Welcome

....to JusticeGhana Group

 Welcome to JusticeGhana

JusticeGhana is a Non-Governmental [and-not-for- profit] Organization (NGO) with a strong belief in Justice, Security and Progress....” More Details

Citizenship

All Hands on Deck

S. Kwaku Asare

I recently had the audacity to ask a highly respected public official why, under our laws, a Ghanaian (born and educated in Ghana) who holds the citizenship of another country, cannot be the Chief Fire Officer.

Opinion

Photo ReportingAmerica and Britain's Laudind Of Mills, The Relevance To The Ghanaian

There has been a continuous resounding of how the sitting president; John Evans Atta Mills has obtained a good Favor from Obama and Cameron. From his alleged invitation to the G8 summit to the numerous trips to the USA, the president is said to have a very romantic relationship with these two world leaders.

Opinion

Apologies in Life

In the last few days—maybe weeks, our airwaves have been filled with condemnations and demands for apologies. These calls started with Nii Lante Vandapuye’s call for people who have non-Ga names to be prevented from registering in Odododiodoo constituency and escalated with Ken Agyapong’s declaration of war.

Think Again

Photo Reporting

Shattering The Myth Of Jj Rawlings - 1

A dangerous fallacy has taken hold of Nigerians; the idea that Nigeria needs a ‘JJ Rawlings’ who through an orgy of killing and comprehensive slaughter of all the past leaders will deliver Nigeria from the clutches of rapacious looters that have cornered the commonwealth.

Dairies

The Nation Must Secure Nkrumah’s Diary

Regicide is the act of killing a king or ruler and in all ancient cultures regicide carried a curse, especially if the ruler was unjustly sent to the other world. Ghana, more or less, committed regicide on February 24, 1966 when the President, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah was overthrown. The issue here is not whether he deserved to be overthrown, but six years later he died in a hospital in Bucharest of what Amilcar Cabral called the “cancer of betrayal”. Between 1966 and his death in 1972, Nkrumah expressed his political views publicly in a number of books, notably Dark Days in Ghana, Handbook of Revolutionary Warfare, The Struggle Continues and Voices from Conakry.