Global news giant CNN has corrected an error it committed in its report on Ghana during the country's just ended elections. The US-based news house had in a post-elections report described Ghana as a country where citizens queue up for food, sparking anger among Ghanaians on social media.
The internet community in Ghana tweeted their displeasure about the apparent untruth in the CNN report under the hashtag #CNNgetitright.Responding to the development, CNN corrected the error in the story and added a note saying: "An earlier version of this article incorrectly described the status of the retail economy in Ghana. Stores are generally well stocked, and food shortages are rare.
The earlier version also erroneously said Nana Akufo-Addo ran for president in 1998. Ghana did not have presidential elections in 1998".
Below are details of the story.
Ghanaian President John Mahama has conceded defeat to Nana Akufo-Addo in the recently concluded elections, a spokesman for the President-elect told CNN on Friday. Akufo-Addo, of the New Patriotic Party, won 5,180,389 to 4,193,861, or about 55% to 45%, reported representatives at the EC National Coalition Centre, which verified results sheets from 241 constituencies.
Akufo-Addo, the son of a former president, had lost prior runs for the presidency in 2008 and 2012. He alleged voter fraud after the 2012 loss to Mahama. The Supreme Court spent more than a month deliberating before declaring Mahama the winner by a narrow margin.
As the vice president, he first took office after the death of President John Evans Atta Mills.
According to his campaign website, Akufo-Addo has promised to improve the economy by overseeing the mining of untapped bauxite deposits and building an integrated aluminum industry. Part of a former British colony, Ghana was among the first African countries to gain independence, in 1957. It endured a series of coups before a military dictator, Jerry Rawlings, took power in 1981. Rawlings led Ghana through a transition to democracy about 10 years later.