Kotoka International Airport (IATA: ACC, ICAO: DGAA) in Accra, the capital of Greater Accra in the West African country Ghana, is an international airport and has the capacity for large aircraft such as the Boeing 747-8.
Kotoka International Airport (IATA: ACC, ICAO: DGAA) w Accra, the capital of Greater Accra in the West African country Ghana, is an international airport and has the capacity for large aircraft such as the Boeing 747-8.


Greater Accra
Abakosɛm

The airport consists of two passenger terminals, labelled as Terminal 1 and Terminal 2. Terminal 1 serves primarily domestic and regional operators, while Terminal 2 serves primarily international and longhaul operators.
Construction officially commenced on 1st March 2016 on a new $250 million Terminal 3 which is capable of handling 5 million passengers a year and will be equipped with new state of the art Facilities.

The terminals are connected by an internal walkway. There is also a VVIP terminal used for diplomatic flights and a military terminal used for military operations.
New Terminal 3 will handle 1,250 passengers an hour, equipped with three business lounges, large commercial and retail area and six boarding bridges.

Terminal 2 is the principal international departure terminal and includes restaurants, duty-free shops and two Business Class lounges.
The terminal is expected to be completed by end of July 2017.[5]

Adinkra which is managed by Aviance and Akwaaba under the management of AHS Menzies. There is a general seating area with a duty-free shop and bars for passenger. State Protocol Lounge is used by Senior Government Officials/Diplomats and VVIPS.
Awiemuhyen ne bea a ɛkɔ

New Terminal Three
Passenger

Construction officially commenced on 1st March 2016 on a new $250 million Terminal 3 which is capable of handling 5 million passengers a year and will be equipped with new state of the art Facilities. New Terminal 3 will handle 1,250 passengers an hour, equipped with three business lounges, large commercial and retail area and six boarding bridges. The terminal is expected to be completed by end of July 2017.[5]
Cargo

Kotoka International Airport
Kotoka Wiemuhyɛn gyinabea

Kumasi International Airport (IATA: KMS, ICAO: DGSI) is an international airport serving Kumasi, the capital of the Ashanti Region and the Ashantiland Sothern Ghana.[1][2] It is the busiest airport on the Ashantiland Peninsula. Kumasi International Airport is located 6 kilometres (4 mi) from Kumasi.
Kumase Wiemuhyɛn gyinabea (IATA: KMS, ICAO: DGSI) yɛ wiemuhyɛn gyinabea a ɛwɔ Ghana.[1][2] Ɛno nkoaa ne wiemuhyɛn gyinabea a ɛwɔ Kumase. KumaseWiemuhyɛn ɛ yɛ kwansin nsia ɛfiri Kumase .

The airport was closed for a week in September - October 2012 to allow resurfacing of the tarmac.[3] The current traffic at the airport stands at 42,000 a month.
Wɔtoo saa wiemuhyɛn gyinabea yi mu wɔ Ɛbɔ bosome mu wɔ afe 2012 mu seneɛ wobɛtumi asiesie kwantenpɔn no mu.[3] Sesiara ɛwiumhyɛn bɛyɛ,42000 bosome biara.

Airlines and scheduled destinations
Ɛwiemuhyɛn ne bea a ɛkɔ

The Kumasi International Airport has undergone rehabilitation to become an International Airport. Work to upgrade the Kumasi Airport to international standard was scheduled to be completed by the end of 2015.
Wayɛ nsiesie bebree w Kumase Wiemuhyɛn gyinabea Kumase Wiemuhyɛn gyinabea sɛ deɛ ɛbɛyɛ wiemuhyɛn akeseɛ bɛtumi ɛfiri ha akɔ ɔman ahodoɔ so.Wɔ gyidi sɛ afe 2015 nkɔ na awieyɛ na wawie saa dwumadie

The project, valued at about $300 million, will see the construction of a new two-storey ultra-modern terminal, restaurants, shopping and parking areas, and a ring road around the airport.
Saa dwumadie ne boɔ bɛyɛ Amerika sika $300 ɔpepee, wei bɛma wiemuhyɛn gyinabea yi a yɛ abɛfo afei nso bɛbia ye didi ne dwadie bea nyinaa bɛba abɛka ho.

