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Ghana’s Sports Minister Mustapha Ussif has claimed he remains confident the nation can “successfully host an outstanding African Games” despite the multi-sport event being delayed until next year, and the construction of venues and facilities is “on track”.
The first African Games set to be held in Ghana were postponed from August this year until March 8 to 23 2024 because of economic pressures and delays in preparations.There have been calls for Ghana to pull out of staging the Games altogether because of an economic crisis which has led to huge price rises and a $3 billion (£2.3 billion/€2.7 billion) bailout from the International Monetary Fund.However, Ussif toured facilities in Accra and insisted Ghana remains in a position to host the African Games.”The progress we’ve seen today is truly commendable,” he said.”The facilities of the University of Ghana are of exceptional quality and meet the highest international standards.”I am confident that, with the continued dedication and support of all parties, we will successfully host an outstanding African Games.”The University of Ghana Stadium is undergoing renovation to host athletics, football and rugby sevens at Accra 2023, and the Athletes’ Village is also due to be based at the institution.Ghana is due to host the African Games for the first time next year, after it was delayed because of economic pressures and delays in preparations ©Getty ImagesUssif claimed the projects at the University of Ghana are close to completion and will be finished before the deadline of December of this year.”To assure the country and media, we will finish the facilities and do testing before the Games,” he added.”We are not grappling with meeting deadlines.”We are on track and are going to ensure the contractors complete the facilities on time.”The contractor did indicate we are almost 70 per cent complete with the stadium, some of the other facilities are at 80 per cent.”The Games Village is almost 85 per cent complete.”Construction of the Borteyman Sports Complex remains ongoing to host the majority of sport events on the programme for Accra 2023.This project includes a new aquatics centre, while judo, taekwondo and weightlifting are among the other sports due to be held at Borteyman.
The subject of this year’s prestigious Beatrice de Cardi lectures, held at the Society of Antiquaries of London, was the archaeological discoveries over the past 22 years in Bahrain.In 2001, the Crown Prince and Prime Minister of Bahrain, Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, established the Anglo-Bahraini Early Islamic Bahrain Project to understand how Islam travelled across the country that, as an island nation, was a key stepping point between the Arabian peninsula and Persia and East Asia.“The state of archaeology in Bahrain has always been very good, but the Islamic period was neglected,” says Timothy Insoll, the Al-Qasimi professor of African and Islamic Archaeology at the University of Exeter, who delivered the lecture. “I think it was in part to do with the fact that people think [Islam] is what we are now – so why is it important archaeologically?”Islam was also not a preferred subject of study for most European or American teams, who tended to excavate periods they perceived more of a connection to such as early Christianity or Greco-Roman sites – whether in Bahrain or other locations across the Islamic world, such as Afghanistan.Insoll and his teams worked to fill in these missing gaps to try and understand what happened from around 7th to 11th centuries when the inhabitants of Bahrain converted to Islam, largely from Christianity.Timothy Insoll, the Al-Qasimi Professor of African and Islamic Archaeology at the University of Exeter. Photo: Wikimedia commons In the 2010s, they found the site of Bilad Al Qadeem, which they have shown to be the centre of Islamic settlement in the 11th to 13th century AD. Excavations at the palace there divulged information about what kinds of food the inhabitants then ate, how they kept and stored water and even the environment.The presence of mollusks showed that ground was wetter and danker than the current desert. That might have brought with it its own complications – such as the spread of parasites, which Insoll and his team theorise came along trade routes. The large mangrove trees that were used to support the palace at Bilad Al Qadeem, as for other houses of the time, were imported from Madagascar and East Africa, and the diseases might have come with these beams on the ship.Insoll, working with Rachel MacLean of the University of Exeter, as well as students and other archaeologists, opened a small museum in 2016 to display some of the extraordinary funerary monuments they discovered, with their finely carved calligraphy attesting to the names of the men and women buried there.A small park, which is coming soon, will integrate a canal from the time of Bilad Al Qadeem into the recreational environs, drawing on its 1,000-year-old ability to cool the air and circulate water.Insoll also identified a number of changes over the past two decades of working in the Gulf – most notably, an expansion of who has been involved in the field.Previously “it was all foreigners, parachuting [into the Gulf] and doing their monthly fieldwork, and then publishing in journals like these,” he explained, gesturing at the leather-bound volumes in the Society of Antiquaries’ library. “Archeology wasn’t engaging with the local population or building capacity among local students. And this has been a change throughout the Gulf – and now in Saudi with Vision 2030.”Insoll’s team now includes Salman Almahari of the Bahrain Authority for Culture and Antiquities – the first Bahraini to achieve a PhD in archaeology.They also discovered another site showing the fertile crossover of religions in Bahrain, such as Samahij, a Nestorian Christian dwelling from the 7th century. Found on the isle of Muharraq, just off the coast of the country, signs in the site heavily suggest Christian habitation, such as the outline of a fish etched into one of the walls and ceramics bearing the sign of the cross.Local Bahrainis helped the archeologists identify some of the food sources, such as the fish that were very similar to those of the present day.“The notion of partnership is extremely important, and that’s pushing archaeology to the next level,” says Insoll. “We are now integrating the local voice – people saying I remember this site 50 years ago, this is what was here then. Why don’t you go and excavate here, or I understand this type of structure or material – like the madbasa, a room that was used for fermenting dates.“The world is changing, and archaeology should reflect that. And archaeology is a lot richer for it.”Updated: September 23, 2023, 7:07 AM
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