23.1 C
Kumasi
Tuesday 09 December, 2025
Odehyieba.com
Home Blog Page 17

Ghana vs Switzerland (2-0) Full Highlights Goals, Pre-Qatar 2022 FIFA World Cup Friendly Match (Video)

Ghana vs Switzerland (2-0) Full Highlights Goals
Ghana vs Switzerland (2-0) Full Highlights Goals

Mohammed Salisu and Antoine Semenyo gave Ghana the deserving win over their European opponent “Switzerland” as they head to Qatar 2022 FIFA World Cup in high spirit.

The Black Stars of Ghana defeated Switzerland by 2-0 in an international friendly match on Thursday, November 17, 2022 at the ZSC Stadium in Abu Dhabi.
Southampton defender, Mohammed Salisu scored the first goal of the match with a header from a corner kick effected by Daniel Kofi Kyereh.

The goal which was the first goal of the defender inspired Ghana to another goal when striker Antoine Semenyo launched on a glorious pass from Kamaldeen Sulemana to slot home a volley.

In-form Black Stars players Thomas Partey and Mohammed Kudus did not play the match as they were left out of the squad.

Ghana head into the 2022 World Cup with high hopes after defeating Switzerland who were able to beat Portugal twice in four matches this year.

Watch highlights of the match below

QueenLet received nomination at 2022 Ghana Music Awards UK [Video]

Soakat Gospel Musician QueenLet
Soakat Gospel Musician QueenLet

The multiple award-winning Soakat Gospel singer QUEENLET, signed by Euro-African’s record label “Debrich Group“, received the “Best European Song Of The Year” nomination.

Queen Leticia Kyerewaa, popularly known as QueenLet, bagged 2022 Ghana Music Awards UK nomination.

QueenLet’s “WindBlow” song featured Jimmy D Psalmist earned her the nomination, in the category “BEST EUROPEAN SONG OF THE YEAR“.

Previous single “Dear Holy Spirit” attracted endorsement from Rev Dr Mary Ghansah.

QueenLet tag as the mother of “Soakat” gospel music genre (Soaking & Atmospheric).

Certainly, never in the history of Gospel music industry, she’s been verified by Google.

Above all, QueenLet is a professional Germany Nurse, Talented and Gifted Gospel Musician of our time.

QueenLet is a prolific Songwriter, a Composer with intelligent perceptual reasoning in vocal frequencies and calculus’s when uncooked musical data is given to her.

But, QueenLet ministry as a Psalmist is characterized by the manifestation of Elohim’s tangible Presence.

Hence, resulting in holistic transformation in the lives of participants in the Soakat Gospel Explosion.

She inspires, transforms and unmoor every vessel of God, with Elohim’s legal emancipation grace.

Finally, as transformation takes place in the body of Christ, a mighty finger of ELOHIM has picked an unadulterated voice.

We thank you, “Ghana Music Awards UK”.

Watch Nominated Song Video Below:

Source: GhanaRegions.com

2022 Ghana Music Awards UK – Full List Of Nominees plus QueenLet

2022 Ghana Music Awards UK
2022 Ghana Music Awards UK

Full List Of Nominees For The 6th Edition Of The Ghana Music Awards UK.

Below is nominees for Ghana Music Awards UK 2022.

