Blog Archive

Friday 5 December 2014

2 Children burnt to death at Twemasen

Two children were burnt to death beyond recognition when fire gutted a house at Twemasen, a suburb of Offinso in the Ashanti Region.

Identified only as Nhyira, nine months old and Vanessa, two years, the children were said to be sleeping when their house was caught up in flames last Monday.

Their mother, who is believed to be a health worker at the Offinso Health Centre, managed to escape from the house, but she is yet to be located.

Her disappearance has since made it difficult for personnel of the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS) at Offinso to investigate the matter.

The remains of the two kids have been deposited at the morgue for autopsy.

The cause of the fire has not been ascertained, but some eyewitnesses have attributed it to a suspected electrical fault.

In separate interviews, they said it was around 10 p.m. last Monday when they heard the mother of the kids screaming for help.

The Acting Offinso Municipal Fire Officer, Assistant Divisional Officer (ADO) II, Mr K.E. Glalah, who briefed the Daily Graphic, said the GNFS received a distress call at around 11:16 p.m. last Monday that a house had caught fire at Twemasen in Offinso.

He said upon arrival at the scene, the fire had already engulfed the boys’ quarters attached to a six-bedroom house.

Mr Glalah said with the help of personnel from the Offinso office of the National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO) and residents, the fire was brought under control before the remains of the deceased could be retrieved.

He said the GNFS was investigating the matter.

Ghana Announces Plans for Combat, Trainer, Transport Aircraft Buys

 Among the aircraft Ghana plans to acquire is the Super Tucano.
 GABORONE, BOTSWANA — Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama says his government has set aside $300 million for the purchase of new combat, trainer and transport aircraft to support United Nations peacekeeping operations.
Speaking at the opening of the Ghanaian Air Force’s new aircraft maintenance hangar and logistics warehouse at the Air Force Burma Camp in Accra, Mahama said the Air Force will get new Super Tucano light attack/trainer aircraft from Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer, one CASA 295 heavy-lift transport aircraft from Airbus Military in Spain, Mi-17, Mi-35 attack and transport helicopters from Russia, and Harbin Z-9 helicopters from China.
He said the new aircraft will be used to secure the country and support UN peacekeeping operations in several nations.
“We must sustain the atmosphere of peace and security needed for the development of all sectors of the country. To do that, we must continue to invest in the latest equipment not only for the Air Force, but for all the security agencies,” he added.
Mahama said the aircraft are due for delivery by the end of 2015. The new aircraft hangar, which has fire fighting facilities, ambulance service, and servicing and maintenance facilities, was financed by the Brazilian National Bank of Social and Economic Development. The hangar is equipped with a bus, a fire combat vehicle, an ambulance, a refueling truck, a self-supporting water supply system and power generators.
The hangar is the Air Force’s third aircraft storage and maintenance facility. The others are located in the cities of Tamali and Takoradi.
Mahama said the commissioning of the new hangar marks a new era in Brazilian-Ghanaian relations as the South American country continues to bankroll the economic and security needs of the West African nation.
Air Vice Marshal Michael Samson Oje, Air Force chief of Air Staff, said the hangar would serve the maintenance and safety needs of all aircraft and improve transport expertise and technology.
“We in the Air Force are not oblivious of the fact that these aircraft maintenance hangars are national assets borne out of the sweat of the taxpayer. We promise to maintain and take good care of these vital assets. We also promise to use them judiciously to perform our tasks efficiently to the benefit of our beloved nation,” he added.
The Ghanaian armed forces is engaged in UN peacekeeping operations in Mali, Ivory Coast, South Sudan and Lebanon.
Brazil is also funding establishment of the Ghanaian Flight Training School, several road projects and the construction of an international airport in the central city of Tamale.