NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/rudeboy-warns-nigeria-is-actually-at-war/Nigerian singer Paul Okoye, known professionally as Rudeboy, declared the country is “actually at war” on Tuesday, reacting to a relentless string of kidnappings he says Nigerians have come to accept as normal.
In a post on X, the former P-Square act said Nigeria was moving from one abduction to the next with a frequency that should alarm the public, but instead appeared to be passing with dull indifference. His frustration centred not just on the volume of cases but on what he described as a collective numbness that has set in among citizens.
The remarks land against a backdrop of documented security deterioration across multiple states. Nigeria has reached a point where mass abductions no longer produce the sustained outrage or urgency they once did, with headlines appearing, officials issuing statements and security agencies launching rescue operations, only for the nation to gradually move on until another attack occurs.
An analysis of school abductions in Nigeria spanning more than 16 years shows what began as isolated incidents has grown into what security analysts describe as a “lucrative criminal enterprise,” exploited by armed groups to extract ransom from families and pressure the government.
Rudeboy has spoken out on insecurity before. When gunmen attacked worshippers in Jos during Palm Sunday celebrations in March 2026, he took to X to say Nigerians were “not angry enough” about the deteriorating security situation across the country. Tuesday’s post goes further, framing the kidnapping cycle not as a governance failure but as an active conflict that the public has stopped recognising as such.
His use of war language reflects a growing sentiment among Nigerian public figures that the language of crisis has lost its power to move institutions or citizens. Whether that view accelerates pressure on the administration of President Bola Tinubu remains to be seen.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/rudeboy-warns-nigeria-is-actually-at-war/
Category: Entertainment
Rudeboy Warns Nigeria Is Actually at War
Rudeboy Warns Nigeria Is Actually at War
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/rudeboy-warns-nigeria-is-actually-at-war/Nigerian singer Paul Okoye, known professionally as Rudeboy, declared the country is “actually at war” on Tuesday, reacting to a relentless string of kidnappings he says Nigerians have come to accept as normal.
In a post on X, the former P-Square act said Nigeria was moving from one abduction to the next with a frequency that should alarm the public, but instead appeared to be passing with dull indifference. His frustration centred not just on the volume of cases but on what he described as a collective numbness that has set in among citizens.
The remarks land against a backdrop of documented security deterioration across multiple states. Nigeria has reached a point where mass abductions no longer produce the sustained outrage or urgency they once did, with headlines appearing, officials issuing statements and security agencies launching rescue operations, only for the nation to gradually move on until another attack occurs.
An analysis of school abductions in Nigeria spanning more than 16 years shows what began as isolated incidents has grown into what security analysts describe as a “lucrative criminal enterprise,” exploited by armed groups to extract ransom from families and pressure the government.
Rudeboy has spoken out on insecurity before. When gunmen attacked worshippers in Jos during Palm Sunday celebrations in March 2026, he took to X to say Nigerians were “not angry enough” about the deteriorating security situation across the country. Tuesday’s post goes further, framing the kidnapping cycle not as a governance failure but as an active conflict that the public has stopped recognising as such.
His use of war language reflects a growing sentiment among Nigerian public figures that the language of crisis has lost its power to move institutions or citizens. Whether that view accelerates pressure on the administration of President Bola Tinubu remains to be seen.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/rudeboy-warns-nigeria-is-actually-at-war/
Ghana Hits 81% Inclusion But Rural Gap Widens
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/ghana-hits-81-inclusion-but-rural-gap-widens/Ghana’s financial inclusion rate has reached 81 percent, the Bank of Ghana (BoG) announced earlier this month, driven largely by mobile money agent networks and basic phone-based transactions rather than smartphone penetration. Yet behind that headline figure, a persistent structural divide continues to limit meaningful access for millions of rural Ghanaians.
Speaking at the 2026 3i Africa Summit in Accra, Matilda Asante-Asiedu, Second Deputy Governor of the BoG, said Ghana’s model showed that large-scale financial inclusion was achievable without dependence on smartphones or internet connectivity, with farmers, traders and rural households accessing formal services through basic mobile networks and agent infrastructure.
