blank
search-icon

The MAIN Reason Why Most Ghanaians Are Sometimes HAPPY for No Reason

A-Plus Corner
A-Plus Corner

Sometime you are rich. Sometimes you are poor. Sometime you have no money but you feel rich. I remember when I used to play monopoly on a regular basis. Even though those were the dark days of my life, with no where to sleep, very little to eat and roamed for hours just to find a spot to place my monopoly game, my virtual buying of property and building of houses and hotels made me feel rich.

Most people feel rich at times. They feel some joy or get into a good mood for no particular reason. This feeling is very common with Ghanaians and I will tell you why.

I know most of you have heard of the word telepathy. It is scientifically defined as the purported transmission of information from one person to another without using any of our known sensory channels or physical interaction.

Yes, most Ghanaians are living a telepathic life as some greedy government officials have entered them into government payroll without their knowledge and are receiving money monthly in their name. Anytime you feel rich when you know very well that you may go to bed hungry remember that it is possible you have been paid and having a telepathic reaction.

Read more

BNI Uncovers Big Time Scam Within the Ghana National Service Scheme

Ghana
Ghana

It is an incontrovertible fact that times are hard in Ghana. But it seems that is the case for only the ordinary person, as anyone in a position of power seems solely interested in how they can abuse it for their own benefit.

A common belief is shared that corruption is rife in Ghana, but the Bureau of National Inverstigations (BNI) have uncovered a racket within the National Service Scheme(NSS) that even by our standards, is truly mind boggling.

Graphic Online reports officials of the BNI have uncovered a deep seated rot at the NSS that loses the country over GHc 7.9 million every month. The scam is carried out by inflating the roster of National Service personnel, with the perpetrators then cashing out the allowances of the non-existent ghost names they flood the system with.

The ghost names are reportedly generated from the head office in Accra, and then distributed to regional and district personnel involved in the scam. To keep the possibility of discovery low, the ghost personnel are often posted to remote and often non-existent institutions.

Read more