  1. HIPLIFE/HIP HOP ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Black Sherif
  • Amerado
  • Sarkodie
  • D-Black
  • Medikal
  1. HIPLIFE/HIP HOP SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Abotr3 (Patience) – Amerado ft. Black Sherif
  • Coachella – Sarkodie ft. Kwesi Arthur
  • Second Sermon – Black Sherif
  • Asuoden – Sista Afia ft. Kuami Eugene
  • Heat – Wendy Shay
  • Kweku The Traveller – Black Sherif
  • Anadwo – Kwame Yesu ft Black Sherif & Kimilist
  • SIKA – Kimilist ft. Yaw Tog & Kwame Yesu
  • Holy F4K – Smallgod x Ivorian Doll x Vic Mensa x Black Sherif x Kwaku DMC
  • 22 In Two’s – Ball J
  1. HIGHLIFE SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Tena Fie – Kuami Eugene
  • Thy Grace (Part 1) – Kofi Kinaata
  • Feelings – Cina Soul ft. KiDi
  • Obiaa – Akwaboah ft. Cina Soul
  • Jonathan – AK Songstress
  • Eboso – R2Bees
  • Emelia – Emelia Brobbey
  • Praise – Fameye
  1. HIGHLIFE ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Kofi Kinaata
  • Cina Soul
  • Akwaboah
  • Kuami Eugene
  • Fameye
  • Kwabena Kwabena
  • Sista Afia
  1. GOSPEL SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Awurade Ye – Diana Hamilton
  • Oluwa Is Involved – Joyce Blessing
  • The Glory – Obaapa Christy
  • Enyo – Bethel Revival ft. Joe Mettle
  • Yahweh – Akesse Brempong ft. MOGmusic
  • 3y3 Woaa (It’s You) – Empress Gifty
  • Only You – Celestine Donkor
  • His Glory – Ohemaa Mercy
  • Hewale Lala – Perez Muzik
  • Piesie Esther – Wobɛdi Adanseɛ
  1. GOSPEL ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Empress Gifty
  • Celestine Donkor
  • Diana Hamilton
  • Obaapa Christy
  • Ohemaa Mercy
  • MOGmusic
  1. REGGAE/DANCEHALL ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Shatta Wale
  • Samini
  • Epixode
  • Stonebwoy
  • Larusso
  1. REGGAE/DANCEHALL SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Touch It – KiDi
  • Best Life – Shatta Wale
  • New Gen – Stonebwoy
  • Picture – Samini ft. Efya
  • Greedy Men – Stonebwoy
  • Odeshi – Epixode
  • Bunker – Kuami Eugene
  • Send Dem – Larruso
  1. AFROBEATS ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Kelvyn Boy
  • S3fa
  • King Promise
  • KiDi
  • Mr Drew
  • Darkovibes
  • Camidoh
  • Wendy Shay
  1. AFROBEATS SONG OF THE YEAR
  • E Choke – S3fa ft. Mr Drew
  • Sugar Cane – Camidoh ft. Phantom
  • Down Flat – Kelvyn Boy
  • Dollar On You – Kuami Eugene
  • Choplife – King Promise ft. Patoranking
  • Mon Bebe – KiDi
  • Je M’appelle – Darkovibes ft. Davido
  • Enjoyment Minister – D-Black ft. Quamina MP & Stonebwoy
  • S3K3 – Mr Drew
  1. MALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR
  • Akwaboah – Ntro Naa
  • Luigi Maclean – Mala
  • King Promise – Slow Down
  • Joe Mettle – Ye Obua Mi (My Help)
  • KiDi – Bad Things
  1. FEMALE VOCALIST OF THE YEAR
  • Cina Soul – OMG
  • Esther Godwyl – Faithful God
  • Celestine Donkor – Only You
  • Diana Hamiliton – Awurade Ye (Do It Lord)
  • Niiella – Where You Are
  1. INSTRUMENTALIST OF THE YEAR
  • Emmanuel Afreh
  • George Osei Agyekum
  • Emmanuel Bludo
  • Bright Osei
  • Owuraku
  • Dominic Quarshie
  • Dan Grahl
  • Francis Kweku Osei
  • Kwame Yeboah
  • Jo Oware
  1. SONGWRITER OF THE YEAR
  • Akwaboah – Obiaa
  • Fameye – Praise
  • Diana Hamilton – Awurade Ye (Do It Lord)
    Kofi Kinaata – Thy Grace (Part 1)
  • Bullet – Heat (for Wendy Shay)
  • Minister OJ – ‎Meduru (I Will Get There)
  • Celestine Donkor – Only You
  1. BEST RAPPER OF THE YEAR
  • Rollies & Cigars – Sarkodie
  • Last Verse – Strongman
  • The Throne – Amerado
  • 5th August – Lyrical Joe
  • Wudini Anthem – Obibini
  • No Fear – M.anifest ft. Vic Mensa & Moliy
  1. BEST COLLABORATION OF THE YEAR
  • Obia – Akwaboah ft. Cina Soul
  • Enjoyment Minister – D-Black ft. Quamina MP & Stonebwoy
  • Sugar Cane – Camidoh ft. Phantom
  • Je M’appelle – Darkovibes ft. Davido
  • Coachella – Sarkodie ft. Kwesi Arthur
  • Choplife – King Promise ft. Patoranking
  • Echoke – S3fa ft. Mr. Drew
  • Stubborn Acadamy – Medikal ft. Shatta Wale
  • Abotr3 (Patience) – Amerado ft. Black Sherif
  • SIKA remix – Sista Afia ft. Sarkodie & Kweku Flick
  1. NEW ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Mona 4Reall
  • Black Sherif
  • Efe Grace
  • Scott Evans
  • Lady Opheilia
  • Jayana
  • Kimilist
  • Malcom Nuna
  1. MOST POPULAR SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Touch It – KiDi
  • Praise – Fameye
  • Kwaku The Traveller – Black Sherif
  • Echoke – S3fa ft. Mr Drew
  • Second Sermon – Black Sherif
  • Sugarcane – Camidoh f Phantom
  • Down Flat – Kelvyn Boy
  • Obiaa – Akwaboah ft. Cina Soul
  1. ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Black Sherif
  • King Promise
  • KiDi
  • Sarkodie
  • Kuami Eugene
  • Akwaboah
  • Stonebwoy
  • Celestine Donkor
  • Diana Hamilton
  1. AFRICAN ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Fireboy DML
  • Wizkid
  • Ckay
  • Focalistic
  • Joeboy
  • Tems
  • Kizz Daniel
  • Burna Boy
  • Ladipoe
  1. UNCOVERED ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Kentac
  • Yvette Ageiwaa
  • Talaat Yaaky
  • Chief One
  • Eva Kingful
  • Kwame Rhatty
  • Phaize
  • Esi Bentil
  • Kelly Clarke
  • Jonn Winner
  • Gambo
  1. BEST MUSIC VIDEO OF THE YEAR
  • Mon Bebe – KiDi (Dir. by Rex)
  • Echoke – S3fa ft. Mr Drew (Dir. by Junie Annan)
  • Rollies and Cigars’ – Sarkodie (Dir. by Yaw Skyface)
  • Odeshi – Epixode (Dir. Snaresbeat)
  • Sad Girlz Luv Money (remix)’ – Amaarae (Dir. by Remi Laudat)
  • Bad Gyal – Mona 4Reall (Dir. by Rex)
  • Mood – Mr Drew (Dir. by Xpress Philms)
  • 3y3 Woaa (It’s You) – Empress Gifty (Dir. by Skyweb)
  1. MOST DOMINANT FAN BASE OF THE YEAR
  • Shatta Movement
  • 69 Fans
  • Bhim Nation
  • Sark Nation
  • Team Move
  • 4reallers
  • Gadam Nation
  • Slay Nation
  • Meditants
  • Team DH
  • Shay Gang
  1. UK BASED BEST DJ OF THE YEAR
  • DJ Fiifi
  • DJ P Montana
  • DJ Paak
  • DJ Sandra Omari
  • DJ Racheal Anson
  • DJ Sawa
  • DJ Invisible
  • DJ Nore
  • DJ Pocks
  • DJ OV
  • DJ Kwamz Original
  1. UK BASED UNCOVERED ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Shatty Charlotte
  • Denny
  • Maily Ro
  • DJ Martin
  • JVS
  • Yas VW
  • Dosty
  • Dolly Essence
  • Kkeda
  1. UK BASED AFROBEATS ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Goldkay
  • W1zzy
  • Bollie
  • Drumz
  • Kwamz
  • NSG
  • Juls
  • Eugy
  • Kojo Funds
  • Mista Silva
  1. UK BASED AFROBEAT/AFROPOP SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Never Let Go – DJ Fiifi ft. Yung D3mz
  • Hang Wiv Me – Goldkay
  • Away – Fresh Andy
  • Tell Me What You Want – K. Dee ft. Latino & AMG
    Rumba Rumba – Bollie
  • Kelewele – Drumz ft. Ephraimbeatz
  • Bom Bom Bom – Eugy x Dancegod Lloyd
  • Inside Me – Kwamz
  • Don’t Rush – Ghetto Boy
  • Mood – Juls x Kojo Funds
  • Let Me Know – Kojo Funds
  • Game Over – Br3nya ft. KiDi
  • Makosa – DJ Nore ft Eugy Official x Quamina MP
  • Monica – DJ Paak ft Reefer Tym
  1. UK BASED HIP HOP SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Runnin’ – Dolly Essence
  • Dem Dead – Black Kat Gh ft. Ed ILL
  • Do Da Most – Star Vicy
  • Ayinye – O. G (Kweku of Ghana)
  • Played (Daa Daa Wo) – DJ Paak x TheOnlyRLS feat. Bosom P-Yung, YPee & Kweku Flick
  • 2 Chains – Headie One
  • Double Double – Abra Cadabra
  • Brick By Brick – Suspect OTB
  • Sky EM – S Wavey
  • Colonization – NSG
  1. UK BASED HIGHLIFE SONG OF THE YEAR
  • My Woman – Charles Kalah
  • Afia – Davison Band UK
  • Ghana – Ohene
  • Baby You Love Me – Jo-Z
  • Obaa – Bollie
  1. UK BASED ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Bollie
  • Goldkay
  • Headie One
  • NSG
  • Eugy
  • Bree Runway
  • Abra Cadabra
  • Juls
  • Kojo Funds
  1. UK BASED NEW ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • KK Mensah
  • Nana Yaw Yeboah
  • Anointed Betty
  • Naomi Assani
  • Fresh Andy
  • Kay Bryn
  • Joseph Matthew
  • Kingsley Rymz
  • TheOnlyRLS
  1. UK BASED GOSPEL SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Child of God – Ruth Appiagyei
  • Shidaa – Yvonne Asamoah-Tawiah
  • Faith – Trudy
  • Lift Jesus Higher – Cilla
  • Nkunim – Akubless
  • He Deserves To Be Praised – Nana Amankwah Tiah
  • It Won’t Be Long – Alex Achempong
  • Moko B3 (None Like You) – Joe Branfo
  • Aseda – Minister Kofi Nyarko ft. Nacee
  • I Have A God – Daniel Appiah-Adu
  • Na You – Samuel Sey
  1. UK BASED WORSHIP SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Obiara Nte Se Wo – Augustine Aboagye
  • You Alone – Alice McKenzie
  • Be Still – Edward Amponsah
  • We Lift You Up – Justice Odoi
  1. UK BASED GOSPEL ARTISTE OF THE YEAR
  • Nana Amankwah Tiah
  • Cilla
  • Akubless
  • Alex Acheampong
  • Minister Kofi Nyarko
  • Daniel Appiah-Adu
  • Samuel Sey
  • Alice Mckenzie
  • Yvonne Asamoah-Tawiah
  • Ruth Appiagyei
  1. UK BASED BEST COLLABORATION OF THE YEAR
  • Kelewele – Drumz ft. Ephraimbeatz
  • Shidaa (Thanksgiving) – Yvonne Asamoah-Tawiah ft. MOGmusic
  • Faith – Trudy ft. Kofi Sarpong*
  • Aseda – Minister Kofi Nyarko ft. Nacee
  • We Meuve – DJ Paak x TheOnlyRLS ft MR OULALA & Shady Humble
  • Money Calling – P. Montana ft Kofi Jamar x Suspect OTB
  • Schweet – ShaSimone x Suspect OTB
  • Suzanna – NSG ft Patoranking
  • Makosa – DJ Nore ft Eugy x Quamina MP
  1. UK BASED PRODUCER OF THE YEAR
  • Dada
  • JROCS
  • JULS
  • JAE5
  • Silvastone
  • Ephraim Beatz
  • Adeshie Studios
  1. BEST GHANAIAN EUROPEAN SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Your Love – Wilhelmina Music ft. Kobby Mantey
  • Windblow – QueenLet ft. Jimmy D Psalmist
  • Baba Ologo – Elijah The Worshipper
  • When I See You – Jean Feier
  • Christmas Wish – Soulja Kelly
  • Special – Nana Fofie
  • Rollover – DayVybz
  • Helpless – Frank Keys
  1. BEST GHANAIAN EUROPEAN ARTISTE
  • Wilhelmina
  • Elijah The Worshipper
  • Jean Feier
  • Soulja Kelly
  • Nana Fofie
  • DayVybz
  • Frank Keys
  1. PRODUCER OF THE YEAR
  • Rockstar Made it (Kuami Eugene)
  • Killbeatz
  • Kaywa
  • Ronyturnmeup
  • Willisbeatz
  • MOG Beatz
  • Master Garzy
  • Streetbeatz
  1. ALTERNATIVE SONG OF THE YEAR
  • Ntro Naa – Akwaboah
  • Libilibi – Worlasi ft. Drvmroll
  • Sad Girlz Love Money Remix – Amarae ft. Moliy & Kali Uchis
  • Country Hot – Wutah Afriyie
  • Deja Vu’ – Moliy
  • Bo Nɔnn Ni – Abiana
  • Hello – Atongo Zimba
  • Like A Tree – K. O. G (Kweku Of Ghana)
  1. UK BEST MUSIC VIDEO OF THE YEAR
  • Faith – Trudy
  • It Won’t Be Long – Alex Achempong
  • Dem Dead – Black Kat Gh ft. Ed ILL
  • Colonization – NSG
  • 2 Chains – Headie One
  1. GHANAIAN CONTEMPORARY ACT
  • Wiyaala
  • KOG
  • Santrofi
  • King Ayisoba
  • Afro Moses
  • Atongo Zimba
  • FRA
  • Kyekyeku
  1. BEST INTERNATIONAL CULTURAL ACT
  • Dela Botri & Hewale Sounds
  • Amamere Cultural Troupe
  • Adesa Taloi
  • Big Twins
  • Afrodat Troupe