The figures back a genuine expansion. Registered mobile money accounts rose to 83 million in May 2026, up from 75.2 million in the same month a year earlier, with the agent network now stretching to approximately 992,000 points nationwide. Asiedu noted that interoperability between mobile money platforms had created what the central bank describes as a unified payments system, positioning digital finance as core national infrastructure.
Despite the headline progress, the rural inclusion deficit remains structurally embedded. Financial inclusion rates in urban centres like Accra and Kumasi exceed 75 percent, while in rural regions, particularly in the Northern, Upper East and Upper West regions, rates remain below 50 percent, according to earlier BoG data. Mobile money has narrowed that gap, but has not closed it.
Economists and policy observers point to what they describe as structural inefficiency in rural liquidity flows, where households and small traders remain dependent on informal cash networks carrying higher implicit costs and weaker dispute resolution. Mobile money agents now function as de facto access points in many communities, but analysts warn that affordability, digital literacy and network reliability continue to constrain genuine participation, particularly among older and lower-income populations.
Ghana’s fintech ecosystem, now comprising an estimated 200 firms operating across payments, lending, insurtech and regtech, remains one of the largest in West Africa, and more than 80 percent of adults now use mobile money services. However, gaps remain within rural populations and informal workers, and micro and small enterprises still face barriers in accessing formal credit and insurance products.
The BoG has signalled that regulatory focus will continue on consumer protection, ecosystem interoperability and attracting investment into digital infrastructure. Asiedu said predictable payment systems, clear regulatory frameworks and strong consumer protections were essential to drawing capital into Africa’s digital economy.
The implication for Ghana’s broader economic agenda is direct. Restricted credit access in rural areas constrains small enterprise expansion, while limited savings mobilisation slows capital accumulation outside urban centres. Closing what remains of the inclusion gap will require more than expanding agent coverage. Infrastructure investment, targeted financial literacy programming, and regulatory coherence across service providers are each seen as necessary conditions for genuine, durable inclusion at scale.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/ghana-hits-81-inclusion-but-rural-gap-widens/
Africa Rising Music Conference Seals Global Creative Ties
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, Roger A. Agana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/africa-rising-music-conference-seals-global-creative-ties/The Africa Rising Music Conference (ARMC) wrapped up its 2026 edition in Johannesburg over the weekend, drawing more than 1,000 delegates from over 15 countries and closing with the formal launch of a Germany-South Africa artist mentorship programme and landmark discussions on artificial intelligence in the music industry.
Held over two days at Constitution Hill, the sixth edition of the female-led conference brought together artists, executives, policymakers, entrepreneurs and institutional representatives from the German Embassy Pretoria, the Australian High Commission Pretoria and the Embassy of Sweden in Pretoria, among others.
The most consequential formal announcement was the launch of the Music Mentorship Program for South African Artists, developed through a three-way partnership between the German Embassy Pretoria, ARMC and Berlin-based music company Paradise Worldwide. Five selected South African artists will receive professional mastering support, release strategy guidance, one-on-one mentorship paired with established German music industry professionals, artwork design, press photography and visual content production. Applications are now open.
Australia served as the official international focus country of this year’s edition, a designation that produced one of the conference’s most memorable moments. Australian First Nations rapper DOBBY, brought to the event by music company Alchemy Music as part of the first Australian delegation to attend ARMC, invited emerging South African rappers onto the stage during a networking reception for an unscripted freestyle session that drew strong reactions from delegates and underscored the conference’s emphasis on authentic cross-cultural exchange.
The conference also hosted the Berlin AI Think Tank in Africa, which convened local and international stakeholders to address artificial intelligence, creator consent, licensing, attribution and fair remuneration across the music landscape. Organisations participating in the sessions included the South African Music Performance Rights Association (SAMPRA), the Composers, Authors and Publishers Association (CAPASSO), the Association for Electronic Music (AFEM) and technology research institute Fraunhofer IDMT.
South African artist Rouge, who performed at this edition after facilitating a workshop at the previous conference, spoke to what the platform represents for African creatives.
