News
Top Ghana News Headlines Across Various News Outlets Today: January 4, 2026
Today, January 4, 2026, local Ghanaian media outlets are reporting on a range of significant developments. Reports feature domestic political turbulence to community tensions and corporate tariff reforms, with international events such as the U.S. operation in Venezuela and the capture of President Nicolás Maduro also drawing attention and commentary in the local press.
Judicial Crisis: Supreme Court and Chief Justice Torkornoo
Deputy Attorney-General, Dr Justice Srem-Sai, has opposed the ongoing Supreme Court case challenging the process used to begin removal proceedings against erstwhile Chief Justice Gertrude Torkornoo. The case argues that the President and the Council of State acted wrongly by not explaining why they believed there was enough basis to investigate the petitions against her. However, according to the Deputy Attorney-General, deciding whether there is enough initial reason to proceed is a policy decision, not a legal one. He says this kind of decision is based on political judgment and should not be questioned by the courts. He also argues that the Council of State mainly deals with sensitive public and political matters, and its decisions are therefore outside the scope of judicial review.
In short, the government’s position is that the courts should not interfere with how the President and the Council of State handled the early stages of the Chief Justice’s removal process.
Earlier, the Supreme Court unanimously dismissed an injunction application filed by the ousted Chief Justice seeking to halt the removal process against her. The court held that the application lacked merit, clearing the way for the presidentially-appointed investigative committee to proceed with its inquiry into allegations outlined in three petitions.
Political Commentary: NPP Leadership Debate
Political discourse in Ghana remains lively, particularly within discussions about the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP). Ahead of the 2026 party primaries, a number of commentators and analysts are engaging in debates about leadership choices and the party’s future direction. From the commentaries, it appears former vice president Mahamudud Bawumia and former legislator Ken Agyapong are the lead contenders ahead of the primaries slated for January 31, 2026. Opinion pieces and reports suggest divisions and concerns about electing a leader who can restore public confidence following the party’s embarrassing defeat in the 2024 general elections, with some voices arguing that current figures may not be ideal to return the party to power.
Meanwhile, other Ghanaian outlets have in past months covered internal dynamics within the NPP, including discussions on potential flagbearers and strategic positioning for future elections.
Social and Community Tensions: Ho Central Mosque Closure
Regional news from the Volta Region highlights deep community divisions in Ho over the temporary closure of the Central Mosque by the Volta Regional Security Council following a deadly gunshot incident linked to a long-running dispute over chieftaincy of the mosque. Police and military personnel have been deployed to maintain peace, with residents offering mixed reactions — some seeing the closure as necessary for calm and mediation, others decrying it as an infringement on their right to worship.
Corporate and Economic Developments: MTN Tariff Reductions
On the business front, MTN Ghana announced reductions in tariffs across all products and services, responding to new Value Added Tax (VAT) reforms that took effect on January 1, 2026. The move follows amendments aimed at simplifying VAT administration and reducing tax burdens on individuals and businesses. MTN says the adjustments will deliver direct benefits to consumers and align pricing with the reformed VAT regime.
Security Incident: Autopsy Fast-Tracked After Fatal Police Operation
In Abosso, a mining town in the Western Region, police are fast-tracking an autopsy for an 18-year-old teenager killed during an intelligence-led raid on suspected drug suspects on New Year’s Eve 2025. The Western Central Regional Police Command says the expedited forensic investigation is intended to facilitate burial arrangements and ease rising tensions in the community following the fatal shooting. ACP Bismark Agyapong defended the operation and emphasised law enforcement’s duty to protect lives and property while urging the public not to interfere with police actions.
Law and Order: Arrests for Impersonating NAIMOS Operatives
Law enforcement agencies also reported on the arrest of five suspects posing as officials of the National Inter-Agency Task Force on Illegal Mining (NAIMOS). Police say the suspects were involved in fraudulent activities under the guise of task force operations, prompting multiple arrests as authorities clamp down on impersonation and illegal mining-related scams.
GoldBod and IMF Trading Loss Debate
A $214 million issue linked to gold trading under the Bank of Ghana’s Gold-for-Reserves programme has been in the spotlight for some time now. The debate started when the International Monetary Fund (IMF), said Ghana made a shortfall, or trading losses of $214 million in 2025, suggesting that the country didn’t make as much from selling gold as expected.
Bright Simons, Vice President of IMANI Africa, said on the popular current affairs program, Newsfile, on Saturday, January 3, that the IMF has every right to call it a trading loss because IMF economic reviews apply to all member countries, and the term reflects normal commercial activity where buy and sell prices don’t match. He also argues policy institutions like GoldBod should be held to the same efficiency and transparency standards as others.