By: Frebetha Adjoh

Liverpool vs Real Madrid Live Stream – UEFA Champions League Final 2022

UEFA Champions League Final 2022 - Liverpool vs Real Madrid
UEFA Champions League Final 2022 – Liverpool vs Real Madrid

Liverpool vs Real Madrid Live Stream – UEFA Champions League Final 2022 – Paris, France (CNN) Choose your color – red or white.

The bars and stands around Paris’ Stade de France, the venue for Saturday’s Champions League final, have certainly nailed their colors to the mast.

Walk past some and you could hear Liverpool’s famous anthem, ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone,’ blaring from outdoor speakers. Others had opted for Real Madrid’s spine-tingling ‘Hala Madrid y nada más.’

Thursday evening in the French capital had been somewhat quiet; certainly it would have been hard to guess than European football’s showpiece event, moved from St. Petersburg follow Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, would be taking place on Saturday.

HOW TO WATCH – Liverpool vs Real Madrid or Listen

  1. https://www.zdf.de/sport/zdf-sportextra/sportstudio-uefa-champions-league-finale-liverpool-real-madrid-100.html
  2. https://nigeriaradiostations.com/station/adomfiefm
  3. https://ghanaradiostations.com/station/nhyirafiefm
  4. http://ghanafmradio.com/station/nhyirafiefm

Come Friday morning, however, it was a completely different story. Hundreds — if not more — fans of both sides started arriving and began filtering through the city.

