Meet The Hon. Anthony Mwinkaara Sumah: MP Elect For Nadowli/Kaleo Constituency
Nadowli/Kaleo MP Elect, Anthony Mwinkaara Sumah Listen to article
In the Ghanaian academic parlance, a shark is a commonly used term that refers to someone who is exceptionally brilliant and usually comes atop in his/her class in terms of academic performance. Sharks usually pass their examinations with distinction to the admiration of their colleagues, teachers, and all well-meaning school authorities. Such was the caliber of Hon. Anthony Mwinkaara Sumah during his days in school.
Hon. Anthony Sumah had his elementary and basic education at Jirapa where his father worked as a civil servant, attending St. Anthony’s Primary School and St. Augustine’s JHS basic respectively. After excelling in his class as the best graduating
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A Year Like No Other is an SBS News collaboration with the University of Technology Sydney. It features stories written by journalism students.
Christmas 2012 was a defining time for Khoa Nam Tran.
He was involved in a car accident in which the front passenger died and the driver suffered a severe brain injury. Khoa, who was sitting in the back, had both his legs crushed.
Eight years on, the 37-year-old is reflecting on what has been another significant chapter in his life: 2020.
As the child of refugees, Khoa is no stranger to challenges. His parents fled the war in Vietnam and Khoa was born in France before the family came to Australia when he was two.
Family Court’s self-represented litigants left on their own without choice
By Naomi Neilson|14 December 2020
New research has identified a gap between the domestic violence victims who are not wealthy enough to hire a lawyer but earn too much to be eligible for legal aid, which has left them vulnerable to significant disadvantages in the justice system.
A research project by the University of Technology Sydney (UTS),
“
No Straight Lines”, has demonstrated that people who represent themselves in Family Court matters often do so out of necessity, not choice. Despite a number of services providing one-off advice, these women are left out of ongoing, critical support.
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Feeling bad about the way the pandemic is disrupting your Christmas arrangements? Cheer up, I have good news – of a sort. Keep reading and I’ll convince you Christmas has become so “problematic” you’re probably better off not bothering this year.
A bad-to-non-existent festive season is the perfect way to top off this horrible year, leaving us confident 2021 couldn’t possibly be worse. After this, it’s all upside.
More than $400 million unwanted presents were given in Christmas 2018, according to a study.
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With nowhere to go and nothing better to do, I’ve been searching the internet for ways of improving on the Joy of Christmas. Having consulted the earnest academic experts, I’ve realised Christmas is a minefield of impossible dreams, dashed expectations, overspending, overindulgence and waste, all of it threatened by the risk of a family fight.
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A Year Like No Other is an SBS News collaboration with the University of Technology Sydney. It features stories written by journalism students.
Sydney man Alex Eagles knew he wouldn’t see his Belarusian fiancee Katya Slepneva for a couple of months when he flew home after visiting her in February.
But the 28-year-old didn’t realise he might not see her again this year.
The couple met at a museum in Germany three years ago while travelling. They were both looking at a radar telescope which neither of them knew much about, but they soon fell in love.