Archive for August, 2017

Black Journalists, ‘The World Needs You’ – The Root

White House reporter April P. Ryan declared that for the last seven months, Ive been under attack, and New York Times columnist Charles M. Blow said that the Trump administrations threats to press freedom may be existential central to our existence as the National Association of Black Journalists held its awards banquet Saturday night at its convention in New Orleans.

Unaudited convention attendance swelled to a record 3,319 registrants, NABJ President Sarah Glover announced at the event.

Ryan, NABJs Journalist of the Year, and Blow, chosen to deliver a commentary in the midst of the Salute to Excellence awards program, each cited the First Amendment as they placed Trump administration actions in the context of black journalists roles.

At a panel discussion Thursday, and again on Saturday, Ryan, a reporter for American Urban Radio Networks, said she had considered leaving the beat but decided Im not going any place because thats what they want me to do. Every shoulder that I stand on would be broken down, she said.

Ryan named pioneer black journalists who covered the White House, such as Harry McAlpin, who in 1944 became the first black reporter to attend a presidential news conference; Ethel Payne, who covered every president from Roosevelt to Reagan and was known as the first lady of the black press; and Alice Dunnigan, the first black female journalist to travel with a U.S president Harry S. Truman, on his 1948 whistle-stop tour of 18 Western states.

Ryans profile rose in April after an encounter with then-White House press secretary Sean Spicer, who told Ryan to stop shaking her head as he spoke. The hashtag #BlackWomenAtWork immediately went viral as women of color everywhere shared similar experiences of disrespect in the workplace, Lilly Workneh reported later for HuffPost BlackVoices.

Two months earlier, Ryan asked President Trump if he planned to include the Congressional Black Caucus in an executive order, only to have Trump ask if the caucus members were friends of hers. Do you want to set up the meeting? he asked.

Why stay? Ryan asked on Saturday. Its about Gwen Carr seeking justice in the death of her son, Eric Garner, who died in 2014 after a police officer was caught on video choking Garner, 43, on a Staten Island, N.Y., sidewalk despite his pleas of I cant breathe!

Its questions about Trayvon Martin and why is George Zimmerman still walking the street. Martin was the unarmed black teenager shot by Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer, in Sanford, Fla., in 2012. The Justice Department investigated both cases.

Blow cited Trumps more recent words. Three people died Saturday in connection with a rally in Charlottesville, Va., that drew white nationalists from around the country to protest the removal of a Confederate statue from a city park. Trump condemned hate on many sides in response to the protests and a terror attack in which a car plowed into a crowd.

The world needs you, Blow said of black journalists, to question why the president didnt call out the racists and said the violence is coming from many sides, to ask about the Justice Departments rollback of civil rights enforcement and about reversals of protections by the Environmental Protection Agency.

And perhaps to raise questions internally. Blow said of the white nationalists in Charlottesville, Nobody is asking which one is poor, which one didnt have a father . . .

The columnist went on to tell the journalists, Dont let this industry tell you that you have to be a brown version of a white person. You dont. Dont let them say that to be unapologetically black makes one unemployable. Dont agree that the objective is to be color-blind, rather than color-mindful. It isnt.

Yvette Miley, MSNBCs senior vice president of talent and diversity, picked up Blows theme as she accepted NABJs Chuck Stone Lifetime Achievement Award. Thank you NBC for giving me the opportunity to be my authentic self at work, she said. Miley also said she felt connected to other black journalists at competing networks.

In an extended tribute to the late Jim Vance, the anchor at Washingtons WRC-TV who was often praised as being comfortable in his own skin, Vance was shown discussing the 1970 creation of Blacks in Broadcasting, a local organization of black journalists that predated NABJ. Vance died of lung cancer June 22 after a 48-year career at the NBC-owned station.

Stanley Nelson, the accomplished documentary film maker who hosted a screening Saturday of his Tell Them We Are Rising, a film about historically black colleges and universities scheduled for airing on PBS next Feb. 19, said he felt an obligation to fill in important pieces of black history. Im interested in making films about institutions, he said. Usually its about heroes.

Rep. Cedric Richmond, D-La., chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, greeted convention attendees Wednesday with gratitude that black journalists existed during the reporting of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Black journalists first started to question that designation refugees to describe the displaced hurricane victims, who, after all, remained in the United States, Richmond said.

