North Tongu Member of Parliament, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, has denounced President Akufo-Addo‘s much-publicized investigations into the SML scandal as nothing more than a sham.
Ablakwa contends that recent events, particularly the alleged departure of the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) Commissioner-General, Rev. Dr. Ammishaddai Adu Owusu-Amoah, with a regular passport instead of his official service passport, raises serious doubts about the authenticity of the ongoing probe.
“The Owusu-Amoahs’ first travel destination when they left Accra a week ago was São Tomé and Príncipe, and continuous tracking appears to paint a picture of a family in no hurry to return to Ghana, that is if they will ever return.
“In the January 2, 2024 press statement from the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia presidency signed by Mr. Eugene Arhin, Ghanaians were informed that ‘President Akufo-Addo has tasked KPMG to complete the assignment in two weeks, and submit appropriate recommendations to him.’
“The release additionally indicated that the ‘President has directed the Ministry of Finance and GRA to provide KPMG with whatever assistance they will require for conduct of the audit.’
“Now here we are, the GRA boss who is to be audited has been surreptitiously assisted to leave the country. It is also worth noting that KPMG has only about 6 days left to report to the President. Clearly, President Akufo-Addo’s much touted investigations into the SML scandal is nothing but a sham,” portions of a statement published on Facebook said.
The parliamentarian asserts that the use of a non-official passport implies that Owusu-Amoah’s journey may not be related to official duties, casting a shadow over the sincerity of the government’s investigation.
Ablakwa suggests that this departure is indicative of a deliberate attempt by the GRA boss to evade potential scapegoating by the government in the aftermath of the scandal’s exposure.
“Painstaking investigations further reveal that Rev. Dr. Ammishaddai Adu Owusu-Amoah has told a few very close friends and allies that he will never return to Ghana, particularly after realizing that there’s an elaborate scheme to make him a scapegoat following Manasseh Azure Awuni’s brilliant SML exposé — even though according to Rev. Dr. Ammishaddai Adu Owusu-Amoah, he only carried out the wishes of the same notorious looting cabal,” he added.
As the controversy surrounding the SML scandal unfolds, Ablakwa has accused the government of orchestrating a deceptive façade of accountability while allegedly allowing key figures involved in the saga to evade scrutiny. The North Tongu MP further questions the credibility of the investigative process and raises concerns about the government’s commitment to holding those implicated accountable.
“The NDC Caucus in Parliament shall be demanding an urgent inquiry into how Rev. Dr. Ammishaddai Adu Owusu-Amoah fled Ghana; we shall seek to identify and sanction the conspirators who facilitated his disgraceful escape despite presidential assurances of an urgent high-stakes KPMG audit; we shall be committed to unraveling the subsequent silence, grand deception and attempted cover-up.
“Ghanaians must resolve to do all in our power to vote out this fantastically corrupt Akufo-Addo/Bawumia NPP regime in this year’s election. We must uproot this government of endless monumental embarrassments. We have really had enough!” he added.
In a fiery accusation, former President John Dramani Mahama has pointed fingers at President Nana Akufo-Addo, alleging the deployment of thugs and rogues to disrupt the voting process.
Mahama, expressing deep concern, issued a stern caution, urging Akufo-Addo to cease such actions immediately.
“The use of thugs and rogue elements within the security agencies to disrupt elections in some parts of the country as occurred in the 2020 elections, leading to the loss of eight (8) lives, will forever be remembered as Ghana’s day of infamy and an indelible blemish on our democratic credentials established over the last 31 years of constitutional rule,” he said.
Mr Mahama, who is the flagbearer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), made these allegations in a statement to mark Constitutional Day on Sunday, 7 January 2024.
He further critcised the President for failing to condemn that: “On a rather sad note, it is unconscionable that three years after these tragic events, our President, Nana Akufo-Addo, has not uttered even a word of sympathy to the bereaved families. The perpetrators of these murders continue to walk as free men and still hold on to positions of authority and power.”
Director of Communications at the seat of Ghana’s presidency, Eugene Arhin, has vehemently refuted the allegations made by the National Democratic Congress (NDC) flagbearer, John Dramani Mahama, against President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
Mahama had raised concerns about the death of eight individuals during the 2020 elections, prompting a robust denial from Arhin.
The director dismissed the claims as inaccurate and deceptive.
Eugene Arhin criticized the former president for his claim that President Akufo-Addo failed to condemn the deaths linked to the December 2020 presidential and parliamentary elections.
In the said video, the president condemned the regrettable deaths resulting from post-electoral violence in Odododiodio and Techiman during the general elections.
“I condemn in no uncertain terms the isolated incidents of post-electoral violence in Odododiodio and Techiman that led to a few regrettable deaths. May their souls rest in peace. We must work to avoid the repetition of such events in the future.