Currently, upgrading work on the existing runway and some related works are in progress. A new runway will be added in due course, after which flights can take off and land in the night.[4] Currently an Instrument Landing System (ILS) to aid pilots for take off and landing has been inaugurated.[5]
Sesiara ɛnam saa dwumadie yi nti wiemuhyɛn tumi tu anqdwo.[4] Afei nso nfidie ne nkanea a ɛboa wiemuhyɛnkafoɔ wabue ano a ɛboa wiemuhyɛnkafoɔ .[5]

References
Nhwehwɛmu

Kumasi Airport
Kumase Wiemuhyɛn gyinabea

U.S. Senator Jake Garn claimed to be able to see the Great Wall with the naked eye from a space shuttle orbit in the early 1980s, but his claim has been disputed by several U.S. astronauts. Veteran U.S. astronaut Gene Cernan has stated: "At Earth orbit of 100 to 200 miles [160 to 320 km] high, the Great Wall of China is, indeed, visible to the naked eye." Ed Lu, Expedition 7 Science Officer aboard the International Space Station, adds that, "it's less visible than a lot of other objects.
Great Wall of China yε tete nnoɔma akoraeɛ u [[China]].

Tizza is a small town in the Jirapa District of the Upper West Region of Ghana.The People of this town speak Dagaare[1][2][3]
Tizza y3 kroum kitsiwaa 3w) Jirapa, Upper West Region, Gana. Nkrofo a )motse krom no ka Dagaare[1][2][3]

↑ "Tizza community gets children's facility". Retrieved 2016-09-20. ↑ "Tizza community gets children's facility". Retrieved 2016-09-20. ↑ "Tizza - Upper West Region Map, Weather and Photos - Ghana: populated place - Lat:10.6 and Long:-2.71667". www.getamap.net.
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Kumasi Wesley Senior High School is a female second cycle institution in Kumasi in the Ashanti Region of Ghana.[1][2]
Kumasi Wesley Senior High School yɛ ntoaso sukuu a ɛwɔ Kumasi, Ghana.[1][2]

"Girl collapses as violent rainstorm leaves 25 Kumasi Wesley Girls students injured - MyJoyOnline". www.myjoyonline.com. Retrieved 2016-11-28. ↑ WOWCITY.com. "Kumasi Wesley Girls' Senior High School in Kumasi, Ashanti, Ghana | Kumasi Local Shopping Guide". gh.wowcity.com.
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Origins
Mfitiase

Characteristics
Biribi su

Kente, known as nwentom in Akan, is a type of silk and cotton fabric made of interwoven cloth strips and is native to the Akan ethnic group of West Ghana.
Nnwentom y3 din a w)de fr3 kente w) Akanfo nkurow mu. Wonya kente yi fi "silk" ne asaawafuturu berea w)n anwene ntoma no nteatea de abomu ama no ay3 k3se mua.

Kente is made in Akan lands such as Ashanti Kingdom, (Bonwire, Adanwomase, Sakora Wonoo, Ntonso in the Kwabre areas of the Ashanti Region) It is also worn by the south eastern, central, and a part of the northern people of Ghana.
Akanfo nkurow ahorow a w)w) Ghana, West Africa no edi kente ho dwuma paa. Saa nkurow no bi ne Asanteman( Bonwire, Adanwomase, Sakora Wonoo ne Ntonso. Saa nkurow yi nyinaa w) Asanteman nkurow k3se baako a 3de Kwabre).

Kente comes from the word kenten, which means basket in Akan dialect Asante.
Nnipa a w)w) Anafo- Apue, Mfinimfini me Atifi mantam nso fura kente .

Akans refer to kente as nwentoma, meaning woven cloth.
Edin kente no fi asemfua kenten w) Asante kasa mu.

It is an Akan royal and sacred cloth worn only in times of extreme importance and was the cloth of kings. Over time, the use of kente became more widespread.
Akanfo fr3 kente nwentoma a ase kyer3 s3 ntoma a w)n anwene . Kan no, na 3y3 Akanfo ahenfo ntoma a na ahenfo no fura no dap)n nna nkotoo afei nso na wonni ho agoru koraa.

However, its importance has remained and it is held in high esteem with Akans.
Nanso mmere kakra yi de, nnipa pii fura kente a wonni ho agoru koraa de nnidi a 3s3 ma ntoma no.

Kente characterized by weft designs woven into every available block of plain weave is called adweneasa.
Adweneasa ka kente ntoma ahorow no bi. Ne nnwene no y3 soronko efis3 w)to w)nbo hyehy3 nhoma no yie de hy3 kwan biara aka ne nwene no mu.

The Akan people choose kente cloths as much for their names as their colors and patterns.
Akanfo p3 kente a, w)hwehw3 no fi din a 3daso titiriw ansa na w)nahw3 s3 3y3 tumtum, k)k)) anaa fitaa ansa na s3nea ne nwene no te.