To us, it was our big brothers and big sisters in the industry at our most vulnerable taking up for us, and for that we will never forget, he added.

Colbert I. King, Washington Post: These are your people, President Trump

Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald: Why did Charlottesville carnage happen? Because we lie to ourselves

Glenn Thrush and Maggie Haberman, New York Times: Trumps Remarks on Charlottesville Violence Are Criticized as Insufficient

It was a hot mess was the most common phrase used to describe a confrontational panel discussion Friday at the National Association of Black Journalists convention in New Orleans, as presidential adviser Omarosa Newman joined an exchange that began with the relatives of black men killed by police and ended with NABJs president Sarah Glover defending the associations decision to invite Newman.

In between was a heated back and forth between moderator Ed Gordon and Newman over whether Newman should be asked to defend President Trumps policies. Gordon maintained that she should be, while Newman said she was there to speak as someone whose family members had been killed, though not by police.

Newman did answer questions about Trump, however, saying that she disagreed with Trumps recent remarks that police should not be so nice to suspects taken into custody. She also insisted that, as she is often the only African American at the presidents policy table, it is important that she be there to transmit black anger over such statements.

If youre not at the table, you are the menu, she said.

Watching was an overflow crowd in a room only half as large as could accommodate those who were lined up to attend. Many were enticed by an overheated Page Six story in the New York Post that reported heavy drama at the convention because of Newmans scheduled appearance. Of those who were admitted, eight stood and turned their backs to the stage. They were reported to be activists.

New York Times journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones was scheduled to moderate a panel on police brutality on Friday, which featured Valerie Castile, Sandra Sterling, and the New Yorkers Jelani Cobb. Hannah-Jones and Cobb pulled out of the panel, and Bounce TVs Ed Gordon stepped in to serve as the events moderator, Carlos Greer reported in the Post Thursday. His piece was headlined, Omarosa causes uproar at National Assoc. of Black Journalists conference.

Convention chair Ryan Williams considered the story over the top. He told Journal-isms Friday morning, I have seen nearly 3,300 black journalists looking to excel in their careers; I dont see uproar.

Valerie Castile is the mother of Philando Castile, a 32-year-old black man and longtime school cafeteria worker who was shot and killed in Falcon Heights, Minn., in July 2016 by Officer Jeronimo Yanez. In June, Yanez was acquitted of all charges by a Minnesota jury.

Sandra Sterling is the aunt of Alton Sterling, who was fatally shot by police in Baton Rouge, La., the same month. According to police, officers Blane Salamoni and Howie Lake saw Sterling, 37, outside a convenience store after it was reported that a man had threatened someone there with a gun. Police said Sterling, who was selling CDs outside the store, fit the description of that man, Matt Zapotosky and Wesley Lowery reported in the Washington Post.

The NABJ plenary session, Black and Blue, this years effort to honor the memory of sociologist, intellectual and civil rights leader W.E.B. Du Bois, opened with a video of an emotional Castile declaring that her sons killer got away scot-free. His guilt was just as clear as the nose on his face, she said, warning viewers that what happened to her son could happen to you: Thats who make the laws.

Sterling, wiping away tears, urged the media not to re-victimize the victim and to investigate the backgrounds of police officers just as vigorously as they do the victims of police violence. Put everything out there. Do it all, she said. Asked by Gordon how she feels seeing the video of her nephews shooting replayed over and over, she said, its like I died every day with him for 365 days.

Gordon told the audience when the afternoon session began that he knew of the 800-pound gorilla in the room Newmans scheduled appearance. He urged a little decorum, and declared that no stipulation had been placed on him stating what he could ask. Gordon said that Newman had requested not to appear by herself and would join a group discussion.

Newman entered to polite applause after a second panel was introduced that included retired Los Angeles Police Sgt. Cheryl Dorsey, author of Black and Blue; political analyst Jason Johnson of Morgan State University, who is also political editor of TheRoot.com; Arthur Silky Slim Reed, a former gang leader now a motivational speaker, and BuzzFeed writer Joel Anderson.

Newman said she wanted to talk about the impact of losing relatives to violence, saying that most people just dont know me. But was not long before Gordon turned the conversation to Trump. Newman tried in vain to return to the subject of slain relatives.

As Adrian Carrasquillo, Anderson and Darren Sands reported for BuzzFeed, Asked specifically about Trumps recent comments suggesting police officers should be rougher with suspects and if she spoke to the president about what he said, Manigault said that she would not disclose confidential conversations with Trump, but that she has invited law enforcement to the White House to discuss the issue.

