
Audio By Carbonatix
Mr Kwaku Ansah-Asare, Director of Readwide Ghana Limited, has appealed to Ghanaian publishers to publish books locally.He said publishing books locally could help reduce the price of books and other publications to enable people to afford them.Mr Ansah-Asare said this in a speech read for him at the launch of the 23rd Book Week celebration organized by the Ghana Association of Book Industry Students and Associates (GABISA) at the Publishing Studies Department of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in Kumasi at the weekend.It was under the theme, "Ghana @ 50, The Role of the Book Industry".He said the nation's bid to eradicate illiteracy would be a mirage if the cost of producing and the prices of books continued to increase since people would not be able to buy them to enhance their knowledge.The Director said he was not happy that most Ghanaians did not like reading and this had affected the development of education.Mr Ansah-Asare appealed to parents to make it a habit of buying books for their children as presents during special occasions like Christmas and on their birthdays.He said plans were far advanced for him to establish reading clubs in all schools.This is aimed at encouraging students to read and appealed to school authorities to organize reading competitions to encourage students to cultivate the habit of reading.Mr Isaac Kofi Appiah, former Head of the Publishing Studies Department of KNUST, urged students to adopt the habit of learning a word a day since that was a sure way of developing their vocabulary and knowledge.He attributed most offences and breach of contracts to people's inability to read and understand simple instructions such as signposts and directional signboards and advised students to strive at all cost to acquire knowledge through reading.Mrs Vesta Adu-Gyamfi, Dean of the Faculty of Industrial Art of KNUST, said since the book industry affected every facet of life, there was the need for the book industry to be given a boost.She attributed most examination malpractices to students' bad attitude towards reading and called for a change to enable them go through their education without much difficulty.Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Guggisberg Fiagbenu enters race for Central Tongu NPP Chairmanship in Volta region
9 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Thursday, April 9, 2026
33 minutes -
“Black Stars have what it takes to win the World Cup” – Sports Minister Kofi Adams
59 minutes -
Bank of Ghana Governor to perform official tee-off at 3i Africa Invitational Tournament
1 hour -
Chamber of Bulk Oil Distributors urges caution amidst Special Prosecutor’s petroleum probe
2 hours -
NDC elections: Nat Tetteh eyes Eastern Regional Deputy Secretary position
2 hours -
Ablakwa highlights Ghana-France cooperation, praises Macron on reparatory justice
2 hours -
Protect people, not prices – Joe Jackson rejects fuel tax cuts and subsidies
2 hours -
Finance Ministry, BoG clarify false claims about Databank’s bond market specialist status
2 hours -
Lawyer petitions President to halt Terminal 2 refurbishment over value-for-money concerns
2 hours -
Sunyani Market traders urge government action amid surging ginger prices
2 hours -
Maphlix Farms to supply 3,000 tonnes to help bridge tomato deficit
3 hours -
Ho MP urges public access to officials’ asset declarations
3 hours -
Ecowas Bank for Investment and Development targets SMEs in Ghana with fresh funding for 2026
3 hours -
Two killed in Bosomtwe clash as residents demand increased security presence
3 hours