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In This Issue...Links to the News:
March 11, 2016
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Release
NPP, October
22, 2012
THE PRESIDENT MUST APOLOGISE TO GHANAIANS ON ONE-TIME PREMIUM
BROKEN PROMISE
President John Dramani Mahama on Sunday said the New Patriotic
Party’s proposal to provide free healthcare to children under
18 years was in contrast to the National Health Insurance
Authority law, according to reports.
He said children were already benefitting from the National
Health Insurance Scheme from their parents by an
administrative directive in 2009, and wondered how the
proposal could be useful to them. He went as far as to suggest
that Nana Akufo-Addo was wrong to say that the next NPP
government will offer free healthcare under the NHIS to all
children under age 18 and that the NPP Presidential Candidate
must sack his advisors.
First of all, the President must get his facts right and stop
embarrassing the presidency with some of his ill-informed
statements. There exists no administrative directive issued in
2009 when it already existed from July 2008. The NPP has been
very consistent on what we plan to do in order to move Ghana
forward. And we have been able to do so because we are
committed to what we say we will do.
1. What Nana Akufo-Addo has done is, essentially, to restate
two of his key manifesto pledges of 2008 to: offer free
secondary education to every child and
2. Free healthcare under the NHIS to every Ghanaian child
under the age of 18.
None of the two policies are currently in place so we are not
at all sure what the President is talking about.
In his speech at the Sunyani Nurses Training College on 17th
October, 2012, Nana Akufo-Addo stated: “On December 7, the
nation has a chance to make a decision on two major issues:
(1)
whether Ghanaians should have universal access to free quality
education for every child under the age of 18, and (2) which
party can be trusted to deliver access to affordable quality
healthcare for every Ghanaian. The NPP believes that free
quality education up to secondary level and affordable
healthcare are essential for the healthy, educated workforce
we need to transform the economy, create wealth and enhance
the welfare and wellbeing of every Ghanaian.”
On the NHIS, he went on to give a solemn pledge: “The NPP will
go a step further to save our health system and keep our
people healthy: we will offer all children free access to the
NHIS. This means that parents no longer have to be a
subscriber to the NHIS for a child to benefit.
Millions more children will be covered by free healthcare.”
Which part of the two clear statements does the President not
understand? His misfired criticism only goes to show that in
John Dramani Mahama Ghanaians have a president who has really
lost touch with the concerns and aspiration of the ordinary
people of Ghana. We have a president who does not seem to know
what time it is and only prefers to add to the current
sufferings of the masses by saying, as he did at his IEA
Eveing Encounter, that under this NDC III government Ghanaians
have enjoyed an “unprecedented quality of life”.
As Nana Akuffo-Addo stated: “The NHIS shows that the NPP
believes in fairness as a principle of social action.
We believe that access to social services should be on the
basis of need, and that government has a duty to keep its
people healthy. We are proud that we are helping to create a
society of fairness and opportunities for everyone, including
the most vulnerable.”
Indeed, before the 2008 December election and weeks after the
NPP Manifesto pledged to decouple children from accessing the
NHIS only through their policy holder parents, President J A
Kufuor and his Cabinet gave an administrative directive to
extend NHIS services to every Ghanaian child below the age of
18, without discrimination.
But, this important social intervention was completely
abandoned by the NDC government after 2009 as they struggled
in vain to implement their dead-from-birth one-term insurance
premium. They have never funded this laudable Kufuor
government policy.
Even though members Parliament have managed successfully to
have the new National
Health Insurance Authority Bill amended to have the decoupling
initiative added before its recent passage, the President is
yet to give his assent to the Bill for it to become law,
thereby, paving the way for its implementation.
Our advice to President John Dramani Mahama is this: please
concentrate on appending
your signature to the Bill, failing which Akufo-Addo will do
so and make sure that our long-standing pledge to offer free
NHIS to every Ghanaian child becomes a reality.
Nana Akufo-Addo has said it over and over again that his
ultimate goal is to achieve universal coverage for all
Ghanaians under the NHIS under his vision of creating a free
and fair society of opportunities for every Ghanaian citizen.
The President could do well to sack those who gave him that
poor and expensive advice to send 250 Ghanaian students to
Cuba at the kind of cost which, if wisely invested, would have
educated nearly a thousand Ghanaian medical students here in
Ghana and, in the process, strengthening the capacity of our
own medical schools.
The President may do well to sack his advisors who kept
telling him that one-time premium was doable. Ghanaians demand
an apology from the President for failing in the last four
years to implement the flagship manifesto promise of the NDC
in 2008, which was to introduce one-time premium for NHIS
users.
Better still, the President should sack himself for advising
his late predecessor that he could bring Koreans to Ghana to
build 200,000 ‘affordable’ homes in 4 years only to end up
wasting everybody’s time and the nation’s resources.
We believe that the NHIS is one of the greatest legacies of
the NPP and a precious asset for the nation. An Akufo-Addo
government will restore public confidence in the NHIS and
allow it to focus on what it was set up to do, which is to
give the masses of Ghana access to affordable, quality
healthcare.
……..Signed……..
Dr Mathew Prempeh, MP
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Will the World Go to War to
Save Mali?
Time, Oct 18, Ghanadot - Another clash with
global consequences looms, apart from the awful
conflagration in war-ravaged Syria. On Oct. 12,
following weeks of French pressure, the U.N. Security
Council set a 45-day deadline for intervention into
Mali, the northwest African nation that has seen roughly
half of its territory overrun by rebels and militias
with links to al-Qaeda’s North African wing (AQIM).
..More
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Ghana’s Annual Cocoa Shipping
Rates to U.K. Increase 8.3%
BusinessWeek, Oct 16, Ghanadot - Shipping cocoa
beans grown in Ghana, the world’s second-largest
producer, to the U.K. will cost 8.3 percent more in the
current crop season, according to a unit of the board
that oversees the industry.....More
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AFAG WARNS MTN
Release, Oct 12, Ghanadot - The Alliance for
Accountable Governance(AFAG) and Ghanaians have notice
with grave concern the calling lapse, unreliability and
connectivity problem of the leading telecommunication
group in Ghana,MTN....
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‘Chop-Chop’ Has Now Become
Ghana’s Fourth Estate Of The Realm
DailyGuide, Oct 9, Ghanadot - Now, when such
crooked selfish brats, through wicked lies and vile
propaganda, have succeeded in taking over the reins of
governance and are busily practising their perfect trade
of naked robbery of state coffers, the only hope of
ordinary people then falls on the power of the media for
protection by way of exposing these wicked nation
wreckers. .
More
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