The Gold Board (GoldBod) — the state body involved in the program — strongly disagrees. Its CEO, Sammy Gyamfi, says the entity did not make losses in 2025, reporting revenues of more than GH₵960 million against expenditures of less than GHS120 million, and expects to declare a surplus. He says claims of losses are false and misleading.
This debate feeds into a longstanding public discussion about transparency in how Ghana’s gold sector is managed. There have been calls for clearer pricing and oversight in the industry.
Culture & Entertainment: Mr Eazi on “Detty December”
In entertainment news, Ghanaian-international artist Mr Eazi claims credit for coining the term “Detty December”, a phrase widely used to describe Ghana’s vibrant festive season. In interviews, the musician said the phrase reflects the spirit of celebration and cultural energy that defines the December period in Ghana and beyond.
Youth Empowerment: Vice-President’s Call for Integrity
At an educational conference hosted by PENSA Ghana, the Vice-President emphasised the importance of integrity and service among students. He urged young Ghanaians to pursue excellence and ethical leadership, reinforcing the role of youth in shaping national development and governance.
International Spotlight: U.S. Operation in Venezuela
Ghanaian media outlets have also referenced the U.S. operation in Venezuela and the capture of President Nicolás Maduro, with local commentary drawing parallels to conflict dynamics in Libya and Iraq and stimulating public debate about international intervention and its implications for global stability.
Africa Watch
As Xenophobic Attacks Rise, Cape Town’s ‘Apartheid Wall’ Draws Accusations of Misaligned Priorities by Black South Africans
A wall against crime or against the poor? As xenophobic attacks rise, critics say Black South Africans are fighting the wrong enemies
CAPE TOWN — A controversial $7 million wall rising along Cape Town’s N2 highway has reignited a painful debate about race, poverty, and belonging in post-apartheid South Africa.
For a growing number of pan-African voices, the structure is a symptom of something deeper: a dangerous misalignment of priorities among black South Africans, who are simultaneously turning violent against fellow African immigrants while a resurgent settler class consolidates power.
The nearly 9-kilometer “N2 Edge” safety barrier, branded by critics as an “apartheid wall,” is designed to separate the highway leading from Cape Town International Airport from the sprawling, impoverished black townships of Nyanga and surrounding settlements. The route has long been known as the “N2 hell run” due to frequent hijackings, smash-and-grab ambushes, and occasional deadly attacks on motorists.
City officials, led by the centre-right Democratic Alliance (DA), defend the R114 million (approximately $7 million) project as a necessary crime-fighting measure. Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis said the road is used by “hundreds of thousands of people a day,” many of them local commuters who feel unsafe.
A woman was fatally stabbed at a traffic light just off the highway after leaving the airport complex in December 2025, an incident that accelerated the project’s approval.
But former anti-apartheid activist and cleric Allan Boesak has called the wall an attempt to “hide the poor.”
“They are trying to build a wall behind which they are trying to hide the poor,” Boesak said at a recent Ramadan community gathering. “They are trying to hide the fact that there is indeed a black Cape Town and a white Cape Town – a privileged Cape Town and a privileged-deprived Cape Town.”
A Wave of Xenophobic Violence
The wall controversy comes amid a resurgence of xenophobic and Afrophobic attacks across South Africa. In recent months, immigrants from Ghana, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, and other African nations have been assaulted, robbed, and driven from their homes in townships near Johannesburg, Durban, and Cape Town (as shown in many viral videos inundating social media feeds).
Shops owned by foreign nationals have been looted, and at least seven people have been killed in xenophobic mob attacks since the beginning of the year, according to civil society monitors.
South African police have made dozens of arrests, but community leaders say the violence reflects deep-seated resentment over unemployment, housing shortages, and crime, frustrations that are frequently misdirected at fellow Africans.
One pro-African unity commentator, whose analysis has circulated widely in response to the recent violence, argues that black South Africans are being manipulated by a familiar colonial playbook.
“The settler class has always been unified,” the commentator, Shannel R Oliver wrote. “When will Africa be?”
The U.S.-based commentator pointed to historical precedents:
“The Belgians turned the Hutu against the Tutsi. The British divided the Igbo and the Yoruba, the Fante and the Ashanti — specifically to crush unified African resistance. Today the targets are Xhosa and Zulu, township against township, African immigrant against South African.”
Strategic Assets and Secessionist Ambitions
The wall’s construction also coincides with renewed efforts by some members of Cape Town’s white minority to break the Western Cape away from South Africa entirely. A UK-born immigrant named Phil Craig has been lobbying Washington to support secession, reportedly comparing Cape Town’s strategic value to Panama and Greenland — two territories former U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened to seize by military force.
