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2022–23 →. Live Matches on StarTimes Ghana. The 2021–22 Ghana Premier League was the 66th season of the top professional association football league in Ghana [1] which began on 29 October 2021 and concluded on 19 June 2022. [2] Hearts of Oak were the defending champions.
Kwame Nkrumah. Headquarters. Accra. , Ghana. Website. www .gna .org .gh. The Ghana News Agency ( GNA) is a Ghanaian state-owned news agency that was founded in 1957 by Kwame Nkrumah. Donald Wright, who was seconded by the Reuters News Agency set up the Ghana News Agency and in 1961 President Nkrumah appointed Dr. Goodwin T. Anim as the GNA's ...
Ghana mass media, news and information provided by television. Radio studio in Ghana. Television was introduced to Ghana in 1965 and was under State control. The Ghana Broadcasting Corporation held a monopoly on television broadcasting until 1994, following the 1992 constitution of the new democratically elected government.
Ghana too has its own long and rich history of textiles - perhaps best known for its bright, patterned kente cloth. ... His latest project at the Barbican showcases a typically Ghanaian item he ...
Africa Cup of Nations. 2015. Africa Cup of Nations. 2008. *Club domestic league appearances and goals. Asamoah Gyan ( / ˌæsəˈmoʊə ˈdʒɑːn / ASS-ə-MOH-ə JAHN; [3] born 22 November 1985) is a Ghanaian former professional footballer who played as a striker. He is a former captain of the Ghana national team.
ACCRA (Reuters) - Ghana's Supreme Court said on Wednesday that lawyers battling over the legality of one of Africa's most restrictive anti-LGBTQ bill must amend their motions due to insulting ...
Bogoso explosion. / 5.58500°N 2.04639°W / 5.58500; -2.04639. On 20 January 2022, a large explosion occurred along the Tarkwa-Bogoso-Ayamfuri road in Western Region, Ghana, after a truck transporting mining explosives collided with a motorcycle. The explosion levelled the nearby Apiate village, killing 13 people and injuring 200.
The Accra Sport Stadium disaster occurred at the Ohene Djan Stadium in Accra, Ghana, on 9 May 2001. It killed 126 people, making it the worst stadium disaster to have ever taken place in Africa. [1] [2] It is also the third-deadliest disaster in the history of association football behind the Estadio Nacional and Kanjuruhan Stadium disasters.