Im not going to stand here and defend everything about Donald Trump, she said.

As she fended off questions about Trump, Manigault at one point accused the moderator of being aggressive, took the microphone and decided to stand up and walk the stage. . . .

Gordon, too, became more animated, insisting that questions about Trump were fair game and asking whether Newman was aware of the depth of feeling against the president among African Americans when he makes such statements as his July 28 remarks to Long Island, N.Y., law enforcement officers. When arresting these thugs, Trump said then, Please dont be too nice.

Law enforcement officers around the country denounced the statement, and the White House responded that Trump was joking.

Newman told Gordon that nothing she said would appease him, and asked whether the panel had become simply a dialogue between the two of them.

She also said, no black boy should be treated the way Freddie Gray was, or any of these other young men were treated, referring to the 25-year-old Baltimore man who died in police custody in 2015.

Asked for his response, Reed said, first of all, Freddie Gray was not a boy . . .

Pressed for her own responses to such deaths, Newman advised the audience to Google Eric Garner and her own name.

Look for yourselves, she said. The suggestion was met with groans.

Along the way, three, then four, five, six and finally eight audience members stood with their backs to those on stage. Others walked out. The BuzzFeed report said, Brittany Packnett a Ferguson protester who rose to prominence inside the Black Lives Matter movement as a part of the policy group Campaign Zero, and a well-respected activist on race, justice, and policing was among the less than ten protesters who stood with their backs to Manigault as she spoke. . . .

When Gordon asked whether the White House was aware of the anger that some of us feel, Newman replied, I think they see it. Were very keen on that, and noted that the administration had invited civil rights leaders, the Congressional Black Caucus and other African Americans to come to the White House. The Congressional Black Caucus has refused.

Rep. Cedric Richman, D-La., the Caucus chair, told NABJs opening session on Wednesday, Were not going to the White House for a social gathering. He wrote to constituents in June, We gave the administration a 130 page document. No Response. We sent 8 letters. No Response. We have had zero meetings with cabinet secretaries.

And when he [Trump] didnt take us seriously, we declined a second meeting. Because we have to get his attention.

Newman said at the panel discussion, When you dont come to the table, decisions are made whether youre at the table or not.

Eventually, Newman left the stage.

Glover stood in front of the audience to explain that NABJ felt obligated to to invite members of the Trump administration to the convention, that Newman had accepted and that Friday was the only day she was available.

Gordon, still on stage, replied that organizers had discussed Newmans appearance for an hour and a half and that it would be foolhardy to assume that we would sit here and not ask certain questions.

Let us close this out. Ill see you at the White House Christmas party in December, Gordon concluded, raising his fist.

NABJ issued this statement:

As an organization of professional journalists, NABJ seeks to have candid and frank conversations with newsmakers. For years, the NABJ has invited the White House administration to partake in the annual convention. We appreciate that the Director of Communications for the White House Office of Public Liaison Omarosa Newman is participating this year and has come to share her perspective on issues that are critical to our members, and moreover, critical to the communities that we serve.

Hannah-Jones, who watched the proceedings from the audience rather than the moderators perch, told Journal-isms as she left the discussion, You can see that I made the right decision.

Cobb wrote on Facebook, A man does not grow up on the South Side of Queens in the crack era without learning to recognize a set-up when he sees one.

He elaborated, Under other circumstances, maybe. But NABJ was talking some craziness about her being there as someone who has been impacted by violence, not as a member of the administration. So it wasnt even clear we would actually get to discuss anything important. More likely it was going to devolve into precisely the kind of fiasco that wound up happening. So basically, the idea was to get people with good standing in the community and reputations for doing serious work and drag them into a gutter of ad hominem insults.

I can play the dozens with the best of them (Drew Hall, 87-88) but not in my professional setting, not when Im sitting next to the grieving mothers of Philando Castile and Alton Sterling, not when were dealing with an ignorant administration that has used insult and distraction to its advantage so shamelessly. And not when Im there with someone whose whole agenda is to turn a serious forum into reality TV.

At the annual NABJ business meeting earlier Friday, Glover and Shirley Carswell, interim executive director, announced that the convention had attracted 3,289 registrants, an unaudited Thursday figure, of which 2,554 were paid. The figure tops last years 3,225.

