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Thursday, 19.09.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

GH: Ghana

  • GH: Use internet for career development

    Dr Edward Omane Baomah, Minister of Communications has cautioned Ghanaian youth against cyber related crimes and instead use the internet for career and academic advancement that would inure to national development.

    He said government was establishing a computer emergency response unit to deal with cyber insecurity, as it (government) would not allow its investments in the sector to be misapplied.

  • GH: Veep Launches U.S.$ 5Million E-Procurement System. to Prevent Corruption, Inefficiency in Public Procurement. Expected to Save Country $ 100m Annually

    The Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia has launched an electronic procurement system estimated to save the country $100million annually through the prevention of corruption and inefficiencies in public procurement.

    The $5million Ghana Electronic Procurement System (GNEPS), the first of its kind in West Africa, is part of an e-transform Ghana project being executed with a $97 million World Bank credit provided in 2014.

  • GH: Vice President Launches Glo 1 Fibre-Optic Cable

    Vice President John Dramani Mahama at the weekend launched the services of Glo 1 submarine fibre-optic cable linking Ghana to the rest of the world expressing the hope that it would help deepen service delivery.

    He said: "It is our hope that it will improve our financial services, improve the health services and the educational system and transform the agriculture sector through value addition."

    Vice President Mahama lauded the steady growth of telecommunication services in Ghana with over 17 million subscribers, giving a teledensity of 75 percent compared to less than three per cent in 1997.

  • GH: Volta River Authority to Digitise Operations Next Year - CEO

    The Volta River Authority (VRA) plans to digitise most of its operations from next year to improve efficiency and profitability.

    It said the power generation space was now very competitive with a lot of independent power producers however, the authority believed that leveraging on technology by introducing programmes such as the internet and artificial intelligence would enable it to lead its competitors

  • GH: Vote Transfer Will Be Difficult This Year - Deputy EC Chair

    A deputy chairman of the Electoral Commission, David Kanga has warned that transferring of voters from one polling station to another will be very difficult this year due to the introduction of the biometric register.

    Even though the Commission is working around the clock to find possible ways of dealing with the issue, Mr. Kanga cautioned voters to register at polling stations in their neighbourhood.

  • GH: Voters Register Ready, August

    The Electoral Commission (EC) has finished collating data of the 13 million people captured in the biometric voters’ register. The register is slated for exhibition in August, EC officials have disclosed.

    The exhibition will pave the way for a comprehensive voter’s register since voters would be given the opportunity to verify their inclusion in the register that will form the basis of the country’s new electoral database.

  • GH: Wakanda City of Return Project Launched in Cape Coast

    The Wakanda City of Return project has been launched in Cape Coast to pave way for the creation of an ultra-modern smart city that befits Cape Coast as a tourism hub.

    The African Diaspora Development Institute (ADDI), two local companies and the City of Cape Coast that form the fulcrum around the building of the city say, they are leveraging on the heritage and cultural tourism assets of Ghana to create a place of pilgrimage for the people of African descent to know about their history, culture, civilization of Africa and our role in the creation of the new world economy.

  • GH: We need Machines to complement Digital Revolution - Frimpong Boateng

    Professor Kwabena Frimpong-Boateng, the Minister of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation, has said that while the world is embracing digital revolution, there is the need to manufacture physical machines that could help every country to extract her natural resource endowment.

    He was of the opinion that poverty gap was a technological gap because no country in the world had developed without the capacity to manufacture basic devices and machines.

  • GH: Women empowerment in ICT a step towards development

    Information and Communication Technology (ICT) provides enormous opportunities and avenues for national development.

    Women in particular are not supposed to use ICT for marketing and advertising alone, but to use the technology for information gathering and sharing of knowledge. There is, therefore, the need for the country to adequately train women in the use of ICT.

    Some girls or women, who take courses in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics other related programmes excel.

  • GH: Workshop on e-Governance for Audit Service Staff

    The National Information Technology Agency (NITA) on Tuesday organised a workshop for staff of the Ghana Audit Service in Accra to upgrade their knowledge on the operations of the e-Government initiatives under the e-Ghana project.

    The project will deploy portal infrastructure to provide a platform for content management, document management, workflow and e-Forms, service integration and information and application security for government agencies.

  • GH: World Bank approves gov’t ICT funds

    The World Bank Board of Directors has approved funds to improve service delivery by government using Information and Communication Technology (ICT).

    The Government of Ghana has already made significant investments in communications infrastructure and continues to seek solutions, which leverage the infrastructure to improve government services and extend the reach of such services to all its citizens, in particular the most vulnerable, Yusupha B. Crookes, Country Director for Ghana said.

