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Missing AFCON 2025 Was The First Warning Shot. Will The Black Stars Rise, Or Will History Repeat Itself? – Ras Mubarak queries

The night of 30th March 2026 will be remembered in Ghana not for celebration, but for the sharp crack of a guillotine. Hours after the Black Stars fell 2-1 to Germany in Stuttgart, their fourth straight friendly defeat, following a humiliating 5-1 thrashing by Austria, the Ghana Football Association dropped the bomb: Otto Addo was out.

No long press conference. No detailed autopsy. Just a terse statement thanking the man who had just guided Ghana to the 2026 World Cup, then wishing him well.

It was the kind of swift, emotional decision that has defined Ghanaian football for decades. Passionate fans demanded blood after those heavy losses. The FA delivered it.

But as the dust settles and the tournament in North America looms just 71 days away, one question hangs heavier than the humid Harmattan air: was this the move that saves the Black Stars… or the one that sinks them?

Let’s be honest, this squad has always been a paradox. From the golden generation of the 2000s to the current crop of Premier League stars, the Black Stars possess the raw materials to trouble any team on their day. They topped their 2026 World Cup qualifying group with authority. Addo became the first coach to qualify Ghana twice. The talent pipeline is still flowing.

Yet the same old ghosts haunt them. Defensive fragility. Tactical rigidity in big moments. A habit of collapsing against organised, high-pressing European sides in pre-tournament friendlies. Missing the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations, the first time in 20 years, was the warning shot.

The recent friendlies were the execution. The team looked disjointed, unsure, almost apologetic on the pitch. For a nation that lives and breathes football, that stings deeper than any scoreline.

The Ghana Football Association finds itself once again in the eye of the storm it helped create. Otto Addo’s record (22 games, 8 wins, 5 draws, 9 losses) was never perfect, but it delivered the one thing that matters most: a ticket to the World Cup.

The timing of his dismissal, right on the cusp of the tournament, raises eyebrows. Was this about results, or about appeasing the loudest voices in the stands and on social media?

Ghanaian football has a well-worn script: poor run of games, public outcry, coach sacked, new saviour hired, repeat. The FA has pulled this lever so often that instability has become the only constant.

Players arrive for camps wondering who will be in charge next month. Technical staff inherit half-baked squads and rushed tactics. And every time, the same administrators who appointed, supported (or failed to support) the coach walk away unscathed.

This is not just about one sacking. It is about a pattern that has turned potential into perpetual “what ifs.”

The 2026 World Cup is no longer a distant dream, it is 11 June away. Ghana still has friendlies lined up against Mexico and Wales in May. A new coach (rumours already swirl around names like Walid Regragui) will have mere weeks to:
(I) Drill defensive organisation that has leaked like a sieve.

(II) Forge chemistry among a squad of global stars who rarely play together.

(III) Finalize a 26-man roster under immense pressure.

(IV) Inject belief into a team that has just been told its leader wasn’t good enough.
This is not preparation. This is crisis management wearing a national jersey.

Sacking Addo is done. Regret changes nothing. The only question that matters is what comes next. Here is the roadmap Ghana must follow if the Black Stars are to write a new chapter instead of another tragic verse:

1. Appoint with urgency and vision, not panic. The next coach cannot be a short-term firefighter. He must be a proven tournament performer who can hit the ground running. Give him real authority over squad selection and tactics. No more committee interference.

2. Turn the remaining friendlies into laboratories. Use Mexico and Wales matches to test systems, not to chase results. Experiment boldly. Build the starting XI that will face the group stage in June.

3. Demand FA accountability – publicly and structurally. Fans and media must keep the heat on the administrators. Why were defensive weaknesses allowed to fester? Why were preparation camps and logistics not world-class? The FA should release a transparent post-mortem and commit to long-term reforms: youth academy overhaul, domestic league investment, and player welfare protocols that actually work.

4. Unite the family. Bring back senior players as leaders. Create a technical advisory panel that includes past legends. Ghanaian football thrives when it feels like a national mission, not a boardroom power play.

5. Embrace the pressure. The Black Stars have always performed when the world doubts them. This is not the time for fear; it is the time for the famous Ghanaian never-say-die spirit that once made the world stand up and take notice.

The sacking of Otto Addo was understandable in the heat of the moment. Whether it was wise will be judged not by headlines today, but by how Ghana performs when the World Cup whistle blows in June.

The talent is there. The passion has never left. The only missing piece is stability, strategy, and the courage to break the cycle.

The nation, and the entire Black Stars family are watching. The clock is ticking. This is not just another coaching change, it is a moment of truth for Ghanaian football.

Will the Black Stars rise, or will history repeat itself? The answer starts now.

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Tamale Metro Assembly Members Confirm Fuseini Okasha as PM

Assembly Members of Tamale Metropolitan Assembly have confirmed Fuseini Okasha as their Presiding Member, renewing his mandate for another 2 years term.

