Inspire hope and confidence in our youth - Kojo Yankah
MAR 3, 2021
Former Member of Parliament and the founder of the African University College of Communication (AUCC), Mr Kojo Yankah has challenged the leaders on the need to inspire hope and confidence in the youth.
He said it is about time we change the perception that Ghana has not always been poor.
In a statement on the free covid-19 vaccines from Covax, he takes serious exception to the tag on Ghana as a poor country. We need to inspire our youth that we haven t always been poor. In my next book entitled Pain and Faith in Our Motherland , I mention some bitter truths: Kwame Nkrumah set up several scientific research institutes to drive our development. Food Science, Aquatic Biology, Geology and Geophysics, Industrial Standards, Marine Fisheries .
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Former Member of Parliament and the founder of the African University College of Communication (AUCC), Mr Kojo Yankah has challenged the leaders on the need to inspire hope and confidence in the youth.
He said it is about time we change the perception that Ghana has not always been poor.
In a statement on the free covid-19 vaccines from Covax, he takes serious exception to the tag on Ghana as a poor country.
“We need to inspire our youth that we haven’t always been poor. In my next book entitled ‘Pain and Faith in Our Motherland’, I mention some bitter truths: Kwame Nkrumah set up several scientific research institutes to drive our development. Food Science, Aquatic Biology, Geology and Geophysics, Industrial Standards, Marine Fisheries”.
https://www.afinalwarning.com/487942.html (Natural News) In this study, researchers at the
Centre for Scientific Research into Plant Medicine in Ghana documented indigenous knowledge of medicinal plants used to treat malaria to facilitate the discovery of new candidate drugs. Their findings were published in the
Journal of Medicinal Plants Research.
Medicinal plants are widely used for the treatment of diseases, including malaria, in Ghanaian Traditional Medicine.
To find new sources of drugs, the researchers collected data about Ghanaian traditional plant medicines from 36 herbalists registered with the Ghana Federation of Traditional and Alternative Medicine (GHAFTRAM).
They used a well-structured questionnaire to facilitate data collection. Only answers from willing respondents were documented.
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