“ARMC is more than just a conference, it’s a growing movement,” she said.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, Roger A. Agana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/africa-rising-music-conference-seals-global-creative-ties/
Chris Brown Earns Honorary PhD Ahead of US Tour
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/chris-brown-earns-honorary-phd-ahead-of-us-tour/American R&B artist Chris Brown has received an honorary Doctor of Philosophy degree from Harvest Christian University in Dallas, Texas, recognising his two-decade career in music and entertainment.
Brown, who goes by the nickname Breezy, shared news of the award on Instagram on May 23, posting photographs from the ceremony alongside his Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree certificate from the private Dallas institution. The degree was awarded in the field of Visual and Performing Arts.
“I DID A THING!” Brown captioned the post.
The honorary degree coincides with the release of his new album BROWN, his twelfth studio project, which came out on May 8. The album has received a mixed critical reception, with reviewers divided over its scope and ambition, though Brown’s core fanbase has responded with considerable enthusiasm.
The recognition also precedes one of the most anticipated concert events of the year. Next month, Brown will launch the Raymond and Brown tour alongside Usher, a pairing that has generated intense demand for tickets. The tour opens in Denver on June 26 and is scheduled to travel across the United States and Canada through the rest of the year, with the final date currently set for December 12 in Tampa, Florida.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/chris-brown-earns-honorary-phd-ahead-of-us-tour/
Ghana Hits 81% Inclusion But Rural Gap Widens
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/ghana-hits-81-inclusion-but-rural-gap-widens/Ghana’s financial inclusion rate has reached 81 percent, the Bank of Ghana (BoG) announced earlier this month, driven largely by mobile money agent networks and basic phone-based transactions rather than smartphone penetration. Yet behind that headline figure, a persistent structural divide continues to limit meaningful access for millions of rural Ghanaians.
Speaking at the 2026 3i Africa Summit in Accra, Matilda Asante-Asiedu, Second Deputy Governor of the BoG, said Ghana’s model showed that large-scale financial inclusion was achievable without dependence on smartphones or internet connectivity, with farmers, traders and rural households accessing formal services through basic mobile networks and agent infrastructure.
The figures back a genuine expansion. Registered mobile money accounts rose to 83 million in May 2026, up from 75.2 million in the same month a year earlier, with the agent network now stretching to approximately 992,000 points nationwide. Asiedu noted that interoperability between mobile money platforms had created what the central bank describes as a unified payments system, positioning digital finance as core national infrastructure.
Despite the headline progress, the rural inclusion deficit remains structurally embedded. Financial inclusion rates in urban centres like Accra and Kumasi exceed 75 percent, while in rural regions, particularly in the Northern, Upper East and Upper West regions, rates remain below 50 percent, according to earlier BoG data. Mobile money has narrowed that gap, but has not closed it.
Economists and policy observers point to what they describe as structural inefficiency in rural liquidity flows, where households and small traders remain dependent on informal cash networks carrying higher implicit costs and weaker dispute resolution. Mobile money agents now function as de facto access points in many communities, but analysts warn that affordability, digital literacy and network reliability continue to constrain genuine participation, particularly among older and lower-income populations.
Ghana’s fintech ecosystem, now comprising an estimated 200 firms operating across payments, lending, insurtech and regtech, remains one of the largest in West Africa, and more than 80 percent of adults now use mobile money services. However, gaps remain within rural populations and informal workers, and micro and small enterprises still face barriers in accessing formal credit and insurance products.
The BoG has signalled that regulatory focus will continue on consumer protection, ecosystem interoperability and attracting investment into digital infrastructure. Asiedu said predictable payment systems, clear regulatory frameworks and strong consumer protections were essential to drawing capital into Africa’s digital economy.
The implication for Ghana’s broader economic agenda is direct. Restricted credit access in rural areas constrains small enterprise expansion, while limited savings mobilisation slows capital accumulation outside urban centres. Closing what remains of the inclusion gap will require more than expanding agent coverage. Infrastructure investment, targeted financial literacy programming, and regulatory coherence across service providers are each seen as necessary conditions for genuine, durable inclusion at scale.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/ghana-hits-81-inclusion-but-rural-gap-widens/
Chris Brown Earns Honorary PhD Ahead of US Tour
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/chris-brown-earns-honorary-phd-ahead-of-us-tour/American R&B artist Chris Brown has received an honorary Doctor of Philosophy degree from Harvest Christian University in Dallas, Texas, recognising his two-decade career in music and entertainment.
