Friday, October 31, 2014

HENKING ADJASE-KODJO IS THE GJA JOURNALIST OF THE YEAR

The writer, Manasseh Awuni Azure (A Ghanaian Journalist)
On Saturday August 21, 2010, the boy from Bongo will have yet another opportunity to cure the remnants of his childhood kwashiorkor and immunize his future children against the protein deficiency disease.

Yes, if kwashiorkor grabs you and you survive to tell your story, you’ll agree with me that poverty is concrete noun, and not an abstract noun as your English teacher told you. And if someone sends you Antoa to curse you and says, “Let him die”, it is not as painful as when he says, “Let him be poor.” But thank God, those days are gone and your boy can now dine with the big men, and Saturday is another such occasion!

The venue will be the Banquet Hall of the State House, where Ghana’s most noble and ignoble men will converge to award Stars of the Order of the Volta and Stars of Order of the Vulture. The Ghana Journalists’ Association (GJA) awards are here and it will be interesting to see the men who buy ink in barrels gather to take stock of themselves and honour outstanding performances. There will be more than enough to quaff and munch and yours truly has started fasting for the day. This will be my third consecutive GJA Awards Night since, by God’s abounding grace, I moved from the peninsular district of Kete-Krachi to Accra, thanks to the Ghana Institute of Journalism. I’m in the process of becoming a member of the GJA and next year, hey, I’ll ride a donkey from here to Bongo if, or rather when, I pick one or more of the award next year.

After the northern journalists’ awards recently, I wrote a news commentary extolling the virtues of some journalists from the savanna regions who have over the years made northerners proud. I named names such as George Sydney Abugri and Anas Aremeyaw Anas among others, and a few minutes after the news commentary was aired on GBC Radio, one of the veterans in GBC Radio Newsroom saw me and called me. He looked very serious and I wondered whether I had defamed someone in the commentary.

“Do you know of Razak El-Alawa?” he asked me when I followed him to the newsroom. I scratched my head and my mind travelled many centuries back. I had actually not met the man before, and apart from a few articles I had read in the Daily Graphic with that byline, how was a 1985-born supposed to know about him? But fortunately I remembered while sipping a bottle of alvaro at the previous GJA awards night, I saw that name repeat itself twice in the colourful brochure that carried a full list of Ghanaian journalists’ hall of fame. The man is the only three-time winner of that award, followed by Kwaku Sakyi Addo and…

“So why did you not add his name. As for George Sydney Abugri, Anas Aremeyaw Anas and those you mentioned in the commentary, when did they come? If you like, sit down and I can give you names of northern Journalists … ”

I told him that I knew Anas was from Bimbilla and Afroman Sydney Abugri was from Bawku but had no faintest idea which part of the planet Alhaji Razak was hatched. And what about the name Razak? Well, we cannot conclude that because Albert Abongo is the MP for Bongo, Kanda Bongo Man is also from Bongo.

“I should have researched further,” I admitted and that ended the argument. The man in question is not a northerner, but ask me his interest and I’ll tell you that he is proud of journalism of his days and cannot afford to hear “amateur journalists” taking credit leaving his diligent companions of yesteryears. And I must admit that it is at such occasions as the GJA awards that one meets the great writers our history.

This year’s GJA awards promises to be great. Recently I heard the GJA President, Mr. Ransford Tetteh, saying he was happy about the keen interest shown in the awards. This, to him, has confirmed that the men and women behind the keyboards and microphones have developed faith in the GJA. It is good when the competition is patronized. But I think Mr. Tetteh and his men should concern themselves with the quality of the entries and not just the quantity. They say this year has the greatest number of entries.

The Ghana Institute of Journalism’s library may not be more spacious than a big lotto kiosk, but it is home to some of the best books on journalism and communication one can ever find on Odomankoma’s planet.

And one of such books I paid a penalty for returning it late is the Best Newspaper Writing published by the Poynter Institute of the USA. The book is published annually and it contains the winning and shortlisted stories of the American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE) annual media awards. When I compare those stories to newspaper stories that win awards here, I feel we’re still many miles away from modernity.

A few newspaper writings such as our columnists (the Alomeles, Akordors, Abugris, and the Kwaku Sakyi-Addos are men of their own classes) and stories of Anas and a few can match the best anywhere. But we still have a long way to go in print journalism.

