Saturday, 2 March 2013

Fashion: ‘Atonokosi Handmades’ Jewellery





























 
Paulina Opoku-Gyimah says: ‘Atonokosi Handmades’ jewellery and accessories brand doesn’t assert to be anything it’s not. It’s a fresh, young funky cute jewellery line for young girls-about-town wanting something different and fun. 

A unisex brand that also offers a bespoke service that allows you to have the jewellery or accessories of your dreams to be made especially for you, ‘Atonokosi Handmades’ Jewellery is now very much on Ghana Rising’s radar!!

I love the above designs and believe that ‘Atonokosi Handmades’ is a brand worth keeping your stylish eyes on, and wish this young design house much success.

The above designs are available for purchase at Ed's Chic Afrique, situated in Airport West opposite Bayport Financial Services –but if you are not in Ghana and want more info visit: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Atonokosi-Handmades/186545848086865

 
More Info
Unique Handcrafted Fashion Accessories to compliment your clothing for more info contact +233 247 422 328…

Description
All products are hand-made. The passion for art inspires us to create beautifully crafted accessories to meet your every need and specification. "Atonokosi" simply means 'little darling'. This shows how dear the little things we create are to us and our clients.

Beauty & Wellbeing: Dolcie Facial Clinic, Ghana






Paulina Opoku-Gyimah says: Ever wondered what to buy a bride who has everything or a bride that has very exacting taste? Why not book one of Dolcie Owusua’s elegant, professional make-up and facial services or go one step further--- and book one of the above Dolcie Facial Clinic’s make-up and facial ‘bridal parties, for the bride and her bridesmaids, ---she will never forget this yummy gift!!!

This service is not only restricted to brides or bridesmaids but makes for a lovely addition to a yummy girls night out, engagement parties or a sexy date!!! To book one of Dolcie Facial Clinic’s make-up and facial bridal parties visit: https://www.facebook.com/DolcieFacialClinicDfc

 
More Info:
Passionate about the little details; the shimmering eyes, the lovely curve of the lips, sparkling smooth face; we thrive on the oohs and aahs of the men whose women we transform.

Description
As a makeup enthusiast, we stand for natural, healthy and amazing glow that makeup can offer. We make wild look natural, natural look like second skin and second skin make up is something u won’t want to pass up…


 

EITI Global Conference to take place in Sydney from 23-24 May 2013










“How does transparency lead to change on the ground? Let's start the debate and continue at the EITI Global Conference in Sydney 2013. PS, registration is open and the event is free to attend Learn more: http://eiti.org/sydney2013" EITI

 

Paulina Opoku-Gyimah says: I’m going to very honest, a lot of what the EITI (The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative) stands for and talks about is way over my fashion head, but I do know that, “Congo and Burkina Faso” have just been “accepted as 'EITI Compliant'” and that our beloved homeland Ghana was, “accepted as an EITI Candidate country on 27 September 2007” –which means Ghana, “produces EITI Reports that disclose revenues from extraction of its natural resources. Companies disclose what they have paid in taxes and other payments and the government discloses what it has received. These two sets of figures are compared and reconciled.” And that presently, “GHEITI has asked for an extension of the publication deadline to 28 February 2013”…..

The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) is classed as, “an international standard for transparency in the extractive sector.” Made up of a coalition of, “governments, companies, civil society groups, investors and international organisations, the Initiative is an attempt to reduce corruption and increase openness in extractive industries by establishing an international standard for transparency in the extractive sector” and they are holding their, “6th EITI Global Conference in Sydney.”

This year’s conference in Australia will focus on the, “impact of the EITI in the 37 implementing countries, as well as revisions to the EITI Standard to increase its effectiveness. The conference theme is ‘Beyond Transparency’. It will be an opportunity for implementing countries to share lessons learnt and address future challenges for the EITI”  --and sounds all so interesting and important and grown up ---and seems to keep the ever colourful former labour MP Clair Short –busy…

For more info about the EITI (The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative) visit: http://eiti.org/

Do like their FB page via: https://www.facebook.com/EITIorg

For more info about GHEITI (Ghana’s Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative) visit: http://www.geiti.gov.gh/site/


More Info: Extractive Industries
Ghana's economy has been strengthened by a quarter century of relatively sound management, a competitive business environment, and sustained reductions in poverty levels. Ghana is well endowed with natural resources. Gold is one of the major sources of foreign exchange. Oil production at Ghana's offshore Jubilee field began in mid-December, 2010, and is expected to boost economic growth. Estimated oil reserves have jumped to almost 700 million barrels.  Sound macro-economic management along with high prices for gold and cocoa helped sustain GDP growth in 2008-11.

