John Tia

John Akologu Tia (born 23 September 1954) is a politician and former Minister for Information in Ghana. He was the Member of Parliament for Talensi [1] until he lost to Robert Mosore Doameng in 2012 parliamentary election.

Hon

John Akologu Tia
Member of the Ghana Parliament
for Talensi
Assumed office
Jan 1993
Preceded byFirst in Fourth Republic
Majority1,052
Minister for Transport
Assumed office
Jan 2009
PresidentJohn Atta Mills
Member of Parliament for Talensi Constituency
In office
7 January 2005  6 January 2009
PresidentJohn Kufuor
Personal details
Born (1954-09-23) 23 September 1954
Gambaga, Ghana
NationalityGhanaian
Political partyNational Democratic Congress
Children4
Alma materGhana Institute of Journalism
ProfessionJournalist

Early life and education

Akologu was born at Gambaga in the Northern Region of Ghana.[2] He attended the Zobzia Primary School and then the Local Authority Middle School both at Gambaga. His secondary education was at the Tamale Secondary School from 1969 to 1974 where he obtained the GCE Ordinary Level. He later obtained a Diploma in Journalism at the Ghana Institute of Journalism in 1980.[2] He was a student at the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA) from 2005 to 2008.[2] He was awarded the Certificate in Management in June 2006. He then got a Diploma in Public Administration in June 2007 and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Public Administration in 2008.[2]

Career

Tia first worked as a pupil teacher at between 1974 and 1976. He then worked with the Information Services Department in Ghana in various capacities taking him from Gambaga to Bolgatanga in 1980. Between 1982 and 1990, he worked with the Ghana News Agency.Akologu was active in the Trade Unions between 1985 and 1992. He was a branch secretary and National Executive Council member of the Public Services Workers Union.

Politics

He got involved in local politics in 1982 when he became the Press Secretary of the Upper East Regional Secretariat of Peoples Defence Committees/Workers Defence Committees set up by the Provisional National Defence Council military government. He was elected an MP in the 1992 parliamentary election as a National Democratic Congress candidate. He has been the MP for Talensi constituency since the first parliament in the Fourth Republic from January 1993. He has been a Member of the ECOWAS Parliament from 2007. In 2009, he was appointed by President Mills as Minister for Information.

Elections

Akologu was elected as the member of parliament for the Talensi constituency of the Upper East Region of Ghana in the 2004 Ghanaian general elections.[3][4] He won on the ticket of the National Democratic Congress.[3][4] His constituency was a part of the 9 parliamentary seats out of 13 seats won by the National Democratic Congress in that election for the Upper East Region.[5] The National Democratic Congress won a minority total of 94 parliamentary seats out of 230 seats.[6] He was elected with 8,346 votes out of 22,148 total valid votes cast.[3][4] This was equivalent to 37.4% of total valid votes cast.[4][3] He was elected over Samuel Kuug Narook of the Peoples’ National Convention, Hajia Mariam Abagna Khalidi of the New Patriotic Party, John Teroug Zongbil of the Convention People’s Party and Robert N. Doameng Mosore an independent candidate.[4][3] These obtained 3,001, 5,354, 865 and 4,582 votes respectively of total votes cast.[3][4] These were equivalent to 13.5%, 24.2%, 3.9% and 20.7% respectively of total valid votes cast.[3][4]

Personal Life

Akologu is married with four children.[2]

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gollark: Which is weird, since all the SoCs ship with it.
gollark: This isn't a common feature here.
gollark: Software cannot directly kill people, but software always has *some* hardware. It just isn't particularly dangerous mostly.
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See also

References

  1. "Hon. John Tia Akologu - Minister for Information". Government of Ghana. Retrieved 13 June 2010.
  2. "Ghana MPs - MP Details - Akologu, John Tia". web.archive.org. 6 May 2016. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  3. Elections 2004; Ghana’s Parliamentary and Presidential Elections. Accra: Electoral Commission of Ghana; Friedrich Ebert Stiftung. 2005. p. 187.
  4. FM, Peace. "Ghana Election 2004 Results - Talensi Constituency". Ghana Elections - Peace FM. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  5. "Statistics of Presidential and Parliamentary Election Results". Fact Check Ghana. 10 August 2016. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
  6. FM, Peace. "Ghana Election 2004 Results - President". Ghana Elections - Peace FM. Retrieved 3 August 2020.
Parliament of Ghana
New title Talensi
1993 present
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by
Minister for Information
2009 present
Incumbent
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