The electronic media seem to be doing better. Joy FM and Citi FM are Great. Unique FM’s Perspectives and Radio Ghana’s Ghana Today are news programmes that seem to make up for the-minister-said stories replete in their major bulletins. Metro TV seem to have enough time for their news and they carry good stories. TV3 have the best news ideas, than any media house in Ghana but they scratch the surface of the stories.

Perhaps, they need to be reminded that how fast you do something will be forgotten but how well you do it will forever be remembered. GTV parades the best reporters in Ghana but their “output” is a subject of my subsequent write-ups. I sometimes wonder whether the prime time is for News or advertisement. The only station with nationwide coverage! They, too, must be reminded that the size of an animal does not matter; what matters is the taste in its soup.

Nevertheless, Saturday is going to be a great day! And the big question is who will wear the coveted crown of the GJA Journalist of the Year?

To me, the GJA Journalist of the Year should go to Mr. Henking Adjase-Kodjo! And I don’t want anybody to ask me who the hell he is, because his journalistic credentials may not fill an A4 sheet of paper. I mean Verdana font type. Font size 32. Bold. Justified! Sorry, Henking, I didn’t mean it.

Certainly, Henkings name will not be mentioned at the GJA awards. He’ll not be nominated, let alone win an award. But to the people of Odumase-Krobo in the Lower Manya Krobo of the Eastern Region, especially the current, past and future students of the Odumase Presbyterian JHS, Henking is not only the Journalist of the Year for the year under review but forever. He is their hero. He is their saviour.

He has demonstrated that with the stroke of the pen, the journalist is an architect of change and development. His parents must be proud of him and so will his community. Henking has demonstrated the naked truth in my mentor Chinua Achebe’s saying, that the cock belongs to one person but its crow is the asset of the entire village. And this week that we’re about to witness the Ghanaian journalists day of honor, I don’t think there is an individual who’s worthier of my praise than Henking.

Now, the news in details, credit to GBC’s Mercy Sowah. That woman and her voice! Only God knows the number of admirers out there who tell me they feel GBC Radio news doesn’t end when she’s reading. That’s another subject for another day.

The year was 2009. Henking was a still in GIJ. He was our Clerk of the SRC General Assembly. The best we’ve had so far, and they will ever have. He was in his final year and they were on their monotonous academic writing they call thesis. Final exams were near. And a referral in one subject meant that you’ll not graduate, thanks to gatekeeper Ms. Avordeda. Familiar name, GIJ alumni?

But despite the stress of having to meet all his responsibilities in GIJ, Henking Adjase-Kodjo found time to do a series of stories on the miserable state of affairs of the Odumase Presby JHS. Seven stories in all, on the same subject! The school was built in 1888 and had not seen any renovation after 121 years of existence. So what happened? In 2008, part of the building collapsed and killed a 13-year old pupil and injured three other pupils.

The rest of the building became a death trap, but the teachers and pupils had no option. So they risked their lives in there. The district assembly was too poor to help. NADMO, according to the headmaster of the school, did not pay heed to them when the school authorities reported their plight to them. The headmaster also explained that they had appealed to Ghana Cement Company Ltd (our own GHACEM) but nothing came out of it. And the central government? The Jubilee House was a priority!

But when Henking took his pen and wrote a touching story ,which presented the views of all interest groups of the school, and the Daily Graphic carried it in its May 7, 2009, edition of and there was change. Zain Ghana was touched by the story and today, the school has a new six-unit classroom block, a staff common room, a well-stocked library and a computer laboratory with internet facilities. The pupils also have new furniture. Pupils of the school now have ceiling fans above their heads, refrigerators to supply them with cold water and instead of stinky KVIPS, they can now sit on WCs and do their own thing, thanks to Zain. And thanks to Daily Graphic for carrying the story.

But the hero himself is 27 year-old Henking Adjase-Kodjo.
When last year the National Union of Ghana Students (NUGS) organized the students’ award and there was a category for Best Student Journalist, Henking was the one I tipped to win. I had presented materials from print, radio, TV and the numerous articles on the internet some people claim are “masterpieces” but the impact of Henking’s story was enormous and I confessed to him.