Some ended up in bars and pubs, others made a beeline for the Stade de France on the outskirts of the city, already keen to take in the atmosphere ahead of what promises to be a memorable final.

This, after all, is a rematch of 2018. Real got the better of Liverpool that day thanks largely to Gareth Bale’s sublime overhead kick, perhaps the greatest goal to ever grace a Champions League final.

Liverpool, though, was left with a sense of what might have been following Mo Salah’s early exit due to an injury caused by Sergio Ramos. You can call it revenge or, as Salah put it in the aftermath of Real’s semifinal comeback against Manchester City, there is a “score to settle.”

On paper, it would be hard to argue that Liverpool boasts the better team, both individually and collectively — but Real’s run to the final has been as improbable as it has been entertaining.

Three comeback wins in successive rounds, against Paris Saint-Germain, Chelsea and then Manchester City, have given this team — which has won the European Cup 13 times — an aura of invincibility in this competition. In an attempt to offer an explanation, Real defender Nacho simply said there was “magic” at the Bernabeu on nights such as those.

It remains to be seen whether that magic can be bottled up and transported from Madrid to Paris for Saturday’s final, but it seems to have given fans an unshakable confidence ahead of the match.

“3-0 Madrid!” shouted one boisterous group of supporters when asked for their score predictions outside the stadium. “A Benzema hat-trick.”

‘They know the way to win’
Claude Makelele, the former Real star and one of the most iconic midfielders of all time, is decidedly less confident.

Having won the Champions League with Los Blancos in 2002, narrowly beating Bayer Leverkusen 2-1, he knows these finals don’t often unfold in the way many predict.

Makelele admits his allegiances lie with Real on Saturday, but has been enthralled by the football Jürgen Klopp’s team has played.

“They’ve made it to the final playing the way they want to play, that they have shown for the last three years,” Makelele told CNN. “Coming back to the final again, it will be a different Liverpool [to the team that lost to Real in 2018] I’m sure, 100%.

“But it will also be a different Madrid. Now they play in a different way; possession, transition … I think it will be very interesting. Liverpool are maybe small favorites but I believe with Madrid, they always play finals, they always know the way to play finals and win.

“The team will be [most important] for both, they’re not just individuals attacking and defending; both teams are teams, from attackers to midfielders and defenders. Both teams have great balance — for me it’s 50/50, it’s tough to pick a winner.”

Real players, too, know exactly what lies before them.
Speaking to CNN earlier this week, forward Rodrygo said playing against Liverpool in the final is “the hardest” test this team has faced in the Champions League this season.

“If they are in the Champions League final now it is because they are the most difficult,” he said. “We’ve been through Paris [Saint-Germain], Chelsea and yes, they’re great teams, but Liverpool is also there, it’s a great team.

“I didn’t want to play against Liverpool, but now we have to play them and we know it’s going to be difficult.”

‘Always be ready’
Real had Rodrygo to thank for helping it snatch victory from the jaws of defeat against Manchester City in the semifinal.

With the team trailing 5-3 on aggregate, manager Carlo Ancelotti brought the Brazilian off the bench with just over 20 minutes remaining and he went on to change the game completely.

Two goals, one either side of the 90 minute mark, ensured the game went to extra time, where a Karim Benzema penalty secured Real’s passage through to the final in Paris.

Ancelotti perhaps may not have the reputation for being a tactical mastermind that Klopp or Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola do, but Rodrygo says the camaraderie Real’s coach has built within the squad is truly unique.

The 21-year-old insists there will be no sulking from the players who are not selected to start on Saturday.

“I always try to give my best, starting or coming on later,” Rodrygo explains. “I think we have a very good group, everyone is very focused and we know that if we start the match or come on, we have to help the team, we have to help Real Madrid.

“I think the coach is making it a little easier because we have players who are very close friends, we’re friends too and this helps a lot. The times that whichever player enters, the opponent is already a little more tired.

“There the substitute has more space and that’s where the player who entered later can decide the match — that’s what happened with me in the other knockout rounds. We know how important the whole team is, those that start the match and those that come on later, and we all have to always be ready.”

Like Makelele in the past, Rodrygo will be hoping to etch his name into Real history and while the former French international knows the joys of winning a Champions League final, he has also experienced the heartbreak of defeat.

The Frenchman was part of the Chelsea team that lost to Manchester United in 2008 and still vividly recalls the feeling from that night in Moscow.

“When you win, you don’t understand [what you have achieved] until the day after,” he said. “When you lose, you understand straight away. This is the difference between winning and losing.”

Credit: cnn

Osinachi’s Death: FG files 23-count charge against husband, Peter Nwachukwu.

Minister Osinachi Nwachukwu And Evangelist Peter Nwachukwu
Minister Osinachi Nwachukwu And Evangelist Peter Nwachukwu

Nigerian musician Osinachi Nwachukwu’s death court charges. The Nigeria Federal Government files 23-count charge against late Osinachi’s husband, Pastor Peter Nwachukwu.

Pastor Peter Nwachukwu, the husband of late popular gospel artist, Osinachi Nwachukwu, who died after an alleged prolonged assault by her spouse.

FG, in the charge that was filed by the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, alleged that the late Osinachi was forcefully ejected from her matrimonial home by her husband, contrary to the Violence Against Persons, VAP (Prohibition) Act, 2015.

It alleged that the defendant, Nwachukwu, had at a time, forcefully pushed his late wife out of a moving vehicle.

The defendant was specifically charged for alleged committing culpable homicide under sections 104 and 379 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, 2015, an offence contrary to section 221 of the Penal Code and punishable with death.
The charge marked CR/199/2022, was entered at the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, by the Head, Sexual and Gender-Based Violence, Department of Public Prosecutions of the Federation, Ministry of Justice, Mrs Yewande Gbola-Awopetun.

FG, alleged that the defendant deprived the deceased of her personal liberty by restraining her movement and locking her up in the house.

More so, it accused the defendant of subjecting the deceased to emotional, verbal and psychological abuse, contrary to section 14(1) of the VAP Act, 2015.

FG told the court that investigations revealed that the defendant denied Osinachi access to her money for medication and household necessities, and thereby forced her into begging and borrowing.

It alleged that Osinachi’s husband forcefully isolated and separated her from her family by preventing her mother and siblings from visiting her matrimonial home.

Nwachukwu was further charged for cruelly beating his children, recording their cry and playing it on his phone.

He was said to have threatened the kids and prevented them from reporting the acts of domestic violence against their mother to the head pastor of their church, Dr Paul Enenche, or any other person.

