[Nyasa Times] Construction workers have ended their two-week strike at the Nkhata Bay Market and resumed work after resolving their grievances with the employer.
[New Dawn] The Manager of the Harper Sea Port in Maryland County, William W. Wallace has joined citizens in reconditioning roads leading to Lake Shepherd and William R. Tolbert Drive communities in Harper City.
[Foroyaa] President Barrow on Thursday told lawmakers that plans are underway to construct eight permanent treatment centres, and refurbish other isolation centres across the country. He said that if the need arises, former Ndemban Clinic and the Sanatorium are ready for use as centres to treat COVID-19 patients.
[Ghanaian Times] Communications Manager of Hearts of Oak, Kwame Opare Addo, has disclosed that the first phase of the club's Pobiman Project would be completed in three weeks.
[Ghanaian Times] A $321-million pharmaceutical park is to be developed within the Dawa Industrial Zone (DIZ) in the Greater Accra Region, to serve as a one-stop shop for the processing and manufacturing of pharmaceutical products like drugs.
[Ghanaian Times] Takoradi -- Construction works have begun on a 3-tier PTC Interchange project at the Kwame Nkrumah roundabout in Takoradi, the Western Region capital.
[SNA] Khartoum -- Sudan Railways Corporation SRC General Manager Eng. Walid Ahmed Mahmoud has discussed means of joint cooperation between the corporation and the American Administration.
[East African] The World Bank on Thursday approved a $130 million grant to Uganda for road infrastructure in the West Nile sub-region. The region hosts the bulk of South Sudanese and Congolese refugees.
[Leadership] Asaba -- A political pressure group, the Delta North Progressive Assembly, has called on the Federal Government to expedite work on the ongoing Second Niger Bridge saying that there was an urgent need to give reprieve to the present Niger Bridge linking Delta State and the South East region.
[Nation] Elgeyo-Marakwet County's development coordination committee has indefinitely suspended construction work at the Sh281 million Kamariny Stadium due to slow pace of work.