So on that night as I sat through the well-attended NUGS Awards Night in the auditorium of Zenith College, I had only hopes for winning the Best Student Writer category because I knew Henking was in the race and since NUGS is about education, he was sure to pick it up the award for the Best Student Journalist. It was a well-attended programme, with the descendants of Eve attending in their numbers. They scooped the well-polished yam mounds on the chests and as they cat walked, they (I mean the yam mounds) vibrated provokingly. You couldn’t look away because they were everywhere. And the word “beautiful” is an understatement. Indeed, heaven will be boring! And hell?

But the night turned out to be one of the most horrific nights in my life. I didn’t get the award for the best student writer and didn’t win the best student journalist, either. So who do you think won the best student journalist award?
No! Not as you think.

Henking didn’t win. It was awarded to an Akan newscaster based in Kumasi. And I cannot hide my disdain for most of these local language newscasters anywhere. Before this guy came to pick up his award, he gave a “free-style” of the comedy they mistake for news casting and the whole hall thundered with rapturous applause.

It was only then that I realized that Henking and I were too noble for those things they called awards. Where ignorance is bliss… One of the panelists who did the selection later told me that after the panel had all agreed to award some of us, the NUGS executive went and sat somewhere and came out with a different list, saying the “Council of Elders” of NUGS had the final say as to who won what.

It was therefore no wonder that after the “newscaster’s” praise had subsided, a loud voice pierced through the auditorium like a spear, “SAKAWA AWARDS.” And guess who owned that voice? It was our own Nana Darkwa Baafi, JJ Rawling’s good friend. But he was 101% right on this occasion. Like a Liverpool fan, he didn’t walk alone.

But on the day of his congregation the Ghana Institute of Journalism honoured Henking. He was adjudged the Most Inspiring Student and a citation was read for him. What about GJA?

But on Saturday night if what happened in 2007 should happen again, I’ll have a say in who becomes the GJA journalist of the year. I still remember that night very vividly, as vividly as the day I broke my code. I mean the day you broke your virginity, your dignity.

The GJA Vice President, Mr. Roland Affail Monney was asked to come and declare the Journalist of the Year. And he obliged. Spotting a neat, dark suit, he daintily mounted the podium and the whole State Banquet Hall died. The public address system used was very lousy but on this occasion, his voice seemed to reach every corner of the hall even if the microphone was taken away from him.

The clink of the glasses could be heard far away as worshipers of booze decided to respect the silence and momentarily placed them on the tables. Nigerians have a proverb that: “When a soup is unpalatable, and the paste of the pounded yam that goes with it is not smooth, that is the time to know a man who loves to eat pounded yam.” But I say that it is when there is excess booze at a state function that we know true “boozemen.”

But on this occasion, everybody respected the silence and the sound of Mr. Affail Monney’s voice rang out like the St. Michael’s Catholic Church bell in Kete-Krachi. He spoke for some time. And we listened, like a spellbinding sermon of salvation delivered to people about to face firing squad. Then he dropped the cluster bombshell! No journalist had written anything sensible enough to be named GJA Journalist of the Year.

The news was that there was no news! Period.
But this year, when such a thing should repeat itself, I will rise up and shout at the GJA officers like the way Representative Joe Wilson shouted at Obama.

“You lie! The GJA Journalist of Year is Mr. Henking Adjase-Kodjo, a freelancer for the Daily Graphic. Hurray!” The only difference will be that I won’t go back to apologise as Rep. Joe Wilson did.
Long live journalism.

Long live Ghanaian journalists who exercise our press freedom responsibly.



Credit: Manasseh Azure Awuni [www.maxighana.com] Email: azureachebe2@yahoo.com. The writer is a young freelance journalist based in Accra, Ghana. To read more of his writing, visit: www.maxighana.com