Although the cloths are identified primarily by the patterns found in the lengthwise (warp) threads, there is often little correlation between appearance and name.
Mp3n pii no, kente hu mu gyina "pattern" a 3da mu w) ne tenten nwene no mu nanso 3y3 a , nsonsonoe ketewa bi na 3da kente no din ne ne nwenebea mu.

Names are derived from several sources, including proverbs, historical events, important chiefs, queen mothers, and plants.The cloth symbolizes high in value.
Akwan ahorow a w)nya din de to kente so no bi fi kasakoa, nne3ma titiriw bi a 3si, ahenfo atitiriw, ahenfo maame ne nnua mu. Ne saa nti, ntoma no gyina h) ma ade a , edi mu.

West Africa has had a cloth weaving culture for centuries via the stripweave method, but Akan history tells of the cloth being created independent of outsider influence.
"West Africafo" dii kan nyaa w)n ntoma nwene kwan mmere pii a atwam. Na w)nwene fa "strip weave" kwan so. Nanso, Akanfo abak)s3m kyer3 s3, w)n de, w)hy33, ase nwene w)ankasa ntoma a obiara anfi baabi ankyer3 w)n s3nea w) nwene ntoma.

Kente cloth has its origin from the Akan-Ashanti kingdoms in Ghana.
Kente ntoma ahy3ase fi Akan-Asanteman mu w) Ghana.

The origin of kente is in the Akan empire of Bonoman.
Kente ntoma nwene fii ase w) Akanfo tete )man k3se Bonoman.

Most Akans migrated out of the area that was Bonoman to create various states.[1] The Ewe people of Ghana think the weaving of Kente originates with them, although they are not claiming they invented the art of weaving.
Akanfo ahorow a w) fii Bonoman no k) kyekyee w)n nkurow nketekete. Ayigbefo a 3w) )man Ghana mu gyidi s3 kente hy33 ase fii w)n h) na 3mmom akwan a w)fa so nwene ade mfitiase de ennfi w)n h).

They suggest that the name is derived from Kete which relates to the two alternating rhythmic actions (ke and te, meaning open and press in the Ewe language) associated with the weaving of the loom.
Ayigbefo yi san kase edin "Kente" no fi asemfua "Kete" a , asekyer3 ( bue ne mia ) w) w)n kasa mu s3nea w)nwene kente w) ne dua so no.

Legend has it that kente was first made by two Akan friends who went hunting in an Asanteman forest found a spider making its web.[5] The friends stood and watched the spider for two days then returned home and implemented what they had seen.
Abak)s3m kyer3 s3, kente nwene hy33 ase berea nnamfo mmienu bi k)huu ananse w) w)n ahay) w) nnwura mu a na )renwene ne dan. Nnamfo mmienu yi hw33 na afei nso sua a nea na ananse no rey3 no nna mmienu. Woduu fie no, wofii ase nwene nea wohuu s3 ananse no rey3 no.

Kente academic stoles are often used by African Americans as a symbol of ethnic pride.[6][7][8] This practice is also very popular with historically black Greek letter fraternities and sororities. African American students hold special ceremonies called "Donning of the Kente" where the stoles are presented to the graduates.
[6][7][8]

Kente cloth
Nnwentom

Early life and education
Adesua ne abrabɔ

Jean Adukwei Mensa is a Ghanaian lawyer and chairperson of the Electoral Commission of Ghana.[1][2][3] She is the Executive Director of the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), and Co-ordinator of the Ghana Political Parties Programme.[1]
Gyean Adukwei Mensa y mmranim ni ɔda Gana [[Abatoɔ Asoe]] so .[1]

Jean Adukwei Mensa had her secondary education at the St Mary's Senior High School in Korle Gonno.
Jean Adukwei Mensa kɔɔ sukuu wɔ St Mary's Senior High School in [[Kɔle Gonno]].

Cocoa production
Kookoo

Agriculture
Kuayε

Financial Services
Sikasεm

Koforidua, also popularly known as K-dua or kof town , is a city and capital of Eastern Region in south Ghana.
Koforidua, yε kuro bi a Gaana anofo. Koforidua y Gaana Atɔe Mantam mu kuropɔn anaa ahenkuro.

The city was founded in 1875 Koforidua has a settlement central city population of 127,334 people in 2012.[1]
Wɔtee Koforidua wɔ afe 1875 mu. Nipa a wɔ Koforidua bεyε 127,334.[1]