Showbiz › General News       27.11.2015

GH¢100,000 For 'Heroes Of Change' Winner

The 2015 edition of the MTN Heroes of Change project, which gives out money to support an individual engaged in an extraordinary charity activity in Ghana, is ready to take off and after a nationwide search for community heroes, some ten nominees have been shortlisted as finalists.

The overall winner of Heroes of Change will this year receive an amount of GH₵100,000 while each of the category winners for the three focus areas will receive GH₵20,000.  The other seven finalists will be given GH₵5,000 to support their work.

In addition to these prizes, the public will have the benefit of donating to any of the ten shortlisted projects through SMS and MTN Mobile Money. This way, the public gets a chance to support the work of the identified heroes who will be showcased on TV.

The winner for last year, Dr Abrokwa Yankyera, a plastic surgeon and founder of the Graft Foundation, received a cash prize of GH₵50,000. This enabled him to treat more patients in the Volta and Eastern Regions of Ghana.

The ten shortlisted finalists were selected after a team was dispatched into their respective communities to verify their stories and their impact on their communities.

They include Dr Emmanuel Bidzaikin who established the only hospital in Nakpanduri, a community in the Northern Region.  The 37-year-old doctor funds the hospital from his purse, donations from individuals and Emmanuel Quartey, founder of the JAYNII Streetwise Foundation in Accra.

The rest are Isaac Adjaottor, a community health worker at Ada Foah who is into Rural Community Development and  Nayina Karim, a 46-year-old social entrepreneur. He established a rehabilitation centre for malnourished children at Karaga in the Northern Region.

Also on the list is Nicholas Kuma who has established a child advocacy group which provides education, healthcare and other needs a child might have. He is based at Bolgatanga in the Upper East Region.

Another finalist is Pastor Joseph Jehu-Appiah, a pastor at the Victory Bible Church (Elohim Sanctuary). He set up the Mephibosheth Training Centre solely dedicated  to caring for disabled children within the society. The children are schooled at the centre and are provided with clothing, food and shelter.

There is also Paul Semeh, a social worker in Accra who has established the Streetwise Children Empowerment Fund and Paulina Opei, aged 57, a nurse by profession. She has an orphanage at Anwia Nkwanta  in the Ashanti Region for abandoned children.

Another nominee is Salome Francois, founder of the New Horizon School at Cantonments in Accra. It is a not-for-profit charity institution that provides day school education for children and vocational training and employment for adults who have intellectual disability. Persons with other disabilities like spastic, cerebral palsy, visually impaired, hearing impediment, etc are also admitted so long as their primary disability is learning difficulty.

Finally, Yvonne Boaduaa  who runs an NGO, Nyakonton Rehab,  at Begero in the Eastern Region, is also on the list. She self-finances the facility which provides training and housing to persons living with disability.  The aim is to equip them with some vocational and technical skills needed to earn a living. The beneficiaries use these skills to create items that they sell and the profits are used for their upkeep.

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