According to USGS, Ghana’s mineral sector, which grew by 10.4% in 2010, was a major contributor to Government revenues and accounted for about 11% of fiscal receipts by the Internal Revenue Service. Gold, in particular, accounted for more than 80%, by value, of the total income from the mineral sector.  Ghana has the 11th largest gold reserves worldwide. In 2011 it was the 8th largest gold producer in the world. About 20,000 Ghanaian nationals were directly employed in large-scale mining, 6,000 were employed in providing services to the mineral sector, and about 500,000 were employed in small-scale mining of diamond, gold, and industrial minerals for the construction sector.

 


The Economist’s Must Read Special Report on Africa…..out now in print


Africa rising: A hopeful continent

African lives have already greatly improved over the past decade, says Oliver August. The next ten years will be even better



 
 
THREE STUDENTS ARE hunched over an iPad at a beach cafĂ© on Senegal’s Cap-Vert peninsula, the westernmost tip of the world’s poorest continent. They are reading online news stories about Moldova, one of Europe’s most miserable countries. One headline reads: “Four drunken soldiers rape woman”. Another says Moldovan men have a 19% chance of dying from excessive drinking and 58% will die from smoking-related diseases. Others deal with sex-trafficking. Such stories have become a staple of Africa’s thriving media, along with austerity tales from Greece. They inspire pity and disbelief, just as tales of disease and disorder in Africa have long done in the rich world.
 
Sitting on the outskirts of Dakar, Senegal’s capital, the three students sip cappuccinos and look out over a paved road shaded by palm trees where restaurants with white tablecloths serve green-spotted crabs. A local artist is hawking framed pictures of semi-clad peasant girls under a string of coloured lights. This is where slave ships used to depart for the New World. “Way over there, do they know how much has changed?” asks one of the students, pointing beyond the oil tankers on the distant horizon.
This special report will paint a picture at odds with Western images of Africa. War, famine and dictators have become rarer. People still struggle to make ends meet, just as they do in China and India. They don’t always have enough to eat, they may lack education, they despair at daily injustices and some want to emigrate. But most Africans no longer fear a violent or premature end and can hope to see their children do well. That applies across much of the continent, including the sub-Saharan part, the main focus of this report.

African statistics are often unreliable, but broadly the numbers suggest that human development in sub-Saharan Africa has made huge leaps. Secondary-school enrolment grew by 48% between 2000 and 2008 after many states expanded their education programmes and scrapped school fees. Over the past decade malaria deaths in some of the worst-affected countries have declined by 30% and HIV infections by up to 74%. Life expectancy across Africa has increased by about 10% and child mortality rates in most countries have been falling steeply.

A booming economy has made a big difference. Over the past ten years real income per person has increased by more than 30%, whereas in the previous 20 years it shrank by nearly 10%. Africa is the world’s fastest-growing continent just now. Over the next decade its GDP is expected to rise by an average of 6% a year, not least thanks to foreign direct investment. FDI has gone from $15 billion in 2002 to $37 billion in 2006 and $46 billion in 2012 (see chart).


Many goods and services that used to be scarce, including telephones, are now widely available. Africa has three mobile phones for every four people, the same as India. By 2017 nearly 30% of households are expected to have a television set, an almost fivefold increase over ten years. Nigeria produces more movies than America does. Film-makers, novelists, designers, musicians and artists thrive in a new climate of hope. Opinion polls show that almost two-thirds of Africans think this year will be better than last, double the European rate.