Brown, who goes by the nickname Breezy, shared news of the award on Instagram on May 23, posting photographs from the ceremony alongside his Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree certificate from the private Dallas institution. The degree was awarded in the field of Visual and Performing Arts.
“I DID A THING!” Brown captioned the post.
The honorary degree coincides with the release of his new album BROWN, his twelfth studio project, which came out on May 8. The album has received a mixed critical reception, with reviewers divided over its scope and ambition, though Brown’s core fanbase has responded with considerable enthusiasm.
The recognition also precedes one of the most anticipated concert events of the year. Next month, Brown will launch the Raymond and Brown tour alongside Usher, a pairing that has generated intense demand for tickets. The tour opens in Denver on June 26 and is scheduled to travel across the United States and Canada through the rest of the year, with the final date currently set for December 12 in Tampa, Florida.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/chris-brown-earns-honorary-phd-ahead-of-us-tour/
Ghana Hits 81% Inclusion But Rural Gap Widens
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/ghana-hits-81-inclusion-but-rural-gap-widens/Ghana’s financial inclusion rate has reached 81 percent, the Bank of Ghana (BoG) announced earlier this month, driven largely by mobile money agent networks and basic phone-based transactions rather than smartphone penetration. Yet behind that headline figure, a persistent structural divide continues to limit meaningful access for millions of rural Ghanaians.
Speaking at the 2026 3i Africa Summit in Accra, Matilda Asante-Asiedu, Second Deputy Governor of the BoG, said Ghana’s model showed that large-scale financial inclusion was achievable without dependence on smartphones or internet connectivity, with farmers, traders and rural households accessing formal services through basic mobile networks and agent infrastructure.
The figures back a genuine expansion. Registered mobile money accounts rose to 83 million in May 2026, up from 75.2 million in the same month a year earlier, with the agent network now stretching to approximately 992,000 points nationwide. Asiedu noted that interoperability between mobile money platforms had created what the central bank describes as a unified payments system, positioning digital finance as core national infrastructure.
Despite the headline progress, the rural inclusion deficit remains structurally embedded. Financial inclusion rates in urban centres like Accra and Kumasi exceed 75 percent, while in rural regions, particularly in the Northern, Upper East and Upper West regions, rates remain below 50 percent, according to earlier BoG data. Mobile money has narrowed that gap, but has not closed it.
Economists and policy observers point to what they describe as structural inefficiency in rural liquidity flows, where households and small traders remain dependent on informal cash networks carrying higher implicit costs and weaker dispute resolution. Mobile money agents now function as de facto access points in many communities, but analysts warn that affordability, digital literacy and network reliability continue to constrain genuine participation, particularly among older and lower-income populations.
Ghana’s fintech ecosystem, now comprising an estimated 200 firms operating across payments, lending, insurtech and regtech, remains one of the largest in West Africa, and more than 80 percent of adults now use mobile money services. However, gaps remain within rural populations and informal workers, and micro and small enterprises still face barriers in accessing formal credit and insurance products.
The BoG has signalled that regulatory focus will continue on consumer protection, ecosystem interoperability and attracting investment into digital infrastructure. Asiedu said predictable payment systems, clear regulatory frameworks and strong consumer protections were essential to drawing capital into Africa’s digital economy.
The implication for Ghana’s broader economic agenda is direct. Restricted credit access in rural areas constrains small enterprise expansion, while limited savings mobilisation slows capital accumulation outside urban centres. Closing what remains of the inclusion gap will require more than expanding agent coverage. Infrastructure investment, targeted financial literacy programming, and regulatory coherence across service providers are each seen as necessary conditions for genuine, durable inclusion at scale.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/ghana-hits-81-inclusion-but-rural-gap-widens/
Ghana Hits 81% Inclusion But Rural Gap Widens
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/ghana-hits-81-inclusion-but-rural-gap-widens/Ghana’s financial inclusion rate has reached 81 percent, the Bank of Ghana (BoG) announced earlier this month, driven largely by mobile money agent networks and basic phone-based transactions rather than smartphone penetration. Yet behind that headline figure, a persistent structural divide continues to limit meaningful access for millions of rural Ghanaians.