Specifically, some of the counts in the charge read: “That you Peter Nwachukwu, 56, male, on the 8th of April, 2022 at Aco Estate, opposite police station, Lugbe, Abuja, FCT, within the jurisdiction of this honourable court, did commit an offence to with: culpable homicide punishable with death in that you caused the death of Mrs Osinachi Nwachukwu by your various acts of violence and aggravated assault with the knowledge that her death would be the probable consequence of your acts.”

“That you, Peter Nwachukwu, male, sometime between 14th November 2009 and April 2022 at Aco Estate, opposite police station, Lugbe, Abuja, FCT, within the jurisdiction of this honourable court, did commit an offence to wit: emotional, verbal and psychological abuse on Mrs Osinachi Nwachukwu (deceased) by humiliating her and making utterances like ‘you are smelling,’ ‘you are mad,’ to her in the presence of her music crew members.”

Credit: Vanguard News Nigeria

Ghana vs Nigeria: $190k gate proceeds set historic revenue record

Ghana vs Nigeria
Ghana vs Nigeria

The first leg of the 2022 World Cup playoff between Ghana and Nigeria has rake in a historic GH₵1.4 million ($190,000) football revenue record in the West African nation.

This is the highest amount ever recorded in any football match in the country following the meeting of the two nations at the Baba Yara Stadium.

The Black Stars drew 0-0 with the Super Eagles last Friday with the return leg scheduled for the Moshood Abiola Stadium in Abuja.

Ghana’s National Sports Authority boss Professor Peter Twumasi said “This is the highest amount the we’ve recorded from ticket sales from any national team football match, ever.”

Ghana had more of the possession and chances but proved sloppy in their finishing during the first leg in Kumasi.

Only twice did they test goalkeeper Francis Uzoho, who made a stop from a stinging shot by Issahaku Fatawu in the 33rd minute and then again in the 71st minute from Mohammed Kudus.

Nigeria’s best opening fell to Moses Simon 10 minutes into the second half but he squandered the chance to score a vital away goal.

Nigeria were awarded a penalty with 15 minutes left when Idrissu Baba Mohamed handled the ball after being tripped in his own penalty area, but after a VAR check the referee changed his decision and handed Ghana a free kick.

Ghana were playing their first game under new coach Otto Addo, who had former Brighton & Hove Albion manager Chris Hughton as a consultant.

He handed debuts to AS Roma teenager Felix Ohene-Gyan and 33-year-old former Belgium defender Denis Odoi, who switched allegiance ahead of the two-legged playoff.

Leicester City’s Ademola Lookman, who had previously played for England at under-21 level, made his Nigeria debut as a substitute for the last 15 minutes.

The winner of the tie will qualify for the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar later this year.

credit: ghanasoccernet

Madeleine Albright Biography, First Woman to Serve as Secretary of State, Dies at 84

Madeleine K. Albright, a child of Czech refugees who fled from Nazi invaders and Communist oppressors and then landed in the United States, where she flourished as a diplomat and the first woman to serve as secretary of state, died on Wednesday in Washington. She was 84.

The cause was cancer, her daughter Anne said.

Enveloped by a veil of family secrets hidden from her for most of her life, Ms. Albright rose to power and fame as a brilliant analyst of world affairs and a White House counselor on national security. Under President Bill Clinton, she became the country’s representative to the United Nations (1993-97) and secretary of state (1997-2001), making her the highest-ranking woman in the history of American government at the time.
Ms. Albright visited American troops at the Tuzla Air Base in Bosnia in 1998.
ImageMs. Albright visited American troops at the Tuzla Air Base in Bosnia in 1998.
Ms. Albright visited American troops at the Tuzla Air Base in Bosnia in 1998.Credit…Amel Emric/Associated Press

It was not until after she became secretary of state that she accepted proof that, as she had long suspected, her ethnic and religious background was not what she had thought. She learned that her family was Jewish and that her parents had protectively converted to Roman Catholicism during World War II, raising their children as Catholics without telling them of their Jewish heritage. She also discovered that 26 family members, including three grandparents, had been murdered in the Holocaust.

With her father, a diplomat, probably facing execution, the family’s odyssey from a Europe on the brink of World War II to safety in America took 10 years and two escapes to London. The first came as Nazi troops invaded Czechoslovakia in 1939, and the second came after the family’s postwar repatriation, when Czech Communists with Soviet support overthrew the government of Czechoslovakia in 1948.

In America, Madeleine Korbel was a gifted student, married into the wealthy Albright-Medill newspaper family and wrote many books and articles on public affairs. She also climbed the ranks of the Democratic Party to pinnacles of success as a counselor to President Jimmy Carter and as a foreign policy adviser to three presidential candidates: former Senator Walter F. Mondale of Minnesota in 1984, Gov. Michael S. Dukakis of Massachusetts in 1988 and Mr. Clinton in 1992. She was also the campaign foreign policy adviser to Geraldine Ferraro, the first woman to run for vice president.

She was largely unknown until Mr. Clinton took office as president in 1993 and named her chief delegate to the United Nations. Over the next four years, she became a tough advocate for the global interests of the United States. But she and Mr. Clinton clashed repeatedly with Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali over peacekeeping operations in Somalia, Rwanda and the Bosnian civil war.

Mr. Clinton had heartily endorsed humanitarian and peacekeeping operations when American troops entered Somalia in 1992 to feed starving victims of civil war. But when 18 American troops were slain by the forces of a Somali warlord in 1993 and the nation saw television images of a dead helicopter pilot dragged through the streets of Mogadishu, Mr. Clinton retreated from politically risky United Nations missions.

Thus the U.S., like most other member states, held back from aiding a small force of U.N. peacekeepers when Rwanda descended into genocide and rape in 1994. As many as a million people were killed. Ms. Albright put the onus on Mr. Boutros-Ghali, calling him “disengaged.” But Mr. Boutros-Ghali said he had been rebuffed when he tried to see the president to seek support.

Years later, Mr. Clinton apologized for America’s inaction in Rwanda. In a 2003 memoir, “Madam Secretary,” Ms. Albright wrote, “My deepest regret from my years in public service is the failure of the United States and the international community to act sooner to halt these crimes.” It was a regret she repeated, in much the same words, in an interview for this obituary.

Mr. Boutros-Ghali’s frustration over the Clinton administration’s pattern of voting for tough Security Council resolutions and then refusing to support actions on the ground was most notable in the 1992-95 civil war in Bosnia, a conflict of ethnic and religious differences that led to displaced populations, massacres, rapes and “ethnic cleansing” campaigns against Muslims and other minorities.

