Thursday, 28 March

Ghana’s COVID-19 load now 18,630 with 14,046 recoveries

Health News
So far, 117 people have died of the virus

Ghana has recorded 496 new COVID-19 cases, taking the total case count to 18,630, the Ghana Health Service reported on Thursday, 2 July 2020.

The new figures were announced by the Director-General of the Ghana Health Service, Dr Patrick Kuma-Aboagye at a press briefing organised by the Ministry of Information.

So far, the number of patients who have recovered and been discharged stands at 14,046.

The death toll remains 117.

Out of the current case count of 4,467, Dr Kuma-Aboagye said 22 are in severe condition with eight in critical condition.

Six others are on ventilators.

The Greater Accra Region is still leading with 10,296 cases, followed by the Ashanti Region – 3,834 cases.

Meanwhile, President Nana Akufo-Addo has urged eligible voters who go to the polling centres to register for the voter ID card to ensure that they obey all the necessary protocols put in place to mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Addressing the nation on the eve of the commencement of the registration exercise, President Akufo-Addo reassured all eligible voters of their safety at the 33,327 polling stations across the country, explaining that the Electoral Commission has put in place the necessary, elaborate protocols for the process

“All these protocols should be adhered to strictly”, he admonished.

Additionally, the President said, “I want to remind all Ghanaians that all the other protocols and restrictions, especially those dealing with large gatherings, must be adhered to and enforced at the polling stations at all times”.

“So, let us all abide by them, and conduct ourselves in a manner befitting the image and status of Ghana,” he added.

All prospective registrants who go to any of the EC’s centres to have their names captured in the voter roll for the 2020 polls would be given chits, as part of measures to ensure all the COVID-19 safety protocols are adhered to, the election management body has announced.

In a statement, the EC said: “To further limit and minimin overcrowding, the Commission has introduced the Queue Management System that ensures that applicants are provided with chits”.

“This will ensure that applicants only visit the centres at the times they are allotted”, the statement explained.

“We believe that this will help reduce the overcrowding and queues at the registration centres. We count on the general public to assist the Commission to work to maintain law and order at all the registration centres,” the EC said.

The Commission’s new strategy follows observations by the Ghana Medical Association and other health professionals that the process could end up worsening Ghana’s case count.

On Wednesday, 1 July 2020, the Director of Electoral Services at the EC, Dr Serebour Quaicoe, said persons who breach COVID-19 protocols at registration centres in the ongoing voter registration exercise are adults and should be held responsible for their actions instead of blaming EC Chair Jean Mensa.

Dr Quaicoe’s statement was a reaction to the GMA’s insistence that Mrs Mensa, as the head of the electoral management body, should be held solely responsible for any COVID-19 breaches at the centres.

Speaking to Benjamin Akakpo on the Executive Breakfast Show (EBS) on Class91.3FM on Wednesday, 1 July 2020, the Vice-President of the GMA, Dr Frank Serebour, said it is Mrs Mensa’s job to ensure that her staff observe the protocols to keep Ghanaians safe.

Dr Serebour stated: “She [Jean Mensa] is the head and I believe that it is [on] her authority that the EC officials are working. So, she has to ensure that the right things are done. They must put in place the right things, the right security and all the needed logistics are put in place at the centres”.

“She requested for health personnel, she’s been given; we’ve trained them and given them health personnel to help them, so, we think that every single activity that’s being done is being done under her auspices and she has to make sure that the right people are at the right places, they have the right training and, so, it is her responsibility and I believe that she knows that and that is the reason she held the press conference and she told Ghanaians exactly what was going to happen at the registration centres, so, we think that any breaches that occur at these centres, she should be solely held responsible for those breaches and, so, we stand by that and we think it's her reasonability because after all, she is the head and she has to ensure it happens.”

Speaking on the same show, Dr Quaicoe, however, called on the security personnel at the polling centres to help enforce the safety protocols.

He said: “We’ve come with the modalities, so, we expect the security people to help us to ensure that people observe the protocols. All of us, if we go there and people are not doing the right things, let’s all speak against it. The Electoral Commission does not support people who do not observe the protocols…”

“We’re dealing with adults and they should be held responsible for their actions. The law says that you should wear a mask and the law has law enforcers, so, what we can do is to educate the people. There are laws and when they breach them, people who are law enforcers must make sure they are punished … but like I said, the people who are going to the centres are adults and, so, they should also know that what they are doing has an effect on their own health and those people they get into contact with and I’ll also entreat the security services, they shouldn’t allow people to breach the protocols and go scot-free.”

 

Source: Classfmonline.com