Africa is too big to follow one script, so its countries are taking different routes to becoming better places. In Senegal the key is a vibrant democracy. From the humid beaches of Cap-Vert to the flyblown desert interior, politicians conduct election campaigns that Western voters would recognise. They make extravagant promises, some of which they will even keep. Crucially, they respect democratic institutions. When President Abdoulaye Wade last year tried to stand for a third term, in breach of term limits, he was ridiculed. A popular cartoon showed him in a bar ordering a third cup of coffee and removing a sign saying, “Everyone just two cups”. More than two dozen opposition candidates formed a united front and inflicted a stinging defeat on him, which he swiftly accepted. Dakar celebrated wildly, then went back to work the next day.
GDP & Population

At the end of the cold war only three African countries (out of 53 at the time) had democracies; since then the number has risen to 25, of varying shades, and many more countries hold imperfect but worthwhile elections (22 in 2012 alone). Only four out of now 55 countries—Eritrea, Swaziland, Libya and Somalia—lack a multi-party constitution, and the last two will get one soon. Armies mostly stay in their barracks. Big-man leaders are becoming rarer, though some authoritarian states survive. And on the whole more democracy has led to better governance: politicians who want to be re-elected need to show results.

Ways to salvation
Where democracy has struggled to establish itself, African countries have taken three other paths to improving their citizens’ lives. First, many have stopped fighting. War and civil strife have declined dramatically. Local conflicts occasionally flare up, but in the past decade Africa’s wars have become a lot less deadly. Perennial hotspots such as Angola, Chad, Eritrea, Liberia and Sierra Leone are quiet, leaving millions better off, and even Congo, Somalia and Sudan are much less violent than they used to be. Parts of Mali were seized by Islamists last year, then liberated by French troops in January, though unrest continues. The number of coups, which averaged 20 per decade in 1960-90, has fallen to an average of ten.

Second, more private citizens are engaging with politics, some in civil-society groups, others in aid efforts or as protesters. The beginnings of the Arab spring in north Africa two years ago inspired the rest of the continent. In Angola youth activists invoke the events farther north. In Senegal a group of rap artists formed the nucleus of the coalition that ousted Mr Wade.

Third, Africa’s retreat from socialist economic models has generally made everyone better off. Some countries, such as Ethiopia and Rwanda, still put the state in the lead. Meles Zenawi, Ethiopia’s prime minister from 1995 until his death last year, achieved impressive gains by taking development into his own (occasionally bloodstained) hands. Others, such as Kenya and Nigeria, have empowered private business by removing red tape. Yet others are benefiting from a commodities boom, driven by increased demand from China, which has become Africa’s biggest trading partner. Over the past decade African trade with China has risen from $11 billion to $166 billion. Copper-rich Zambia and oil-soaked Ghana are using full coffers to pay for new schools and hospitals, even if some of the money is stolen along the way.

Inevitably, Africa’s rise is being hyped. Boosters proclaim an “African century” and talk of “the China of tomorrow” or “a new India”. Sceptics retort that Africa has seen false dawns before. They fear that foreign investors will exploit locals and that the continent will be “not lifted but looted”. They also worry that many officials are corrupt, and that those who are straight often lack expertise, putting them at a disadvantage in negotiations with investors.
So who is right? To find out, your correspondent travelled overland across the continent from Dakar to Cape Town (see map), taking in regional centres such as Lagos, Nairobi and Johannesburg as well as plenty of bush and desert. Each part of the trip focused on one of the big themes with which the continent is grappling—political violence, governance, economic development—as outlined in the articles that follow.

The journey covered some 15,800 miles (25,400km) on rivers, railways and roads, almost all of them paved and open for business. Not once was your correspondent asked for a bribe along the way, though a few drivers may have given small gratuities to policemen. The trip took 112 days, and on all but nine of them e-mail by smartphone was available. It was rarely dangerous or difficult. Borders were easily crossed and visas could be had for a few dollars on the spot or within a day in the nearest capital. By contrast, in 2001, when Paul Theroux researched his epic travel book, “Dark Star Safari: Overland from Cairo to Cape Town”, he was shot at, forced into detours and subjected to endless discomforts.

Another decade from now a traveller may well see an end to hunger in some African countries, steeply rising agricultural production in others, the start of industrial manufacturing for export, the emergence of a broad retail sector, more integrated transport networks, fairer elections, more effective governments, widespread access to technology even among many of the poor and ever-rising commodity incomes. Not everywhere. This report covers plenty of places where progress falls short. But their number is shrinking.

