Ghanaian$31519$ - tradução para holandês
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Ghanaian$31519$ - tradução para holandês

Ghanaian parliamentary election, 1979; Ghanaian presidential election, 1979; Ghanaian general election, 1979; 1979 Ghanaian presidential election; 1979 Ghanaian parliamentary election
  • 150x110px

Ghanaian      
adj. van Ghana
gospel song         
  • [[Mahalia Jackson]] has been called the "Queen of Gospel"
  • Philip Paul Bliss
GENRE OF MUSIC EMPHASIZING CHRISTIAN LYRICS
Gospel Music; Gospel (music); Gospel Explosion; Gospel (genre); Gospel Song; Gospel band; Gospel choir; Gospel singer; Gospel singers; Gospel song; Gospel songs; Gospel artist; Gospel music artist; Gospel Singer; Gospel hymn; Bluegrass gospel; Gospel choirs; British black gospel; 19th-century gospel; 19th-century gospel music; 20th-century gospel; 20th-century gospel music; Gospel singing; Gospel musician; List of Ghanaian Gospel Musicians; Christian gospel music; History of gospel music
gospellied

Definição

pesewa
[p?'si:w?]
¦ noun a monetary unit of Ghana, equal to one hundredth of a cedi.
Origin
Akan, lit. 'penny'.

Wikipédia

1979 Ghanaian general election

General elections were held in Ghana on 18 June 1979, with a second round of the presidential election on 9 July 1979. The presidential election resulted in victory for Hilla Limann of the People's National Party, who received 62% of the votes in the run-off, whilst his PNP won 71 of the 140 seats in Parliament. According to one scholar, the elections were conducted "in as free and fair a manner as might be considered humanly possible under local conditions" and the losing candidates publicly accepted defeat. Around 5,070,000 people were registered to vote.

The Electoral Commissioner during the elections was Joseph Kingsley-Nyinah, an Appeal Court Judge who was appointed by the Supreme Military Council (SMC). Although the SMC was overthrown on 4 June 1979, the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council military government which replaced it allowed the elections to proceed just two weeks later.