ZAIN THE SAVIOUR


Full video via this link

Henking A. Adjase-Kodjo, the writer
To the chiefs and people of Odumase-Krobo, particularly the staff and students of the Presbyterian Junior High School (the school that was left to rot), the name Zain, will forever remain synonymous with salvation and relief because what all others have failed or refused to do, Zain has done.
Just when hope was getting lost because the authorities were shirking their responsibility and virtually running away from what they were mandated to do and with no rescuer in sight, Zain came from nowhere to restore smile on the faces of the visibly hopeless tutors and pupils of the 1888-built school; the school had been left for a long time to rot, injure and kill.
All, even those whose mandate it was to ensure that the building was fit for human habitation and, for that matter, academic exercise fled in the face of the worsening condition, leaving the teachers and pupils like “orphans”. But Zain did not. It is, therefore not for nothing that the name Zain has gained acceptance in the Odumase township and beyond.
At least if for nothing at all, their prompt response to the distress call of the school within a day has succeeded in averting a worse form of the earlier recorded disaster. This has shown that they are not only in the country for business, just like others, but to improve the lots of the people.
But for the rescue mission, the news of the impending rainy season would be a bad one for the “orphaned” teachers and pupils because it would worsen their plight.
I am very sure if they had the power, they would have suspended the season and, for that matter, the rains but they had no such power so they resigned themselves to fate only hoping that nothing disastrous happened.
If at the hands of mere showers that preceded the season, parts of the roof of the colonial edifice kept flying off, to the extent of snuffing life out of one student and injuring many others, one can imagine what would have become of the building, the pupils and teachers during and after the heavy rains of this season as has already been predicted by the Meteorological Service not too long ago.
We needed no consultation to arrive at the conclusion that a great but preventable disaster was looming. I am firm in the belief that other schools in other parts of the country are in similar or worse conditions.
If in the heart of a town like Odumase-Krobo, which is very close to the capital city, we still find crumbling schools buildings like this, one can guess with certainty the nature of school building in the “remote” parts of the country. How long should we continue to toy with risky situations like this?
Some things can be toyed with, if we so want, but not when human lives which we neither can create nor restore are involved and more so when one has already been lost as a signal that more were going to be lost.
Is this the kind of free, compulsory but quality basic education government keeps boating of? Why then should it be compulsory if children have to face life-threatening conditions to access it and die in the process? What would the benefit be to come to school only to be struck dead by a collapsing school building?
I shudder to think that the deceased, Bernard Narteh, has been dispatched to eternity prematurely and for this reason the authorities responsible for the mismanagement of the schools must be taken on for negligence of duty. Negligence because the building started showing signs of imminent collapse long ago and yet the authorities simply refused to act. This is where or disregard for maintenance has brought us.
Could it be that those whose mandate it was and still is to ensure the safety of the people (pupils and teachers) and the provision of a conducive environment for academic activities simply refused to do so because they are not directly affected in any way or the condition of the school had not been brought to their attention?
Was it a case of lack of finance, the usual refrain, and if so, what prevented them from taking initiatives? Am I being made to believe that “communal labour” which has been very effective in arresting situations like this has outlived its usefulness?
Was it that the stakeholders were too many and their roles not properly defined for which reason they shirked their responsibility? And who at all is directly responsible for the management of public-mission schools like the one in question- Odumase Presby Junior High School? Because one of the identified causes of the abandonment is “who has what responsibility to do what?”
Is it the government, the mission/church or the Parent-Teacher-Association? Some may even argue that the old students have a role to play. Is there a clear definition of who does what? If there is, then the identified authority must be held responsible.
While the government, for that matter, the District Assembly and the Ghana Education Service (GES) seem to be too busy with “more important issues”, the church has also almost withdrawn, playing a passive role in the management of the school.
I very much believe that the church has withdrawn because the school is “public”, otherwise what reason can the Presby Education Unit (PEU) the Presby Education Foundation (PEF) and the Dangme-Tongu Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana (PCG) assign for not responding to the distress call of the school”
Anyway, where was the National Disaster Management Organisation (NADMO)? What did it do about what happened? Why the silence even when they had fully been made aware of the disaster?
Would I be wrong to think that what happened was not disasterous enough for them to manage? Perhaps, disaster to them is better managed on a large scale and not when only three people are injured and a single life lost.
Thank God, the management of Zain has been touched by the plight of the school and is hurriedly putting up a befitting classroom block with a library and a computer laboratory in place of that “death trap”. But the question is, what of other schools in the same and similar conditions?
Zain certainly cannot do all and that is why the government must sit up and prioritise properly, otherwise the very essence of the laudable interventions such as the Capitation Grant, School Feeding Programme, free school uniforms and the others would all not be felt.
Of what essence would it be for the children to attend school for free, be fed for free but learn in crumbling school building only to die later because of the faulty and abandoned school building?
We have toyed with lives for far too long and so this must be a lesson. We done Zain! This is a long-lasting investment that you have made and you will forever be remembered for this philanthropy. You are really making the world a wonderful place.
Daily Graphic, Monday June 22, 2009
Watch full video via this link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLVH07UUu1k&list=UU7ljxYzKiZJZYmrQI8c0nLA