Wait for it
The biggest reason to be hopeful is that it takes time for results from past investment to come through, and many such benefits have yet to materialise. Billions have already been put into roads and schools over the past decade; the tech revolution has only just reached the more remote corners of the continent; plenty of new oilfields and gold mines have been tapped but are not yet producing revenues. The aid pipeline too is fairly full. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation alone has invested $1.7 billion in Africa since 2006 but acknowledges that “it takes years and years to shift the system.” Some aid will be wasted, some new roads will remain empty and more than a few barrels of oil will be stolen. Yet whereas currently not even half of Africa’s countries are what the World Bank calls “middle income” (defined as at least $1,000 per person a year), by 2025 the bank expects most African countries to have reached that stage.

As the hand-painted number 3 bus pulls out of Cap-Vert and travels through the streets of Dakar, the views, bathed in buttery late-afternoon sunlight, reflect aspects of Africa’s current triumphs and tribulations. On the left are new tenement buildings with running water for the urban poor. On a hill to the right stands a 160-foot (49-metre) bronze statue of a man with a muscular torso resembling Mr Wade in his younger years on which he spent $27m of public money. The bus leaves the capital behind and chugs on, passing craggy cliffs and flooded pastures, single-room huts and mangrove forests. Several hours later it crosses a muddy creek near the city of Ziguinchor, heading south towards Guinea-Bissau.

Fashion: Doty Dzynes








 


“Doty D-zynes is a fashion brand created in Ghana aimed at promoting Ghanaian goods.” Doty Dzynes

 

Sexy Skyscraper heels, Mary-Janes, flats, wedges et al --all covered in delectable Ghanaian wax print cloth, what’s not to love?? For more call Doty D-zynes on +233232999992, email: dotydzynes@rediffmail.com
 

 

Do LIKE their Facebook page via: https://www.facebook.com/DotyDzynes


 

Friday, 1 March 2013

Post Prosperity Preaching: New Condemnation Preaching Means It’s Time for Christians to Start Reading the Bible……for themselves…

Title: Ghana's celebrity preachers clash over prophecy of president's death...Rival pastors in unholy row over prediction of imminent disaster..

By Afua Hirsch Dated: 27-2-2013


Worshippers raise their hands during worship service at the Pure Fire Miracle Church in Accra, Ghana
Worshippers during a service at the Pure Fire Miracle Church in Accra, Ghana Photograph: Pius Utomi Ekepi/AFP
 
They prefer to be known for preaching about peace and loving thy neighbour, but Ghana's celebrity pastors are becoming embroiled by a rather ungodly row.

A well-known pastor has sparked outrage amongst his colleagues by making what Ghanaians are describing as an "earth-shattering" prophecy, that the president John Dramani Mahama, will die this year.

The reverend Isaac Owusu Bempah, founder of one of Ghana's burgeoning new charismatic churches, the Glorious Word Ministry International, says that the message came to him directly from God.
Owusu Bempah, who first announced the prophecy on New Year's Eve and has repeated it several times on local radio, has also cautioned that the president's refusal to meet him might hamper attempts to avert the disaster.

"I have not been able to meet the president and inform him. A similar thing happened when I prophesied about the late President John Atta Mills (who died last year), but they turned me away," he said.

But senior figures from other churches have hit back at the prediction, claiming it was unethical, and did not meet the criteria of a genuine prophecy.

"According to the new testament, if you give prophecy, it should edify, exalt or confirm," said Bishop Dr Charles Agyin Asare, founder of the Word Miracle Church International and former vice president of the Ghana Pentecostal and Chariasmatic Council. "The scripture says we should judge prophecies to see whether they be of God, not that we should swallow them hook like and sinker. If I were to judge this prophecy, I would judge it incorrectly," Agyin Asare added.

Dramatic prophecies are not uncommon in Ghana, where churches are big business and celebrity pastors compete to fill conference centres, theatres and arena for special weekend long services and prayer gatherings.