The Security Council deplored the atrocities, but its peacekeepers were unable to subdue the fighting. Aside from limited airstrikes, the United States did not substantively intervene, although the Clinton administration eventually mediated the conflict.

In 1996, the Security Council voted overwhelmingly to give Mr. Boutros-Ghali a second term. But Ms. Albright, in her last days as the American delegate, cast a decisive veto, her prerogative as one of the five permanent Council members. Mr. Boutros-Ghali called the veto an assault on his integrity and said he had been hounded out of office by Mr. Clinton for election-year political gain.

Days after beginning his second term, Mr. Clinton nominated Ms. Albright as secretary of state. She was unanimously confirmed by the Senate (99-0) and soon made her first official trip, not to a foreign capital but to Texas, where she spoke at Rice University — determined, she said, to take United States foreign policy straight to the American people.

“As secretary, I will do my best to talk about foreign policy not in abstract terms, but in human terms and bipartisan terms,” she said. “I consider this vital because in our democracy, we cannot pursue policies abroad that are not understood and supported here at home.”

She then embarked on a nine-nation world tour, with stops in Rome, Paris, London, Brussels, Bonn, Moscow, Tokyo, Seoul and Beijing. It was a getting-to-know-you circumnavigation that showed off her grasp of issues, her language skills and her centrality as Mr. Clinton’s chief foreign policy maker and spokeswoman. She generated excitement everywhere, and appeared to have a wonderful time.

“Everybody has their own style, and mine is people to people,” she said on a walk in Rome. “I’m trying mine, and I am enjoying it.”
A Test in Iraq

As Mr. Clinton’s top diplomat during relatively peaceful years, Ms. Albright dealt with regional conflicts in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Haiti, Northern Ireland and the Middle East, but no wide wars. She promoted the expansion of NATO into the former Soviet bloc nations of Eastern Europe and defended continued economic sanctions against Iraq.

A crisis on Ms. Albright’s watch developed in late 1997 and early 1998, after Iraq’s president, Saddam Hussein, blocked the access of United Nations inspectors to sites where Iraqi chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction were believed to have been hidden, in violation of a Security Council resolution passed at the end of the 1991 Persian Gulf war.

After months of warnings and an American military buildup in the region, Ms. Albright and Mr. Clinton threatened to launch devastating aerial attacks on Iraq unless the sites were reopened to inspection. “Iraq has a simple choice,” Ms. Albright said in a public warning to Hussein. “Reverse course or face the consequences.”

In an 11th-hour move to prevent war, the United Nations secretary general, Kofi Annan, carrying final terms drawn up by Ms. Albright, flew to Baghdad and secured the Iraqi leader’s agreement to restore unrestricted access to the sites by U.N. weapons inspectors and diplomatic chaperones. In December 1998, the United States and Britain bombed scores of Iraqi military targets and research installations to degrade Iraq’s ability to manufacture weapons of mass destruction.

Ms. Albright championed NATO bombings in Kosovo that halted attacks on ethnic Albanians by Yugoslavian forces in 1999. She also promoted ratification of the Kyoto Protocol on climate change. But American diplomats in Africa said she had failed to heed warnings that foreshadowed truck bombings in 1998 that killed 224 people at the American Embassies in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

Throughout her tenure, Ms. Albright opposed the proliferation of nuclear weapons in rogue states. But on a visit to North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-il, in October 2000, she was unable to strike a deal to limit his country’s ballistic missile program before Mr. Clinton left office.

Still, her performance as secretary of state won high marks from career diplomats abroad and ordinary Americans at home. Admirers said she had a star quality, radiating practicality, versatility and a refreshingly cosmopolitan flair. She spoke Czech, Polish, French and Russian.

Unlike her immediate predecessor, Warren Christopher, a reserved foreign policy wonk who saw his role as Mr. Clinton’s diplomatic lawyer, Ms. Albright was an aggressive advocate of Clinton policies. Conscious of television cameras but remarkably natural in public, she strolled through crowded capitals (with discreet security guards) like a tourist with free time on her hands.

She was a diminutive presence with an assured style: impeccably tailored and perfectly coifed, with touches of gold or pearl in her brooches, an amused smile for the cognoscenti and eyes that missed nothing. In meetings with foreign diplomats, colleagues said, she was firm but flexible, prepared to move beyond her talking points and to engage her counterparts in frank oval-table bargaining.

“So often in diplomacy, it’s all set pieces,” an aide told The New York Times. “You say this and I say that and the meeting ends and nothing happens. But she engages. And in contrast to nearly all her predecessors, she doesn’t hide policy differences, but brings them out, and speaks very directly of them, saying things like ‘Here’s what we agree on, here’s what we don’t. Let me tell you what the real problem is.’”
Ms. Albright with her predecessor, Warren Christopher, at her confirmation hearing in 1997.
Image
Ms. Albright with her predecessor, Warren Christopher, at her confirmation hearing in 1997.
Ms. Albright with her predecessor, Warren Christopher, at her confirmation hearing in 1997.Credit…Stephen Crowley/The New York Times

She courted the public, too, with speeches that made arcane foreign policy seem exciting and even meaningful to Americans, whose anxiety about a Soviet nuclear attack had faded, although the age of terrorism was right around the corner. Coming after decades of Cold War tensions, her relaxed pitches made many Americans feel prouder, or at least better, about their nation’s role in the world.

After Ms. Albright stepped down as secretary of state in 2001, there was speculation that she might pursue a political career in the Czech Republic. Vaclav Havel, the writer and former dissident who was the republic’s first president from 1993 to 2003, suggested publicly that she might succeed him. Ms. Albright said she was flattered but not interested.

In 2008, Ms. Albright supported her longtime friend Hillary Clinton for the Democratic presidential nomination, and then supported Barack Obama, who won the nomination and the presidency, appointing Mrs. Clinton as his first-term secretary of state.

In 2016, Ms. Albright again supported Mrs. Clinton for the presidency. At a campaign stop for the New Hampshire primary, Ms. Albright told a crowd, “There’s a special place in hell for women who don’t help each other.” The line went viral. She had used it previously without objections. But some voters now found it offensive, taking it as a rebuke to younger women who supported a Clinton rival, Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

An ardent feminist, Ms. Albright apologized in an opinion article in The Times. “I did not mean to argue that women should support a particular candidate based on gender,” she wrote. “But I understand that I came across as condemning those who disagree with my political preferences. If heaven were open only to those who agreed on politics, I imagine it would be largely unoccupied.”
Fabricated Memories

Madeleine Albright was born Marie Jana Korbelova in Prague on May 15, 1937, the oldest of three children of Josef and Anna (Speeglova) Korbel. Her father was a press attaché in the Czech Embassy in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and had worked for Czechoslovakia’s first democratic president, Tomas G. Masaryk, who retired in 1935, and his successor, Edvard Benes.