Thursday, October 30, 2014

ZAIN GHANA HANDS OVER ODUMASE PRESBY JHS BLOCK (BACK PAGE)

The school building in its present new form

Full video available via this link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLVH07UUu1k&list=UU7ljxYzKiZJZYmrQI8c0nLA
Three months after Zain Ghana’s promise to the chiefs and people of Odumase-Krobo in the Lower Many Krobo District of the Eastern Region, the company has breathed a new life into the Odumase Presby Junior High School by razing to the ground the decrepit 121 year old classroom block and raised in its place a modern 6-unit educational facility.

The new disabled-friendly building which was inaugurated at a colourful ceremony on Wednesday August 12, 2009 is furnished with new dual desks from the pupils, tables/chairs for the teachers and has a 30-seater computer laboratory with internet connectivity as well as a 40-seater library. It also has a fully stocked staff common room, a headmaster’s office with fridge, washrooms, a rain harvesting/storage facility as well as a water pumping machine.

The state of the art facility would not only serve pupils of the school but double as a resources center for other basic schools in the district.

The reconstruction of the school, followed the publication of the woes of the teachers and students in the May 7, 2009 edition of the Daily Graphic newspaper. According to the report, the school faced imminent closure since the building was not only a death trap but did not provide a conducive environment for effective academic work.

Parts of the roof of the structure, which had never rehabilitated since it was constructed in 1888, often flew about anytime it rained. In one of those instances, a falling debris killed a 12-year-old class six pupil, Bernard Narteh and injured three others.

The CEO Mr. Chris Gabriel addressing the gathering
Speaking at the inauguration, the Chief Executive of Zain Africa, Mr Chris Gabriel, expressed the pride of his outfit to be associated with the project. He said “We are not only proud to have delivered on our promise within record time of three months but are also proud of the high spirit, dedication and passion displayed by the our staff towards the construction of this facility that will put a smile on the faces of these future leaders,”  he stated.
“Since our children are the future leaders, who have a basic right to education, we are resolved to work with stakeholders to ensure a bright future for these young ones,” he added.

Hon. Samuel Ofosu Ampofo taking his turn to address the gatheing
For his part, the Eastern Regional Minister, Mr Samuel Ofosu Ampofo, also commended Zain Ghana, for its commitment to educational development in the country, adding, “you have proved by your commitment that you are a worthy ally to form a partnership with to solve both the communication challenges and socio-economic difficulties facing the region.

The Headmaster, rendering his appreciation on the day of the handing over
The Headmaster, Nene Seth Ayertey, also thanked management of Zain for the swift intervention and promised to take good care of properties and the entire facility.


The pupils having a good time

The students preparing to embark on a procession before the handing over ceremony


Float in session

Students off on a float prior to the event

Zain official admiring the compound


(R-L) Mr. Steve Torode, Chief Operating Officer, Zain Central Africa; the CEO of Zain Africa, Mr. Chris Gabriel, MP for Lower Manya, Michael Tey Nyaunu and Mr. Kodjo Baah, an aide to the MP in a hearty chat after the event

Time for a musical interlude by the school choir

A student reciting a poem

THE CEO having some time with the students

Pupils using the new computer lab

MD for Zain Ghana, Mr. Philip Sowah

Mr. and Mrs. Narteh, parents ofo the deceased, Bernard Narteh

Some of the officials admiring the facility

Rev Samuel Atter Odjelua leading the team to commission the facility


Hon Samuel Ofosu Ampofo, Eastern regional Minister trying his hands on the new computers

Hon Isaac Tetteh Agbo, DCE of Lower Manya using the new computer lab

CEO of Zain Africa, Mr. Chris Gabriel, helping the parents of the deceased Bernard Narteh to unveil a plaque in his memory

THE CEO distributing school bags to the pupils

The pupils proudly displaying their

Some students using the new library

Mr. Chris Gabriel reading a book in the library with students

Some of the pupils in a jubilant mood

Mr. and Mrs Narteh at the handing over ceremony

Hon Michael Teye Nyaunu, MP for Lower Manya addressing the gathering

Edith Sackitey Ninye, a pupil of the school giving the vote of thanks after the event

Time to handover the facility
CEO of Zain Africa, Mr. Chris Gabriel delivering his speech on the day of the inauguration
Full video via this link

Thursday, October 23, 2014

WORK ON ODUMASE PRESBY JHS ALMOST COMPLETE

                        
Work in progress

Full video available via this link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLVH07UUu1k&list=UU7ljxYzKiZJZYmrQI8c0nLA

Construction work on the Presbyterian Junior High School at Odumase-Krobo which started barely a month and half ago is fast nearing completion for the planned handover to Zain Ghana on August 5, 2009.

