Audio By Carbonatix
Parents of some 30 students at Bosomtwe who have been sponsored by the MP, Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum thronged his home to express their gratitude.
The freshers are to pursue engineering programs at the University of Mines and Technology (UMaT) in Tarkwa.

The grateful parents also bid farewell to their children from the home of the lawmaker who had hired a bus to convey the students to the campus.
The former deputy minister took to Facebook to announce his joy at the departure of the students.
“This morning, I bid farewell to 30 students from Bosomtwe who are on their way to University of Mines and Technology (UMaT) at Tarkwa. They are going to pursue various courses in Engineering fully funded by me.
“The excitement on their faces and that of the parents who had assembled in front of my Constituency Office building was palpable.

“Fees paid, accommodation provided and a bus ready to convey them to Tarkwa, I encouraged them to aim high, study hard, read wide and pursue success. My vision of ensuring that Bosomtwe gets 100 engineers within the next ten years is on course,” he wrote.
Sponsorship package for Bosomtwe students
In December last year, former Deputy Education Minister Dr. Yaw Osei Adutwum announced he was sponsoring thirty engineering students from the Bosomtwe constituency at the University of Mines and Technology (UMaT), Tarkwa, in the next academic year.

According to Dr Adutwum, who has also retained his seat as Member of Parliament for the constituency, the gesture is in line with his long-held objective to obtain 100 engineers and doctors each from the constituency before he leaves Parliament.
“My office has taken care of admission, tuition and accommodation of these 30 fresh students until they complete their various courses.

“This feat is part of (an already started) strategies and processes for the fulfilment of one of my political resolutions: to get, at least, 100 engineers and doctors each from my constituency by the time I leave office as MP.
"It is also a way to thank the Lord for how far He has brought me, looking at my story of how I nearly could not go to Secondary school because of poverty; and to also help others that might not have the opportunity to realize their dreams and potentials if they are not given a helping hand,” he announced on Facebook.

He added: “Apart from these thirty freshly admitted, soon-to-be UMaT-trained future engineers, there are other students pursuing medicine, engineering, education, nursing and other courses at different levels of tertiary education, both local and abroad, courtesy my office”.
Latest Stories
-
The $5.4 billion AI question: Will Africa create the future of music or just train it?
25 seconds -
MCGG warns unverified port claims risk reform gains
9 minutes -
Richard Lawson reveals the purpose that sustained his decades-long acting career
49 minutes -
Photo Story: Vice President visits Accra fire scene, donates relief items to victims
52 minutes -
Which way Nigeria? Ballot or bullet: The politics of insecurity and the future of democracy
52 minutes -
Police nab man over attack on Midwife at Tema Polyclinic
1 hour -
AMA supports Tudu fire victims with GH₵106,000 relief package
1 hour -
Turning trash into opportunity: EcoGreen empowers 109 youth, women and vulnerable groups in Techiman
1 hour -
Adversity doesn’t defeat us: Our response to it does (World Cup’ 2026 on my mind)
2 hours -
Christian Council seeks copy of amended anti-LGBTQ+ bill for legal review
2 hours -
SSNIT pension scheme is sustainable, can pay benefits for next 40 years – Director General
2 hours -
‘A man will never marry a man here in Ghana’ – Hassan Tampuli vows
2 hours -
GRNMA demands national policy to protect nurses and midwives following assault at Tema Polyclinic
2 hours -
Ghana wastes up to 45% of its tomatoes. A homegrown brand thinks it has the answer.
2 hours -
Ghanaian-American sentenced to 17 years for leading US$38m global email fraud scheme
2 hours