Gregory Lee, Finance Committee chair, reported:

NABJ total revenue $3,407,000 an increase of 63% from the previous year.

NABJ expenses were down 15% percent from the previous year.

Convention registration was $830,001, an increase of 86% from the previous year.

Convention sponsorship was $1,310,432, an increase of 60% from the previous year.

With the 2016 victory in hand, the committee submitted a series of recommendations to help set up the association with its over $1.2 million dollars in excess revenue for the year.

Michael Days, NABJ Hall of Fame acceptance speech (prepared remarks) (Comments section)

Sebastian Murdock, Taryn Finley, HuffPost BlackVoices: Omarosa Tells NABJ Convention She Fights On Front Lines Every Day To Laughs, Groans

Rochelle Riley: We must all channel the spirit of Ida B. Wells

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Journal-isms is originally published on journal-isms.com.Reprinted on The Root by permission.

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Black Journalists, 'The World Needs You' - The Root

Check on teen’s social networking account leads to underage sex admission – The Borneo Post

Social media applications displayed on a smartphone. AFP File Photo

MIRI: A 20-year-old woman lodged a police report on Saturday after discovering that her underage sister had been having sex with a man since last year.

The matter came to light when the woman decided to check her 15-year-old sisters social networking account and came across several of the teens messages with a man.

The content of the exchanges between the pair left her uneasy and she decided to confront her sister, who went on to admit to having had sexual intercourse with the man on three occasions since 2016.

The two have known each other since early 2016 through the social networking site.

District deputy police chief Supt Stanley Jonathan Ringgit confirmed receiving a report when contacted yesterday, saying police are investigating the case under Section 376 of the Penal Code for statutory rape.

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Check on teen's social networking account leads to underage sex admission - The Borneo Post

NSA Surveillance | American Civil Liberties Union

The National Security Agencys mass surveillance has greatly expanded in the years since September 11, 2001. Disclosures have shown that, until recently, the government regularly tracked the calls of hundreds of millions of Americans. Today, it continues to spy on a vast but unknown number of Americans international calls, text messages, web-browsing activities, and emails.

The governments surveillance programs have infiltrated most of the communications technologies we have come to rely on. They are largely enabled by a problematic law passed by Congress the FISA Amendments Act (FAA), which is set to expire this year along with Executive Order 12,333, the primary authority invoked by the NSA to conduct surveillance outside of the United States. The Patriot Act has also made it easier for the government to spy on Americans right here at home over the past 15 years. Although the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court oversees some of the governments surveillance activities, it operates in near-total secrecy through one-sided procedures that heavily favor the government.

Our Constitution and democratic system demand that government be transparent and accountable to the people, not the other way around. History has shown that powerful, secret surveillance tools will almost certainly be abused for political ends.

The ACLU has been at the forefront of the struggle to rein in the surveillance superstructure, which strikes at the core of our rights to privacy, free speech, and association.

The FISA Amendments Act of 2008 (FAA) gives the NSA almost unchecked power to monitor Americans international phone calls, text messages, and emails under the guise of targeting foreigners abroad. The ACLU has long warned that one provision of the statute, Section 702, would be used to eavesdrop on Americans private communications. In June 2013, The Guardian published documents provided by whistleblower Edward Snowden confirming the massive scale of this international dragnet. Recent disclosures also show that an unknown number of purely domestic communications are monitored, that the rules that supposedly protect Americans' privacy are weak and riddled with exceptions, and that virtually every email that goes into or out of the United States is scanned for suspicious keywords.

In 2008, less than an hour after President Bush signed the FAA into law, the ACLU filed a lawsuit challenging its constitutionality. The case, Amnesty v. Clapper, was filed on behalf of a broad coalition of attorneys and organizations whose work requires them to engage in sensitive and sometimes privileged telephone and email communications with individuals located abroad. But in a 54 ruling handed down in February 2013, the Supreme Court held that the ACLU plaintiffs did not have standing to sue because they could not prove their communications had actually been surveilled under the law.

In March 2015, the ACLU filed Wikimedia Foundation v. NSA, a lawsuit challenging Upstream surveillance under the FAA. Through Upstream surveillance, the U.S. government copies and searches the contents of almost all international and many domestic text-based internet communications. The suit was brought on behalf of nine educational, legal, human rights, and media organizations, including the Wikimedia Foundation, operator of one of the most-visited websites on the internet. Collectively, the plaintiffs engage in more than a trillion sensitive internet communications every year, and each has been profoundly harmed by NSA surveillance.

