News
New UK Visa Centre Opens in Kumasi — Here’s What You Need to Know

Residents of Kumasi and the wider Ashanti Region now have reason to celebrate as UK visa services have officially come closer to home. Beginning 26th June 2025, applicants seeking UK visas will no longer need to endure long trips to Accra for their application processes.
In a significant move aimed at improving customer convenience and addressing rising demand, VFS Global, the official partner for UK visa services, has announced the opening of a brand-new UK Visa Application Centre in Kumasi.
New Location:
VFS Ghana Private Limited
Golden Bean Hotel – Kumasi
3rd Floor, No: 19 Harper Road
Nhyiaeso, Adum – Kumasi
This development is expected to greatly benefit students, business travelers, tourists, and families in the northern and middle belts of Ghana who have previously had to travel to the capital city for visa services.
According to an official statement published on 20th June 2025, VFS Global noted that the Kumasi centre is being launched to “enhance customer experience and cater to a growing demand from our customers.” The new facility promises to deliver the same world-class standards as the Accra centre, including biometric enrollment, document submission, and optional premium services.
Why This Matters:
Reduced travel time and cost for applicants in Ashanti, Brong-Ahafo, and surrounding regions. Improved accessibility to UK visa services for students and professionals. Enhanced processing experience in a familiar local environment.
For full information on services, operational hours, and to book your appointment, applicants are encouraged to visit the official Visa Application page.
This is a major step in decentralizing visa services in Ghana and enhancing regional equity in access to international opportunities.

Stay tuned to AladdynKing Media for more updates on travel, education, and immigration news.
News
Holidays that fall on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays to be observed on Fridays – See all changes here

The Minister for the Interior, Mohammed Muntaka Mubarak, has announced major changes to Ghana’s public holiday calendar.
Through the Interior Ministry, the government laid before Parliament the Public Holidays and Commemorative Days (Amendment) Bill, 2025.
The proposed legislation sought to establish July 1 as a new public holiday and restore the controversial Founder’s Day observance to September 21.
In welcome news for workers, the bill includes provisions to move all midweek holidays (falling on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, or Thursdays) to Fridays.
“Mr. Speaker, we are keeping 1st January as New Year Day, 7th January as Constitutional Day, 6th March as Independence Day, March or April for Good Friday for our Christian brothers, March or April as Easter Monday for our Christian brothers, 1st May as Labour Day, 1st July as Republic Day. It was pushed to commemorate it. We believe that this is a very significant day in the life of Ghana that we should not just relegate to the background and therefore we are bringing it back as a full holiday and we believe that as a country we are united around the 1st July,” the Minister said.
This change aims to create longer weekends and potentially boost productivity.
However, the Minority in Parliament has strongly objected to the Majority’s decision to fast-track the bill under a certificate of urgency.
Opposition members argued this approach sidelines more pressing national issues that require parliamentary attention.
In the end, Parliament passed the Public Holidays and Commemorative Days (Amendment) Bill, 2025.
myjoyonline.com
News
I’v been threatened that I’ll be harmed if I fail to resign or retire – Justice Torkonoo claims

Suspended Chief Justice Gertrude Araba Esaaba Sackey Torkornoo has alleged that she has received multiple threats urging her to resign or suffer harm, following petitions filed to remove her from office.
Speaking publicly for the first time since her suspension, Justice Torkornoo said, “I have heard on several occasions, from loved ones, persons who care, persons who may not know me beyond my public duties.
“And many who think that, since it is clear that the current proceedings seem to be carefully staged to result in my removal as Chief Justice, it would be best if I just retired or resigned, rather than subject myself to an ill-motivated process.” She added that veiled threats had been made against her safety if she failed to step down.
The Chief Justice, who addressed the nation on Wednesday, June 25, described the actions against her as part of “a political agenda to remove me and control the Judiciary,” noting widespread media commentary to that effect.
“I thank all those who have engaged in this conversation out of concern for my safety and well-being,” she said.
Dismissing suggestions that she is clinging to power, Justice Torkornoo emphasised her long service to the legal profession,
“As a lawyer of 38 years standing, a judge of 21 years standing, and Chief Justice of Ghana who has served in the rule of law all of my working life, I consider it my onerous duty and obligation to speak up concerning the administration of justice in this country.”
She said the ordeal had opened her eyes to “a model of injustice that I would never have thought possible if I had not been exposed to it,” and declared her intent “to marshal every effort, in law and leadership, to answer to this situation.”
The Chief Justice explained that under Ghana’s Constitution, judges cannot simply resign while Article 146 proceedings used to remove high office holders are underway. She referenced Supreme Court case J6/02/2019, noting: “There is a decided case on the subject… No one has the authority to walk away from proceedings started by the State.”
She warned that resigning mid-process would not only forfeit her entitlements but would also allow false claims to go unchallenged.
“A judge who resigns or retires would still lose all entitlements because they failed to defend the claims and resigned or retired while the proceedings were going on.”
“If false claims are made against a judge or any commissioner or other public office holder… the solution cannot be to resign or voluntarily retire out of frustration, pressure or fear,” she said.
“One would only find themselves being subjected to two cruelties – a judgment based on false claims, and loss of everything that one has worked for.”
Justice Torkornoo stated that any such resignation would wrongly imply that “this flawed, unknown and opaque process is acceptable. It is not.”
“The current bizarre proceedings I have brought to your attention presents a twist to our nation’s democratic journey that we ignore only at great cost, ” she stated.
myjoyonline.com
News
VIDEO: My resignation will be an admission that this flawed process is acceptable – Suspended CJ Torkornoo

Suspended Chief Justice Gertrude Torkornoo has declared she would not resign from office, framing her removal process as unconstitutional and politically motivated.
Her speech in Accra marks a critical moment in Ghana’s escalating judicial crisis, as this is the first time such an address by a Chief Justice is being conducted.
Addressing the press on Wednesday, June 25, she explained that “If I resign under these circumstances, I will be saying that this flawed, unknown and opaque possesses acceptable. It is not.”
“Finally, let me respectfully say that the current bizarre proceedings that I have brought to your attention present a twist to our nation’s democratic journey that we all ignore at our own cost.”
Justice Torkornoo’s suspension on April 22, 2025, followed three petitions alleging misconduct, which President John Mahama deemed sufficient to trigger an investigation under Article 146(6) of Ghana’s 1992 Constitution.
A five-member committee was formed to probe the allegations, but the process has been mired in controversy.
The suspended Chief Justice has repeatedly challenged the proceedings, filing a Supreme Court injunction to halt the committee’s work, citing violations of her rights.
According to her, Ghana has come too far “not to be concerned about the unconstitutionalities that have been designed not to affect just me personally as Chief Justice, but all judges and public officers, subject to removal processes of Article 146.
She alleges degrading treatment, including body searches, confiscation of electronic devices, and exclusion of her family from hearings held at Osu Castle, a high-security zone she called “psychological intimidation”
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