The block is expected to be inaugurated soon after.At the time of the visit of the Daily Graphic to the site, the building was at its roofing stage, with workers busily at work to meet the set deadline.

The new facility which is also disability-friendly, is made up of six classrooms, a library and a computer laboratory.

It also has a headmaster’s office, a store, a staff common room as well as a washroom for the disabled and teachers.

It would be recalled that the Daily Graphic in its May 7, 2009 edition carried a story about the crumbling school block which claimed the life of a 12-year-old pupil and injured three others.

The story prompted the management of Zain Ghana to reconstruct the entire school building.

In a related development, Journalists for Human Rights-GIJ chapter, a human rights advocacy group, has offered to meet the authorities of the school to discuss some human rights issues in the area.

According to the Public Relations Officer (PRO) of the group, Mr. Seth Joseph Bokpe, “other human rights institutions and groups have been brought on board”.


He also stated that as part of the activities of the group, a four-day sensitisation programme would be carried out in the early part of next month for some selected students of the school as well as youth groups in the area.
A carpenter busily spraying the new set of furniture

Preparation of new set of furniture underway
Full video available via this link

PRESBYTERIAN SCHOOL REHABILITATION BEGINS


Rehabilitation works on the school begins

Full video available via this link

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLVH07UUu1k&list=UU7ljxYzKiZJZYmrQI8c0nLA


Reconstruct work on the crumbling Presbyterain Junior High School classroom block at Odumase-Krobo in the Eastern Region has begun

The project, which is being sponsored by Zain Ghana is expected to be completed in two months.

Workers busy at post
Earlier in the week, the dilapidated six classroom block, a staff common room and an office was razed down to pave way for the reconstruction work.
This follows an intervention by the management of Zain Ghana after a publication of the pathetic condition of the school by the Daily Graphic.
It would be recalled that the Daily Graphic, in its May 7, 2009 edition, carried a story about the state of the school which was posing a serious threat to the lives of both teachers and pupils. The structure was reported to have killed a pupil and injured three others during a rains storm late last year.
Subsequently, the management of Zain was touched by the story and, as part of the company’s Corporate Social Responsibility, decided to rebuild the original part of the building which was built in 1888 and to renovate the rest.
At the moment, the entire JHS block has been demolished and work is ongoing to erect in its place a six-unit classroom block, a staff room and a headmaster’s office.
The block will include a fully stocked library, furnished computer laboratory with internet connectivity as well as a place of convenience for both teachers and the physically challenged who previously had no such facility.
Explaining the rationale behind the total demolishing against the initial plan to rebuild only the original part and to renovate the adjourning classroom, Mr. Joseph Biga, Facilities Manage of Zain Ghana disclosed that their decision was informed by findings during the demolition exercise, adding that, “we thought the extension was strong enough to be renovated but discovered otherwise”.
Demolition work progresses
“It was going to be a waste of time and resources to renovate the weak part which would end up negating the work done”, he stressed adding that “the project is expected to be completed by the first week of August for inauguration”.
In an interview, the Headmaster of the school, Nene Seth Ayertey, was very appreciative of the pace of the project and progress made so far.
He expressed the hope that the project would be carried through successfully in to time to provide the conducive environment for teaching and learning “which has for a long time eluded us”.
A teacher of the school, Mrs. Rosina Asare who could not hide her happiness, also expressed her gratitude to the management of Zain for their prompt response to the call of the school.
“Not only have they saved lives but have made a life-long investment which would go a long way to benefit the children and society in general”, she emphasised.

 
Workers pushing down the weak walls of the adjourning classroom block

Carpenters taking the roof off

Foundation works begin

Full video available via this link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLVH07UUu1k&list=UU7ljxYzKiZJZYmrQI8c0nLA