Executive Order 12,333, signed by President Reagan in 1981 and modified many times since, is the authority primarily relied upon by the intelligence agencies to gather foreign intelligence outside of the United States. Recent disclosures indicate that the U.S. government operates a host of large-scale programs under EO 12333, many of which appear to involve the collection of vast quantities of Americans information. These programs have included, for example, the NSAs collection of billions of cellphone location records each day; its recording of every single cellphone call into, out of, and within at least two countries; and its surreptitious interception of data from Google and Yahoo user accounts as that information travels between those companies data centers located abroad.

In December 2013, the ACLU, along with the Media Freedom Information Access Clinic at Yale Law School, filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit demanding that the government release information about its use of EO 12,333 to conduct surveillance of Americans communications.

For many years, the government claimed sweeping authority under the Patriot Act to collect a record of every single phone call made by every single American "on an ongoing daily basis." This program not only exceeded the authority given to the government by Congress, but it violated the right of privacy protected by the Fourth Amendment, and the rights of free speech and association protected by the First Amendment. For this reason, the ACLU challenged the government's collection of our phone records under Section 215 of the Patriot Act just days after the program was revealed in June 2013 by The Guardian. In May 2015, a court of appeals found that the phone records program violated Section 215, and Congress allowed the provision to expire in June of that year. The program was reformed by the USA Freedom Act, which passed days later.

To bring greater transparency to the NSA's surveillance under the Patriot Act, the ACLU filed two motions with the secretive FISC asking it to release to the public its opinions authorizing the bulk collection of Americans' data by the NSA.

Our earlier work to reform the Patriot Act includes a number of successful challenges to the government's use of and secrecy surrounding National Security Letters.

The ACLU has long fought to bring greater transparency and public access to the FISC the secretive court that oversees the governments surveillance programs. When the FISC was first established in 1978, it primarily assessed individual surveillance applications to determine whether there was probable cause to believe a specific surveillance target was an agent of a foreign power. In recent years, however, the FISCs responsibilities have changed dramatically, and the FISC today oversees sweeping surveillance programs and assesses their constitutionality all without any public participation or review.

The ACLU has been advocating and petitioning for access to the FISC for more than a decade, working with Congress and the executive branch, and appearing before the court itself to push for greater transparency. Days after the courts Section 215 order was published in the press in June 2013, we filed a motion seeking access to the secret judicial opinions underlying the NSA's mass call tracking program. We have since filed two other access motions in the FISC, seeking significant legal opinions authorizing bulk collection and those interpreting the governments secret surveillance powers in the years after 9/11. We also signed a brief filed in the FISC in support of the First Amendment rights of the recipients of FISC orders, such as telephone and internet companies, to release information about the type and volume of national security requests they receive from the NSA and the FBI.

Secret law has no place in a democracy. Under the First Amendment, the public has a qualified right of access to FISC opinions concerning the scope, meaning, or constitutionality of the surveillance laws, and that right clearly applies to legal opinions interpreting Americans' bedrock constitutional rights. We all have a right to know, at least in general terms, what kinds of information the government is collecting about innocent Americans, on what scale, and based on what legal theory.

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NSA Surveillance | American Civil Liberties Union

Russian hackers used NSA’s leaked EternalBlue exploit to spy on hotel guests – CSO Online

Ms. Smith (not her real name) is a freelance writer and programmer with a special and somewhat personal interest in IT privacy and security issues.

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A Russian government-sponsored cyberespionage group has been accused of using a leaked NSA hacking tool in attacks against one Middle Eastern and at least seven European hotels in order to spy on guests.

Why reinvent the wheel, or a hacking tool, when the NSA created such an effective one? The NSAs EternalBlue was leaked online by the Shadow Broker in April. Now the security firm FireEye says it has a moderate confidence that Fancy Bear, or APT28, the hacking group linked to the Russian government and accused of hacking the Democratic National Committee last year, added EternalBlue to its arsenal in order to spy on and to steal credentials from guests at European and Middle Eastern hotels.

In a campaign aimed at the hospitality industry, attackers leveraged a malicious document in spear-phishing emails. The hostile hotel form, which Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center General Manager John Lambert tweeted about in July, appeared to be a hotel reservation document. If macros were allowed to run on the computers used by the hotel employees who opened it, then Fancy Bears Gamefish malware would be installed.