Hitler’s annexation of the Sudetenland and his later invasion of Czechoslovakia forced Benes to flee to London. After 10 days in hiding, Mr. Korbel, targeted for execution by the Nazis, followed with his family and worked for the Benes government-in-exile.

He and his wife had two more children, Katherine and John. Like millions of Londoners, the family endured the Luftwaffe air raids of 1940-41. Ms. Albright recalled nights in shelters and hiding under a steel table at home as bombs fell.

With the outcome of the war in doubt and the fate of Jewish families in a postwar Nazi Europe too horrifying to contemplate, the Korbels, in a wrenching decision, converted to Roman Catholicism in 1941. They had their children baptized, observed Catholic rites and holidays and, to preserve their assumed identities and possibly their lives, fabricated a family history of Christian memories.
Ms. Albright (third from left, sitting) and other unidentified children in Serbia around 1941.

“My parents talked about how they met, and how they were high school sweethearts,” Ms. Albright recalled decades later after learning the truth. “They talked about getting ready for various holidays, for Easter and Christmas.” She recalled being “a very serious Catholic” who loved the Virgin Mary and “played a priest — I was already playing male roles.”

After the war, the Korbels returned to Prague. Mr. Korbel became the Czech ambassador to Yugoslavia, and his family joined him in Belgrade. Ms. Albright recalled her first diplomatic experiences, when she was 8 and accompanied her father to the Belgrade airport to meet visiting dignitaries.

“I was a little girl in Czech national costume when foreign visitors came to Belgrade,” she said in the obituary interview. “I greeted them and gave them flowers.”

Worried about exposing their daughter in Belgrade state schools to Marxist indoctrination, however, the Korbels sent Marie to a private school in Switzerland and changed her name to Madeleine.

When Communists seized power in Prague in 1948, Mr. Korbel was forced to resign and again became a wanted man. Unwilling to return to Prague, he joined a United Nations commission and sent his family first to London and then on to America. The family was reunited in New York, was given political asylum and settled in Denver, where Mr. Korbel became a professor at the University of Denver.

At the Kent School for Girls, Madeleine Korbel founded an international relations club and graduated in 1955. At Wellesley College, she studied political science, edited the school newspaper and graduated with honors in 1959. She also became an American citizen in 1957.

On a summer internship at The Denver Post, she met Joseph Medill Patterson Albright, the grandson of Joseph Medill Patterson, who founded The Daily News of New York, and the nephew of Alicia Patterson, the founder and editor of Newsday on Long Island.

In 1959, Ms. Korbel married Mr. Albright and converted to Episcopalianism. The couple had three daughters, the twins Alice and Anne and Katie, and were divorced in 1983. In addition to Anne, Ms. Albright is survived by her other two daughters, along with her sister, Kathy Silva; her brother, John Korbel; and six grandchildren. She lived in Washington.
Introduction to Politics

In 1962, Ms. Albright began postgraduate work at the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, a Washington-based division of Johns Hopkins University. At Columbia University, she earned a Russian certificate and a master’s degree in international affairs in 1968 and a doctorate in 1976.

She got into politics in 1972, raising funds for the losing presidential campaign of Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine, a family friend, who named her his legislative aide. After Jimmy Carter’s 1976 presidential victory, Zbigniew Brzezinski became national security adviser and recruited his former Columbia student, Ms. Albright, as congressional liaison for Mr. Carter’s National Security Council.

In 2001, she founded what is now the Albright Stonebridge Group, an international consulting firm, and in 2005 she founded Albright Capital Management, focusing on emerging markets. For years, she lived in Georgetown and taught at Georgetown University and was a director of the Council on Foreign Relations. In 2012, President Barack Obama awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.
At a 2006 concert at the Kennedy Center presented by the Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz, Ms. Albright received an award in recognition of her support of the institute, jazz education and the role jazz plays in diplomatic efforts worldwide. She also took a turn at the drums.

Besides her 2003 memoir, Ms. Albright wrote “The Mighty and the Almighty: Reflections on America, God and World Affairs” (2006), “Memo to the President-Elect: How We Can Restore America’s Reputation and Leadership” (2008), “Read My Pins: Stories From a Diplomat’s Jewel Box” (2009) and “Prague Winter: A Personal Story of Remembrance and War, 1937-1948” (2012). Her last book, “Hell and Other Destinations: A 21st-Century Memoir,” written with Bill Woodward, was published in 2020.

Her book “Fascism: A Warning” (2018, also with Bill Woodward) put President Donald J. Trump among the world’s autocrats. In a review for The Times, Sheri Berman wrote, “Democracy’s problems can, Albright assures us, be overcome — but only if we recognize history’s lessons and never take democracy for granted.”

In the ’90s, Mrs. Albright began receiving letters from Europe with sketchy information about her family background. Then, in 1997, The Washington Post published a profile of the new secretary of state reporting that her parents had been Jews who converted to Catholicism and created a fictional past to protect their children from the Nazis.

She accepted the evidence as the truth and told The Times: “I think my father and mother were the bravest people alive. They dealt with the most difficult decision anyone could make. I am incredibly grateful to them, and beyond measure.”

credit: nytimes.com

Nigeria vs Ghana: Times, How to Watch on TV & Listen on Radio, How to stream online

Nigeria vs Ghana Live
Nigeria vs Ghana

Nigeria vs Ghana: All the information you need on how to watch Nigeria play Ghana in the 2022 FIFA World Cup play-off final on Tuesday 29 March.

A tense 0-0 in Kumasi last Friday means that all will be decided in Abjua on Tuesday night in the West Africa derby with a place at the 2022 Qatar World Cup on the line.

A first leg match that saw clear cut chances at a premium sees Otto Addo’s men knowing that scoring away could be key in securing a passage to Qatar with away goals counting double should the score be level on aggregate.

Where to watch/listen to Nigeria vs Ghana

Nigeria vs Ghana – TV Channels App:

DOWNLOAD APP FREE FROM GOOGLE PLAY STORE LINK BELOW:

1. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=nhyirafie.com&hl=en

2. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ghanaofmtv.com&hl=en

Nigeria vs Ghana Live Radio Streaming:

1. https://ghanaradiostations.com/station/nigeriavsghanalive

2. https://nigeriaradiostations.com/station/nigeriavsghana

3. http://ghanafmradio.com/station/nigeriavsghana

“We did well even though we made some mistakes, but we started well, there was just a little bit of fatigue and it made Nigeria come into the game more,” said Ghana’s new coach Otto Addo after the game.