Agyin Asare, one of Owusu Bempah's main critics, says he himself was called to ministry after hearing the audible voice of God in 1983 calling him to "heal the sick, raise the dead, preach the kingdom."

But less than a year after Ghana's last president John Atta Mills died suddenly in office, there has been limited appetite for predictions of doom in the presidency.

"We lost our president last year, and if [Owusu Bempah] was really concerned, the president is a Christian, he has a pastor, he could seek audience with him. But if you just dump your prophecy into the public domain, then you are just trying to scare people. That is not what a Christian minister is supposed to be doing," Agyin Asare said.
Owusu Bempah was not available for comment, but it is not the first time the reverend, who is a regular fixture in the media in Ghana, has warned of impending disaster. A previous prophecy that Ghana could descend into civil war during December elections failed to materalise, after a new government was elected peacefully.

He is not without controversy. In 2011 he was accused of impregnating a member of his congregation whose mother brought her to the church to be exorcised of an evil spirit. Owusu Bempah denied those allegations, blaming a junior pastor in his employment who he said had fathered three children simultaneously with members of the church. He admitted taking the young female member of the congregation in to live with him in his home.

There is no official regulator of churches in Ghana, where two-thirds of the population is Christian and church attendance is high, although no figures exist. But some Christians are critical of the conduct of Ghana's churches. "Most of these churches and their leaders are affiliated to a political party, they just make money out of the ignorance of the people," said Charlotte Biney, 49, a resident in Accra. "The churches hypnotise them and the people believe whatever they say. Even educated people fall for it – deep down in our culture most of the people believe in spiritualism and devilish spirits. It's mind-boggling – sometimes you look at them and ask yourself what's wrong with them."
Such is the level of concern about the conduct of some churches that even pastors said that there should be closer monitoring of the activities of church leaders. "I think that there should be more ethics in ministry," said Agyin-Asare. "Being a pastor doesn't mean you are not accountable – you should be accountable to your church and you should be accountable to a group of ministers. As human beings we are not perfect – God calls imperfect people to do his work."


  

“The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.” John 10:10


“There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven. a time to be born and a time to die, a time to plant and a time to uproot.”


“For God is not the author of confusion, but of peace, as in all churches of the saints.” 1 Corinthians 13:43 King James Version

“The Spirit of the Sovereign LORD is on me, because the LORD has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to bind up the broken-hearted, to proclaim freedom for the captives and release from darkness for the prisoners.” Isaiah 61:1 NIV

"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16 NIV

“Therefore, my dear friends, as you have always obeyed--not only in my presence, but now much more in my absence--continue to work out your salvation with fear and trembling.” Philippians 2:12 NIV

Paulina Opoku-Gyimah says: I don’t know when Christians (I’m one of them), stopped reading the bible and started to rely on sooo called MEN OF GOD to spoon feed them ---‘their’ interpretation of the WORD OF GOD!!!

Because, if what I’m seeing is to be believed, then we are slowly moving out of the, ‘50 Cent Get Rich or Die Trying Sakawa Prosperity Preaching’  era and into the DEMONIC ‘Condemnation Preaching All Die Be Die’ epoch. Meaning folks---that it’s time for we real God fearing, ‘seek him first and all else shall be added’ Christians to --- not only start praying but to start reading the word of God for ourselves, or else --- we will perish from our lack of knowledge!!!

Because. And I’m entitled to my opinions, I don’t believe for one minute that this’ Condemnation Preaching or Prophecy’ or whatever is of GOD because from the little that I know, only God knows the time and the place of when we will all die, and if ---he was to reveal it reveal it to one of his prophets say--- then surly that would have been reveal so that the MAN OF GOD could pray against it!!!!!

I remember hearing a testimony many moons ago by a ‘middle American’ business man who had had one of those near death experiences ---only he had really died and was taken to hell..

I remember him describing HELL sooo clearly that I decided to spend my life ‘working out my salvation with fear and trembling’ … But the biggest most lasting memory from said testimony was ….that HELL was full to bursting with sooo called MEN OF GOD (mercy)!!!! And I have never forgotten said testimony and truly believe it!!!  

