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Accra Daily Mail was an English-language daily newspaper from Accra, Ghana. The paper, which is privately owned, was started in 1998. [1] The daily ceased publication in January 2009 due to financial problems. [2] In April 2009 the paper was relaunched with the name The Mail. [3] Its frequency was also changed to biweekly. [3]
state-owned; along with the Mirror, the most widely read newspaper in Ghana Daily Guide: private Daily Statesman: private The Dispatch: private The Entrepreneur Newspaper: private, bi-monthly The Evening News: state-owned The Finder Newspaper: news from Ghana and Africa, politics, entertainment, world, health, business and sports Today ...
Paper straws are in demand as a sustainable alternative to plastic straws, and they are made by a different manufacturing process. Plastic straws are typically made from polypropylene, but paper straws are made from layers of food-grade paper bonded together with water-based or hot melt adhesives, using gum powder and packing materials.
The researchers found 90% of paper straws had PFAS, compared to 80% of bamboo straws, 75% of plastic straws, and 40% of glass straws. Further, a paper straw brand was the brand with the highest ...
Pages in category "Newspapers published in Ghana" ... Accra Daily Mail; Accra Evening News; African Morning Post; Ashanti Pioneer; C. Christian Messenger (Ghana) D.
Ghana's government will investigate controversial plans to build a $400m (£330m) national cathedral, new President John Mahama has said. Pressure has been mounting on authorities to drop the ...
In November 2019, YEN.com.gh received the title of Best Online News Portal at the National Communications Awards in Accra, 2019. [10]According to Alexa Top Sites rankings by country, Yen.com.gh ranks thirteen in Ghana and is very popular among Ghanaians and people in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Italy, South Africa, Netherlands, France and many other countries.
Following the 6 March 1957 declaration of independence by Ghana from the United Kingdom, there were only around four newspapers.Leader Kwame Nkrumah eventually controlled all the press in Ghana and saw it as an instrument of state authority, providing propaganda that encouraged national unity and creating a hierarchal system of state apparatus to manage the media. [1]