During a ‘Yes or No’ vote confirmation, the Incumbent Presiding Member received 56 ‘Yes’ votes, while 2 people objected his confirmation by thumb printing on the ‘No’ vote.

This came after fellow contender Ibrahim Iddrisu stepped down, paving way for the Incumbent PM to stand unopposed in the second round of the election after first round of the elections by the Assembly Members failed to produce a winner with each contestant failing to meet the threshold of the 42 votes.

While the Presiding Member polled 34 votes to have an edge this time around, Ibrahim Iddrisu garnered 26 votes, pushing the contest to another elections per the status of the Assembly amid tensions and apprehensions.

The outcome of the first round of the elections today, Wednesday 18th March 2026, reflects 10 days ago when the Assembly Members convened to elect PM with the Presiding Member trailing in the contest while Ibrahim Iddrisu led him in the elections.Failing to build consensus, non of contenders opted to stepdown for the other in the last sitting.

In a sharp contrast, Ibrahim Iddrisu, who trailed in the contest today, demonstrated courage, humility and accepted to step down for the PM to go unopposed in the elections.

His decision was anchored on pleas, advice, broader consultation coupled with an intervention made by the Tamale Mayor, Adam Abukari Takoro.

Following the outcome of the elections, Hon. Fuseini Okasha was administered into oath as the Presiding Member of the Tamale Metropolitan Assembly under the guidance of Justice Emmanuel.

This has put rest the seeming divisions, factions, resentment and antagonism nearly creeping into the Assembly due to the Presiding Membership elections.

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Parent assaults Nahada Teacher over disciplinary action meted out to his son

A parent identified as Mba Muniru from Kunyevula, has assaulted Mr.Salifu Abdul Karim, a teacher at the Nahada Islamic Primary School at Gbambaya, a suburb of Tamale, over meting out disciplinary action to his son following a misconduct.

This follows a physical confrontation involving the ward in question and his colleague student, degenerating into physical exchanges of blows, necessitating the intervention of the class teacher to ensure that discipline and sanity prevail in the class by disciplining both culprits involved.

Having been briefed about the happenings in school by his son, Mba Muniru took the issue out of proportion and stormed the private residence of the teacher to accost him after close of school, engaging personal fisticuffs with him, hitting him with a pestle, and also bitting him in the process to inflict visible wounds on his hand.

Before this attack, Mba Muniru executed similar attacks on the teacher at the school’s premises on the same day the incident occurred, dated Monday, 16th March 2026.

Following this development, the Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT), Zogbeli local, in a statement has waded into the issue condemning the conduct of the parent, describing it as unfortunate and regrettable.

GNAT expressed its full support and solidarity to the affected teacher, stating that assaults on teachers do not only endanger the lives of educators but also undermine discipline, professionalism, and the integrity of the educational system.

A portion of the statement said: “GNAT stands in full solidarity with the affected teacher and has actively supported him throughout the reporting process at the police station. We strongly condemn this act of violence and intimidation against a professional teacher who was duly carrying out his lawful responsibilities.We wish to state unequivocally that any form of assault on teachers is unacceptable and will not be tolerated. Such actions not only endanger the lives of educators but also undermine discipline, professionalism, and the integrity of the educational system”.

With the support of GNAT, the victim has formally reported the case to the Sagnarigu Police Station for investigation and possible prosecution as required to serve as deterrent for others.

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Afa Siisu Sa-eed is the heir apparent to Masjidul Bayaan – Sheikh Baasha announces

Published by Inusah Dondaliya

17th March 2026

Leader of Masjidul Bayaan, Sheikh Ibrahim Iddrisu Baasha has declared Afa Siisu Sa-eed, a trainee of the Bayaan Institute as his successor, a confirmation of leadership responsibility on the shoulders of the latter, bringing a close to raging debate as who succeeds the learned Islamic Scholar.

Malam Basha made the bold announcement at the climax of his 2026 Ramadan Sermon at the Masjidul Bayaan’s Mosque in Tamale in the presence of thousands of followers gathered, imploring on his followers to place high regard to his decision, accord the chosen leader with maximum respect and cooperation required for the forward march of the Islamic Institution.

The new leadership direction means Sheikh Siisu Sa-eed will now herald weekly sermons at the Masjidul Bayaan which takes place on every Friday. Prior to this declaration, Sheikh Baasha used to take charge of the Friday’s Sermons by himself at the Mosque.

This decision by Sheikh Ibrahim Baasha is also marking an end to an era 5 decades of service of preaching, spreading the words of Allah, promulgation of Islam, and fighting the wrongs in society in line with principles of Islam. Above all, ensuring that Sunnah as Islamic sect is deeply rooted in Muslim Ummah, engineering its spread across the Northern Region.

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