“We had two clear chances to finish off Ghana, but I think getting a draw is good even though we wanted to win here,” added his Nigerian counterpart Augustine Eguavoen.

Home side Ghana had more of the possession and chances but proved sloppy in their finishing.

Only twice did they test goalkeeper Francis Uzoho, who made a stop from a stinging shot by Issahaku Fatawu in the 33rd minute and then again in the 71st minute from Mohammed Kudus.

Nigeria’s best opening fell to Moses Simon 10 minutes into the second half but he squandered the chance to score a vital away goal.

Nigeria were awarded a penalty with 15 minutes left when Idrissu Baba Mohamed handled the ball after being tripped in his own penalty area, but after a VAR check the referee changed his decision and handed Ghana a free kick.
What time does Nigeria vs Ghana start?

The 2022 FIFA World Cup play-off final between Nigeria and Ghana will kick off at the Abiola National Stadium (Abuja) on 29 March 2022 at 6:00 pm local time.

In the US, that’s 1:00 pm ET and 10:00 am PT.

Find out what time Nigeria-Ghana starts wherever you are in the world.
Where can I watch Nigeria vs Ghana in the UK and US?

In the UK and US, the following television channel and online streaming platform will be broadcasting Nigeria-Ghana:

UK: Mola TV

US: ESPN+

Find out what time Nigeria vs Ghana starts if you’re elsewhere in the world.

credit: AS USA

Ghana vs Nigeria live stream – FIFA World Cup Qualifiers; How can I watch or listen World Cup play-off live on TV or Radio?

FIFA World Cup Qualifiers - Ghana vs Nigeria
FIFA World Cup Qualifiers – Ghana vs Nigeria

FIFA World Cup Qualifiers: Watch & Listen to Ghana and Nigeria both have the chance to bounce back from Africa Cup of Nations disappointment by booking their place at the 2022 World Cup.

The two sides face each other in a two-legged playoff, with the winner earning a spot in Qatar. The first leg takes place tonight in Ghana.

Where to watch/listen to Ghana vs Nigeria

Ghana vs Nigeria – TV Channels App:

DOWNLOAD APP FREE FROM GOOGLE PLAY STORE LINK BELOW:

1. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=nhyirafie.com&hl=en

2. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=ghanaofmtv.com&hl=en

Ghana vs Nigeria Live Radio Streams:

1. https://ghanaradiostations.com/station/ghanavsnigerialive

2. https://nigeriaradiostations.com/station/ghanavsnigeria

3. http://ghanafmradio.com/station/ghanavsnigeria

It was a miserable tournament for the Black Stars in Cameroon at the start of the year, as they crashed out in the group stage with just a single point from their three matches. Otto Addo has since taken interim charge of the national team, with Milovan Rajevac losing his job.

Nigeria had a slightly better time of things, looking impressive for large periods of the group stage, but they came unstuck against Tunisia in the last 16 and were knocked out.

They have missed just one of the last seven World Cups, with that absence coming in 2006, and they will be hoping to keep that impressive run going.

Ghana did not qualify for the 2018 tournament but played in the three previous to that, and will be eyeing up a return to football’s top table.

Live coverage: You can also follow updates from tonight’s game with Standard Sport’s dedicated live blog.

Credit: standard

Australia now ADMITS covid vaccines are harming people, offers up to $600,000 in compensation for the injured [Video]

Australia now ADMITS covid vaccines are harming people
Australia now ADMITS covid vaccines are harming people

Australia now ADMITS covid vaccines are harming people, offers up to $600,000 in compensation for the seriously injured.

So many Aussies are coming down with serious illnesses after getting “vaccinated” for the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) that the Australian government is rolling out a new compensation scheme to try to shut them up.

Local media out of Sydney reported on the new program, which offers varying rates of compensation depending on the severity of the injury and how much a vaccine-injured person is having to pay out of pocket for medical expenses. (Related: Australia is also throwing some people in concentration camps for “ongoing operations”.)

“Doctors say the benefits far outweigh the risks, but as the vaccine rollout now ramps up through the booster phase, there are a rare few who suffer serious side effects,” a 7 News reporter explained (watch below).

“Now the federal government is offering compensation for anyone who becomes seriously ill after having their covid shot.”

REPORT: 79,000 People! – The government now ADMITS to severe vaccine side effects. – Offering some victims over $600,000 in cash and compensation. – Australia.

A man named Matty John was interviewed for the segment as he suffered what felt like a heart attack just two days after getting jabbed with a Pfizer syringe. He says he felt a sharp pain in his chest that was later diagnosed as pericarditis.

John is one of at least 79,000 Aussies who have reported becoming seriously injured by the injections. Here is how they can qualify for compensation:

• For injuries that are confirmed just with evidence from a doctor, no more than $20,000 in compensation will be provided.

• For injuries assessed and confirmed by a team of legal experts,
over $20,000 will be compensated.

• In the worst of cases for the most serious injuries, a maximum payout of $644,640 will be compensated.

“If you do suffer pericarditis, it can result in you paying out of pocket and you might need to see a cardiologist, you might need procedures, so it is definitely appropriate that there is a vaccination scheme there to compensate people,” says Daniel Opare, a medical law expert.

There’s just one catch: Vaccine-injured people must spend at least one night in the hospital in order to qualify

It almost sounds too good to be true, seeing as how there is currently nothing comparable in the United States.

There is a catch, though. In order for a vaccine-injured Aussie to qualify for any compensation, he or she must have spent at least one night in the hospital. For John, this was not the case.

While he did spend two days in the hospital for his pericarditis, he did not stay overnight for either one of his visits. Consequently, he now has to pay out of pocket for his Fauci Flu shot injuries.

This caveat is making it difficult for many others to qualify as well since hospitals are more likely now to send patients home and prevent them from staying overnight so that they automatically will not qualify for compensation.

“This is not enough … not even close!” wrote one upset person on Twitter about the scheme.

“And how many children 5-11?” asked another. “2022 will tell.”

“So how does this work?” asked someone else, confused about the program. “They’re giving you $600k for taking the shot, which they forced you to take? And are still forcing people to take it? I don’t get it.”

“It’s your money,” responded another, explaining that taxpayers and not Big Pharma are the ones bankrolling all this hush money. “Remember, giving out large sums of money will serve to destroy Australia’s economy. You need to get it back from Pfizer.”

The latest Chinese Virus injection news can be found at ChemicalViolence.com.

News Source 7News:

Editor: Steve ( the Guy who knows some stuff).