Oliver described Craig’s campaign as “an invitation to a foreign power to invade a sovereign nation” and “treason.”
Cape Town generates approximately 10% of South Africa’s entire GDP. With Red Sea shipping lanes disrupted by conflict, the Cape Sea Route has emerged as one of the world’s most strategically valuable maritime corridors.
“Whoever controls Cape Town controls the southern gateway of an entire continent,” Oliver warned.
Two Crises, One Question
On the ground in Nyanga, residents say the wall does nothing to address their own vulnerability to crime. According to police statistics, the Nyanga Police Station recorded the highest number of robberies with aggravating circumstances in the country between October and December 2025, and the second-highest number of murders — a 29% increase from the previous quarter.
“Walls might stop bullets but it doesn’t stop crime,” said city councillor Jonathan Cupido of the GOOD political party. Cupido accused the DA-led city government of trying to “hide what we cannot fix.”
At the Cape Town Mardi Gras festival this month, activists carried banners reading “Homes not walls!” — redirecting attention to the city’s deepening housing crisis. Nyanga Community Policing Forum chairman Dumisani Qwebe urged authorities to focus on improving living environments “rather than thinking of building a security wall on the N2.”
Yet as black South Africans protest the wall and, in other moments, attack African immigrants, the commentator’s central question lingers: Who is the real enemy?
“European immigrants are flooding in, buying up land and driving up costs, welcomed by the same settler class building the apartheid wall,” he wrote. “While South African communities are turned against each other, the settler class has always been unified. When will Africa be?”
City authorities have not responded to accusations that the wall is racially motivated. The N2 Edge project is proceeding as planned, with completion expected in early 2027.
Ghana News
Ghana Ties Rice Imports to Local Production, Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital Halts Emergency Admissions, and Other Big Stories in Ghana Today
These are the most relevant and impactful stories from across Ghana today, presented as concise updates on key developments across the country.
Government to Tie Rice Imports to Local Production in Major Policy Shift
The Ghanaian government is set to introduce a significant policy linking rice import permits directly to investments in local rice production and milling facilities. This move by the Ministry of Agriculture aims to boost domestic farming, reduce the country’s growing rice import bill, and accelerate progress toward food self-sufficiency. Read the full story here
Edem Senanu Questions Procedural Lapses in Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill Process
Chairman of Advocates for Christ, Edem Senanu, has raised concerns over how Parliament’s House of Records handled the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, questioning procedural and drafting issues that emerged after its passage. Read the full story here
Sheikh Shaibu Warns Against Politicising Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill
Spokesperson for the National Chief Imam, Sheikh Aremeyaw Shaibu, has cautioned the NDC and NPP against turning the anti-LGBTQ+ bill into a political contest, stressing that Ghana already has a broad national consensus on the matter rooted in cultural and religious values. Read the full story here
Honest Ghanaian Rewarded GH¢10,000 for Returning Lost ATM Cash
Fidelity Bank has rewarded Emmanuel Appiah Boateng with GH¢10,000 for his honesty after he returned GH¢4,000 he found left behind at one of its ATMs. Read the full story here
Nigel Gaisie Files GH¢10m Defamation Suit Against Kumchacha
Prophet Nigel Gaisie has sued Prophet Nicholas Osei (Kumchacha) for GH¢10 million over alleged defamatory statements questioning his prophetic ministry. Read the full story here
680 Ghanaians to Be Evacuated from South Africa Amid Xenophobia Concerns
The Ghana High Commission in South Africa has announced plans to evacuate 680 Ghanaians (340 on June 6 and 340 on June 7, 2026) due to xenophobia-related safety issues. Read the full story here
Free SHS Suppliers to Picket at Education Ministry Over GH¢50m Debt
The National Association of Institutional Suppliers (NAIS) will picket at the Ministry of Education on June 11, 2026, over unpaid debts of approximately GH¢50 million for supplies delivered under the Free Senior High School programme since 2023. Read the full story here
Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital Halts Emergency Admissions
The Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH) in Kumasi has temporarily halted new emergency admissions after its Accident and Emergency ward exceeded capacity due to overwhelming patient numbers. Read the full story here
15 dead, 25 injured in head-on collision at Peki-Tsame
At least 15 people have been confirmed dead and 25 others injured following a devastating head-on collision between a container truck and a passenger bus at Peki-Tsame in the Volta Region. The fatal accident occurred in the early hours of Tuesday, 2 June 2026, near the premises of Peki Senior High School, prompting an emergency response from personnel of the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS). Read the full story here
Ghana News
Today’s Newspaper Headlines: Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Wednesday, June 3, 2026. Stay informed with today’s front pages of Ghanaian newspapers, all in one place.




















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