Fancy Bear, according to a report by the security firm FireEye, used novel techniques involving the EternalBlue exploit and the open source tool Responder to spread laterally through networks and likely target travelers. Once inside the network of a hospitality company, APT28 sought out machines that controlled both guest and internal Wi-Fi networks.

The Gamefish malware would download and run EternalBlue to spread to computers which were connected to corporate and guest Wi-Fi networks. After gaining access, Fancy Bear deployed Responder which listens for broadcasts from victim computers attempting to connect to network resources. Responder, FireEye explained, masquerades as the sought-out resource and causes the victim computer to send the username and hashed password to the attacker-controlled machine.

Its definitely a new technique for Fancy Bear, FireEyes cyber espionage researcher Ben Read told Wired. Its a much more passive way to collect on people. You can just sit there and intercept stuff from the Wi-Fi traffic.

While FireEye didnt observe business travelers credentials being stolen via hotel Wi-Fi networks in July, the security firm cited a similar hotel attack by Fancy Bear in 2016.

In the 2016 incident, the victim was compromised after connecting to a hotel Wi-Fi network. Twelve hours after the victim initially connected to the publicly available Wi-Fi network, APT28 logged into the machine with stolen credentials. These 12 hours could have been used to crack a hashed password offline. After successfully accessing the machine, the attacker deployed tools on the machine, spread laterally through the victim's network, and accessed the victim's OWA account. The login originated from a computer on the same subnet, indicating that the attacker machine was physically close to the victim and on the same Wi-Fi network.

The latest hotel attacks, FireEye added, is the first time we have seen APT28 incorporate this exploit [EternalBlue] into their intrusions. While the investigation is still going on, FireEye told Reuters it is moderately confident that Fancy Bear is behind the attacks. We just don't have the smoking gun yet.

The targeted hotels were not named, but were described as the type where valuable guests would stay. FireEye told Wired, These were not super expensive places, but also not the Holiday Inn. Theyre the type of hotel a distinguished visitor would stay in when theyre on corporate travel or diplomatic business.

FireEye wants travelers, such as business and government personnel, to be aware of the threats like having their information and credentials passively collected when connecting to a hotels Wi-Fi. While traveling abroad, high value targets should take extra precautions to secure their systems and data. Publicly accessible Wi-Fi networks present a significant threat and should be avoided whenever possible. Wired suggested the safest approach for travelers is to bring their own hotspot and altogether skip connecting to the hotels Wi-Fi.

Ms. Smith (not her real name) is a freelance writer and programmer with a special and somewhat personal interest in IT privacy and security issues.

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Russian hackers used NSA's leaked EternalBlue exploit to spy on hotel guests - CSO Online

StarTimes pay courtesy call on NSA boss – Ghana News Agency

Print Sunday 13th August, 2017 Accra, Aug. 11, GNA - StarTimes, official Broadcaster of the Ghana Premier League, on Friday, met the leadership of the National Sports Authority (NSA). The StarTimes delegation held fruitful discussion with the Director General of the NSA, Mr. Robert Sarfo Mensah concerning the development of sports in the country. As part of StarTimes' aim of getting involved in promoting all sports in Ghana,

Accra, Aug. 11, GNA - StarTimes, official Broadcaster of the Ghana Premier League, on Friday, met the leadership of the National Sports Authority (NSA).

The StarTimes delegation held fruitful discussion with the Director General of the NSA, Mr. Robert Sarfo Mensah concerning the development of sports in the country.

As part of StarTimes' aim of getting involved in promoting all sports in Ghana, the NSA boss was consulted to partner the dream.

According to the Country Director of StarTimes, Leo Hao, sports must have a new look in Ghana.

"It is our dream to help grow Ghana sports.

"We want a successful collaboration that will see all sports get a better face lift as we are committed to grow sports in all aspects."

Mr. Sarfo Mensah was delighted to meet the StarTimes delegation and confirmed his office's readiness to partner them.

"My office wants to give Ghana sports the best, in terms of development.

"We are actually preparing to host the National Sports Festival, where more talents will be identified and nurtured. "

"I am very glad to have you and am confident that we can together promote Ghana sports," he noted.

GNA

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StarTimes pay courtesy call on NSA boss - Ghana News Agency