I find it amazing that our loving God the Father, who so loved the world, “ that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life”, -a God who is not, “the  author of confusion, but of peace” –and a God  who sends out his servants (because that’s what true MEN OF GOD are -servants) to, “ preach good news” –could ever turn against his word and start condemning people to death through his servants!!! Thus I will put it to you ….that proclaiming death when only God knows, “ the hour” is not of GOD but of MAN!!!

It’s important for these soo called men of God to remember that all the days ordained for President John Dramani Mahama, “were written in’ God’s book before one of them came to be”  -and that ultimately, “the Lord's will” for President John Dramani Mahama’s life -will come to pass, whether they like it or not!!!

I pray the ‘Blood of Jesus’ over Ghana’s democratically elected President John Dramani Mahama, his family and over Ghana and its people –AMEN!!!. I don't whether he’s good or bad or kind. Whether he’s loves Ghana or not, but I know that what I’m reading concerning various sooo called MEN OF GOD prophesying that he will die this year is wrong, –totally wrong, and dare I say it, maybe even threatening… Lawyers should be called!!!   
Because what started out in one of the countries to our EAST has now eaten its way into the churches of Ghana and we need to pray it out ---In the NAME OF JESUS, AMEN!!!

And whether it’s God’s will for Ghana’s democratically elected President John Dramani Mahama or me or you to pass this year ---is none of ours or their [sooo called MEN OF GOD] business but God’s…

The government of Ghana needs to start tackling the churches in Ghana---free speech is ok, but defamation and curses and death threats…(because that’s what  ‘Condemnation Preaching’ is all about) ---are a no no!!!

If our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus came so that, “we may have life and have it in abundance” then anything contrary to this is NOT OF GOD!!!!

Remember always that the, “thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy” but our Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus came that, “we may have life, and have it in abundance” –Amen!!!

Ghana’s Lust for ‘Take Loan Now Pay Later’ –Must Stop for The Prosperity of Future Generations…


Title: $3bn Chinese loan to be disbursed soon – Iddrisu


Two billion dollars out of the $3 billion Chinese loan is yet to be disbursed. The amount will be used to establish Fishing Landing Beaches.

Trade minister Haruna Iddrisu has told parliament that government is working on the disbursement of the remaining amount to be used for the intended purpose.

“2 billion of the 3 billion Chinese dollars loan remains undisbursed but when the intervention come, people will begin to see Landing sites emerge in the coastal belts from Ada through Discove” Haruna Iddrisu said.

Negotiations for the $3 billion Chinese loan started under late President John Evans Atta-Mills, the loan according to government will be used to engineer massive economic transformation in the country.



Paulina Opoku-Gyimah says: When it comes to reports about the present government of Ghana, it’s very difficult to decipher what’s real, true or false… But if the above loan of $3bn from China to Ghana is true, -then the future of Ghana isn’t sooo bright. Because, whilst it might be cute for the present government and the like ----I wonder, ---whom/what generation will pay back this loan????? Can you imagine the interest on such a loan??? And if they [the fortunate generation] can’t pay it back, ---will they become the slaves of the Chinese [government]?

I think that the time is coming when loans of this nature must be dealt with in a much more transparent way. The people of Ghana deserve to know what these monies are to be used for, -after all, the loans are procured for the people of Ghana!!!!

I think it’s important to point out that said loan was taken out under the watch  of the late President John Evans Atta-Mills –still, I’m not impressed and would love to know what said loan is intended for!!!

Plus, what on earth are, “Fishing Landing Beaches”… From the little that I know, aren’t all beaches in Ghana – ‘Fishing Landing Beaches’??? 

What they need to do is build toilets or sanitation units –if you may, for the Ghanaian public ----so that …ermmm ---we don’t have to defecate all over the beautiful beaches of Ghana…  

Still, if the present government has used this loan to tackle Accra’s sanitation/sewerage problems –as reported and posted on this blog as we came into the new year, --then fine, if not, the Ghanaian public deserves to know what the loan is for!!!!  

As for the remaining amount yet to be “disbursed” –give it back to the Chinese say I, and …%6&*$5  stop selling Ghana and its future  generations for a few peswas!!!! Ghana’s governments lust of –‘take loan now pay later’ –must stop for the prosperity of future generations…..