  • GH: World Bank pledges support for digital transformation

    The World Bank is ready to support Ghana in its ambition to digitalize its economic and social sectors according to Hafez Ghanem, the institution's vice president.

    During a meeting with the country’s vice-president Mahamudu Bawumia on March 25, 2019, the executive invited Ghanaian authorities to increase their infrastructure investments to extend their internet penetration rate, modernise the competition regulatory framework, reduce service costs and boost public institutions’ capacities. According to Hafez Ghanem, the end-goal is to guarantee efficient use of the digital in public institutions.

  • GH: Yaa Asantewaa Girls introduced to mobile training

    The Ghana-India Kofi Annan Centre of Excellence in ICT (AITI-KACE) has introduced over 100 students of Yaa Asantewaa Girls’ Senior High School to the Youth in Mobile training.

    The Ghana’s Youth in Mobile Application Development programme seeks to train secondary school students to develop mobile applications known popularly as apps.

    This forms part of activities marking AITI-KACE 10th anniversary celebration which also includes engaging with different stakeholder groups around Ghana to deliver innovative Information and Technology (IT) training packages.

  • GH: YEA To Train Personnel In E-Health

    The Eastern Regional Director of the Youth Employment Agency (YEA), Mr Mohammed Pelpuo, said the agency would soon train personnel on the new Electronic Health (E-health) system to improve quality healthcare services.

    He said that the new module to be introduced by the YEA and World Vision International, a Non-Governmental Organisation, would equip trainees with mobile phones networked by the NGO, to work hand in hand with the Community Health Planning and Services in deprived areas to ensure that the health needs of the people were met.

  • GH: Youth urged to place premium on ICT

    The Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) Chapter of the Internet Society of Ghana (ISOC), has inducted its newly- elected officers with a call to the youth to put premium on Information, Communication Technology (ICT) education.

    Mr. Eric Akumiah, President of the Society, said this was the surest way to build a knowledge-based society and aid Ghana to become competitive on the global market.

    It is estimated that only 5.2 per cent of the country’s population has regular access to the internet.

  • GH¢303,000.00 Kuntanase ICT Centre nears completion

    A GH¢303,000.00 Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Centre, with a facility for post office, being constructed at Kuntanase in the Bosomtwe District, would soon be ready.

    Work on the structure had already been completed and it has now been left with the installation of the computers and fixing of the letter boxes.

    The project is being funded by the Ministry of Communication. Contract was awarded in April last year.

  • Ghana 2012 Elections to cost 243, million Ghana Cedis

    Elections 2012 estimated at 243, million Ghana Cedis

    Elections 2012 is estimated to cost the nation 243, 528, 305.00 Ghana Cedis, Electoral Commission (EC) Electoral Budget available to the Ghana News Agency at the weekend revealed.

    The budget estimates that the Biometric Voter Registration Exercise will cost 148,942,378.00 Ghana cedis; the exhibition of the Provisional Register 7,477,966.00 Ghana cedis and the Presidential and Parliamentary elections 87,107,961.00 Ghana cedis.

  • Ghana begins compilation of biometric voters' register

    Ghana's Electoral Commission (EC) on Saturday began the compilation of a biometric voters' register that is expected to clean up the bloated voters' roll. The exercise which will end on 5 May is expected to capture the data of some 12 million potential voters.

    About 42,000 temporary personnel have been trained to operate the 7,000 digital registration kits for the exercise with the capacity to register between 100 and 150 persons per day.

  • Ghana begins electronic procurement system 2014

    A major e-Government Procurement (E-GP) project meant to enhance the country’s procurement processes and block the financial loopholes in the system will begin from January next year.

    The project, which will begin as a pilot, is expected to also enhance transparency in the public procurement process; provide a common platform for use by public institutions in public procurement and public financial management; and enhance competition by facilitating increased participation of service providers for government contracts.

  • Ghana digital ID card secures gov services, payments to come

    The Ghana digital ID program has started delivering multi-application credentials to citizens, the start of an ambitious effort that officials say will result in the issuance of cards to some 16 million citizens within a year. Eventually, Ghana’s ID card could outpace similar ones in Europe in terms of how people can use them, according to Cryptovision, a vendor involved with the project.

    The first GhanaCard was recently issued to the Ghanaian President Nana Akufo-Addo. It offers identity verification and “will enable strong two-factor authentication as a password replacement for e-government services online and will be used for the digital signature of electronic documents,” Germany-based Cryptovision says.

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