Speaking at the 2026 3i Africa Summit in Accra, Matilda Asante-Asiedu, Second Deputy Governor of the BoG, said Ghana’s model showed that large-scale financial inclusion was achievable without dependence on smartphones or internet connectivity, with farmers, traders and rural households accessing formal services through basic mobile networks and agent infrastructure.
The figures back a genuine expansion. Registered mobile money accounts rose to 83 million in May 2026, up from 75.2 million in the same month a year earlier, with the agent network now stretching to approximately 992,000 points nationwide. Asiedu noted that interoperability between mobile money platforms had created what the central bank describes as a unified payments system, positioning digital finance as core national infrastructure.
Despite the headline progress, the rural inclusion deficit remains structurally embedded. Financial inclusion rates in urban centres like Accra and Kumasi exceed 75 percent, while in rural regions, particularly in the Northern, Upper East and Upper West regions, rates remain below 50 percent, according to earlier BoG data. Mobile money has narrowed that gap, but has not closed it.
Economists and policy observers point to what they describe as structural inefficiency in rural liquidity flows, where households and small traders remain dependent on informal cash networks carrying higher implicit costs and weaker dispute resolution. Mobile money agents now function as de facto access points in many communities, but analysts warn that affordability, digital literacy and network reliability continue to constrain genuine participation, particularly among older and lower-income populations.
Ghana’s fintech ecosystem, now comprising an estimated 200 firms operating across payments, lending, insurtech and regtech, remains one of the largest in West Africa, and more than 80 percent of adults now use mobile money services. However, gaps remain within rural populations and informal workers, and micro and small enterprises still face barriers in accessing formal credit and insurance products.
The BoG has signalled that regulatory focus will continue on consumer protection, ecosystem interoperability and attracting investment into digital infrastructure. Asiedu said predictable payment systems, clear regulatory frameworks and strong consumer protections were essential to drawing capital into Africa’s digital economy.
The implication for Ghana’s broader economic agenda is direct. Restricted credit access in rural areas constrains small enterprise expansion, while limited savings mobilisation slows capital accumulation outside urban centres. Closing what remains of the inclusion gap will require more than expanding agent coverage. Infrastructure investment, targeted financial literacy programming, and regulatory coherence across service providers are each seen as necessary conditions for genuine, durable inclusion at scale.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/ghana-hits-81-inclusion-but-rural-gap-widens/
Chris Brown Earns Honorary PhD Ahead of US Tour
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/chris-brown-earns-honorary-phd-ahead-of-us-tour/American R&B artist Chris Brown has received an honorary Doctor of Philosophy degree from Harvest Christian University in Dallas, Texas, recognising his two-decade career in music and entertainment.
Brown, who goes by the nickname Breezy, shared news of the award on Instagram on May 23, posting photographs from the ceremony alongside his Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree certificate from the private Dallas institution. The degree was awarded in the field of Visual and Performing Arts.
“I DID A THING!” Brown captioned the post.
The honorary degree coincides with the release of his new album BROWN, his twelfth studio project, which came out on May 8. The album has received a mixed critical reception, with reviewers divided over its scope and ambition, though Brown’s core fanbase has responded with considerable enthusiasm.
The recognition also precedes one of the most anticipated concert events of the year. Next month, Brown will launch the Raymond and Brown tour alongside Usher, a pairing that has generated intense demand for tickets. The tour opens in Denver on June 26 and is scheduled to travel across the United States and Canada through the rest of the year, with the final date currently set for December 12 in Tampa, Florida.
NewsGhana, Latest Updates and Breaking News of Ghana, News Ghana, https://www.newsghana.com.gh/chris-brown-earns-honorary-phd-ahead-of-us-tour/