying’ children in a poverty-stricken country did not materialise.

 

Until I moved to the UK, I never knew about any charity soliciting funds the way I always witness on TV now. I knew about the Red Cross and UNICEF (then) as the only ‘foreign’ charity operating in Ghana. We cannot deny the fact that there are families in need in Africa, but the way television has inundated us with images of hungry and suffering children puts a question mark on anything African. These are the pictures that best describe what the rest of world thinks of Africa.

Africa is being portrayed as a hungry, helpless, desolate place; looking up to the mercy of developed countries for its daily bread just to make money, and it is very unfair. Yes, there is the occasional beggar on the street and some homeless people, but not as bad as it’s being projected to the world by whomever. Africa is doing well for itself in all areas apart from the never shifting corruption, greed, selfishness and power hungry politicians. There are poor people everywhere, but their ‘charitable’ advert is very neat and dignified but Africa’s is so magnified.

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