Author: TNRGH
By Nelson Ayivor Grief is one of life’s most profound and universal experiences. It arrives uninvited, often without warning, and settles deep within the human heart. Whether it is the loss of a loved one, the end of a relationship, the collapse of a dream, or a life-altering setback, grief reshapes our world in ways that words often struggle to capture. Yet, within its heaviness lies an unexpected possibility—the capacity for growth. To grow through grief is not to deny pain or rush healing. It is to walk through sorrow with courage, allowing it to refine, deepen, and ultimately transform…
By Nelson Ayivor Forgiveness is often celebrated as a moral virtue, a spiritual discipline, and a psychological necessity. Across cultures and religions, it is praised as the pathway to peace, healing, and reconciliation. Yet beneath its noble reputation lies a complex reality: forgiveness is not free. It comes at a cost—emotional, social, and even psychological. To forgive is not merely to release anger; it is to confront pain, relinquish justice, and sometimes risk misunderstanding. This article examines the deeper, often overlooked dimensions of forgiveness—what it gives, what it demands, and what it may quietly take away. Forgiveness as Healing: The…
By Nelson Ayivor Resentment is a quiet weight. It does not always announce itself loudly, yet it lingers—settling into thoughts, shaping perceptions, and quietly draining emotional energy. It often begins as a natural response to hurt, betrayal, injustice, or disappointment. Left unresolved, however, it can harden into a barrier that keeps individuals tethered to the very pain they wish to escape. Yet, within the journey from resentment to renewal lies one of the most powerful transformations a person can experience. It is a journey not of forgetting, but of reclaiming control—of choosing growth over bitterness and freedom over emotional captivity.…
In a remarkable show of support, the Ghana Pentecostal and Charismatic Council (GPCC) has thrown it’s weight behind President John Dramani Mahamah’s stance on the LGBTQI+ issue. The council has consequently expressed confidence in the President to steer the ship of the nation “well away from the shores of the LGBTQI+ agenda.” The GPCC said that based on the time-tested values systems of Ghanaian society and the Christian faith, which the President personally espoused, the council was convinced that the President would not be a pushover for foreign influences. The council made the statement in the wake of a controversial…
The World Bank has activated a massive financial buffer to safeguard Ghana’s agricultural sovereignty, targeting two of the nation’s most critical sub-sectors: tomatoes and cocoa, decisively insulating local farmers from external shocks, as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East threaten to disrupt global fertilizer and input supply chains. During a recent stakeholder engagement on food security in Accra, the World Bank’s Senior Agricultural Economist, Dr. Ashwini Sebastian, unveiled the details of the multi-million-dollar emergency intervention – noting that under the directive of the Ministry of Trade, Agribusiness and Industry (MoTAI), a $20 million grant has been fast-tracked to resolve the…
In a renewed push to promote professionalism, dignity, and gender empowerment within the country’s border management system, the Ghana Immigration Service has relaunched the Immigration Ladies Association (IMMILAC) at the Aflao Border Post, marking a significant milestone in advancing women’s role in service delivery. The relaunch event, held on Thursday, March 26, at the busy Aflao frontier—Ghana’s eastern gateway into Togo—brought together senior immigration officials, security stakeholders, Ghana’s Ambassador to Togo and his deputy, traditional leaders and members of the association, all united by a shared commitment to elevating standards of conduct and empowering female officers. Speaking at the ceremony,…
By Godson Bill Ocloo At the Cape Coast Castle, the air is heavy with memory. Visitors walk slowly through narrow corridors, pausing at the “Door of No Return” a place where millions of Africans were forced onto ships, never to return home. For many, it is history. But for Africa, it is not just history. It is something that still echoes in our present realities. Today, that history has taken a significant turn. Following the adoption of a United Nations resolution on reparations an effort strongly advanced by Ghana under the leadership of H.E John Dramani Mahama, President of the…
By Emmanuel Nii Sackey Ghana’s Inspector General of Police (IGP) Christian Tetteh Yohuno has tasked the Police Professional Standards Bureau (PPSB) to initiate immediate investigation into alleged assault on Ghanaian Visual Artist, Ibrahim Mahatma. The visual artist met with the Police Management Board at the police headquarters in Accra today, amidst intensified investigations into allegations of assault by police officers. The incident reportedly occurred on March 21 and involved a group believed to be part of the Inspector General of Police’s Special Operations Team, known as the ‘Black Maria.’ Mahama expressed confidence that justice would be served, citing assurances from…
By Emmanuel Nii Sackey The Ministry of Food and Agriculture has called upon citizens to actively participate in resolving the nation’s tomato supply deficit by establishing home gardens, following the recent export ban announced by Burkina Faso. During a press briefing held on Wednesday, March 25, the Minister for Food and Agriculture, Eric Opoku, highlighted a notable disparity between national demand and supply, citing Ghana’s total demand at 805,000 metric tonnes and the current supply at 510,000 metric tonnes. To mitigate this discrepancy, Eric Opoku encouraged households to cultivate tomatoes, emphasizing that even small-scale home gardens can collectively have a…
A group of Ghanaian journalists are undergoing advanced training in science and technology reporting in the U.K., as part of a government-backed effort to improve how research and innovation are communicated to the public. The nine journalists are participating in sessions at Imperial College London under an initiative supported by the Ministry of Communication, Digital Technology and Innovations, aligned with the UK-Ghana Science, Technology and Innovation Strategy. The programme builds on earlier training in Accra and is designed to equip reporters with the skills to translate complex scientific developments into accessible information, a gap policymakers say limits public engagement with…
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