
The United States Department of Homeland Security DHS has released an updated list of 374 West African nationals targeted for deportation, which includes 32 Ghanaians. This initiative, dubbed 'Worst of the Worst,' identifies foreign nationals considered priority cases for removal from the United States. Nigeria has the highest number of individuals on the list with 124 nationals, followed by Liberia with 94, and Ghana with 32. Other countries represented include Sierra Leone 26, Cape Verde 23, Senegal 19, C么te d'Ivoire and The Gambia 14 each, Mauritania 12, Burkina Faso 9, Niger 8, Guinea and Togo 6 each, Mali 5, and Guinea-Bissau and Benin 1 each. The DHS states that these individuals are among the most serious cases targeted for removal. Some Ghanaian nationals named include Edward Sarpong for burglary and sale of synthetic narcotics, Paul Dayah for sexual assault, drug possession, and drug trafficking, Martin Obeng Darko Berchie for a sex offense, and Kwabena Adjei for homicide. The publication of names and photographs is part of a broader DHS strategy to publicly identify foreign nationals prioritized for deportation.
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This summary was AI-generated from a story originally published by GhanaWeb.

President John Dramani Mahama has cautioned citizens against dumping refuse into gutters, emphasizing that drainage systems are not waste disposal facilities and contribute to worsening flooding across the country. Speaking after a national clean-up exercise in Alajo on July 10, 2026, President Mahama noted that drains are often clogged with heavy silt, plastics, household waste, old furniture, and discarded engine blocks. He urged the public to use designated skip trucks for waste disposal. The President announced plans to institutionalize monthly clean-up initiatives to promote continuous environmental sanitation, acknowledging that a two-day exercise is insufficient. He also disclosed that the Minister of Finance has released GH垄150 million for flood mitigation efforts, including the dredging of drains. President Mahama praised the participation of citizens, traditional leaders, and security agencies in the clean-up, adding that the military would continue to support sanitation efforts beyond the initial two-day exercise, deploying specialized equipment to remove cleared silt.
Must ReadThe Ministry of Health has reported that nearly one-third of Ghanaian adults are now overweight or obese, according to the 2023 Ghana STEPS Report. Awinibuno A.N. Ignatius, Director and Chief Programme Officer for Allied Health at the Ministry of Health, disclosed this during the GreenStay Initiative in Accra on July 10, 2026. Ghana is experiencing a dual burden of malnutrition, with undernutrition alongside a rise in obesity-related diseases such as hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and certain cancers. Poor dietary habits contribute to the issue, as fewer than 5% of adults consume the recommended five daily servings of fruits and vegetables. The Ministry is collaborating with the World Health Organization and the Ministry of Education to implement measures, including the 2022 Non-Communicable Diseases Policy, which promotes healthier diets and increased physical activity. They are also working with the Ministry of Education to introduce nutrition education and wellness programs in schools. The Ministry urged the private sector, including hotels, restaurants, food manufacturers, and retailers, to reduce salt, sugar, and unhealthy fats in products, offer healthier menu options, and invest in workplace wellness initiatives. Reducing obesity rates is expected to improve productivity, lower healthcare costs, and support Ghana's development agenda.
Must ReadProfessor Henry Kwasi Prempeh, Chairman of the Constitutional Review Committee, has called on the Supreme Court to reject lawsuits seeking an interpretation of presidential term limits. These suits argue that a president could be eligible for a third term under certain conditions. Professor Prempeh contends that the lawsuits do not present a genuine constitutional dispute because no action has challenged the established interpretation of Article 662 of the 1992 Constitution. He asserts that the Supreme Court's role is to interpret the Constitution only when an actual dispute exists, not to address hypothetical legal questions. The writ, filed by Ghanaian news editor and lawyer Kenneth Kwabena Agyei Kuranchie, seeks a definitive interpretation of the country's presidential term-limit provisions, specifically Article 662. It asks the court to determine if the two-term limit applies only to consecutive terms and if a substantial break between elected terms resets eligibility. The plaintiff seeks declarations that the two-term limit takes effect only after two consecutive four-year terms, that a substantial break of one four-year electoral cycle resets eligibility, and that the prohibition in Article 662 is not engaged until a person has served two consecutive elected terms.