“This statement was made by President Akufo-Addo on Wednesday, 9th December 2020, at his Nima residence, after being declared the winner of the 2020 elections,” the news report quoted the director of communications at the presidency.
“…Former President Mahama’s claims that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has not uttered even a word of sympathy to the bereaved families” is simply not true. He should, therefore, do the needful and congratulate President Akufo-Addo on his victory in 2020, the post by the director of communications at the presidency further read.
In a speech on Sunday, January 7, 2024, Mahama had alleged that President Akufo-Addo failed to address or offer sympathy for the eight lives lost during the election-related disturbances in 2020.
Mahama called on the government to refrain from undermining democratic rights and criticised the use of thugs and rogue elements in disrupting elections.
“I urge the current government to refrain from actions that continue to undermine democratic rights under their administration. The use of thugs and rogue elements within the security agencies to disrupt elections in some parts of the country as occurred in the 2020 elections, leading to the loss of eight (8) lives, will forever be remembered as Ghana’s day of infamy and an indelible blemish on our democratic credentials established over the last 31 years of constitutional rule, Mahama said in his statement.
“On a rather sad note, it is unconscionable that three years after these tragic events, our President, Nana Akufo-Addo, has not uttered even a word of sympathy to the bereaved families. The perpetrators of these murders continue to walk as free men and still hold on to positions of authority and power,” Mahama added.
A prominent political figure, and Member of Parliament for Builsa South, Clement Apaak, has spoken out against what he perceives as the misuse of state power by the Akufo-Addo-led government.
Apaak, known for his vocal stance on governance issues, in a tweet raised concerns about the alleged misconduct of members of the current administration and has called for a critical examination of the government’s actions.
Speaking on the matter, Apaak asserts that the reported misuse of state power reflects a failure on the part of the Akufo-Addo administration.
He emphasizes the importance of condemning such actions to safeguard democratic principles and ensure accountability within the government.
“Such misuse of state power by this failed Akufo-Addo/Bawumia gov’t doesn’t augur well for our democracy and must be condemned,” he said.
His comment was in reaction to the cancellation of the intended unveiling of the face behind #TheNewForce.
“Doesn’t the 1992 constitution guarantee freedom of speech and association? Ironically, today is CONSTITUTION Day. Our democracy has indeed retrogressed under this gov’t,” he noted.
Former President, John Dramani Mahama, has refuted President Akufo-Addo‘s claim of not congratulating him after the 2020 general elections.
John Dramani Mahama alleges that President Nana Addo DankwaAkufo-Addo has remained silent on the fatalities and injuries suffered by conscientious Ghanaians during the aforementioned elections.
In his perspective, the President ought to reflect on his actions with a sense of remorse, as he believes Akufo-Addo has failed to express sympathy towards grieving families and individuals coping with various forms of deformities resulting from the aftermath of the 2020 elections.
“On a rather sad note, it is unconscionable that three years after these tragic events, our President, Nana Akufo-Addo, has not uttered even a word of sympathy to the bereaved families. The perpetrators of these murders continue to walk as free men and still hold on to positions of authority and power,” he said in a tweet on X.
Meanwhile, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, in a speech after he was declared the winner of the 2020 elections, condemned various isolated incidents of post-electoral violence.
He said, “We condemn in no uncertain terms the isolated incidence of post-electoral violence in Odododiodo and Techiman that led to a few regrettable deaths. May their souls rest in peace”.
Former Ghanaian President John Dramani Mahama has swiftly responded to assertions made by Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, denying the accusation that he has not extended congratulations three years after Akufo-Addo’s declaration as President following the 2020 elections.
John Dramani Mahama alleges that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has remained silent on the fatalities and injuries suffered by conscientious Ghanaians during the aforementioned elections.
In his perspective, the President ought to reflect on his actions with a sense of remorse, as he believes Akufo-Addo has failed to express sympathy towards grieving families and individuals coping with various forms of deformities resulting from the aftermath of the 2020 elections.
“On a rather sad note, it is unconscionable that three years after these tragic events, our President, Nana Akufo-Addo, has not uttered even a word of sympathy to the bereaved families. The perpetrators of these murders continue to walk as free men and still hold on to positions of authority and power,” he said in a tweet on X.
Meanwhile, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, in a speech after he was declared the winner of the 2020 elections, condemned various isolated incidents of post-electoral violence.
He said, “We condemn in no uncertain terms the isolated incidence of post-electoral violence in Odododiodo and Techiman that led to a few regrettable deaths. May their souls rest in peace”.
President Akufo-Addo has indicated that he is yet to receive a congratulatory message from former President John Dramani Mahama following his victory in the 2020 elections.
Speaking in an address ahead of Ghanas Constitution Day, the President noted that four years after his victory, the former President is yet to congratulate him.
“On a lighter note, three years on, I am still waiting on my main opponent in the 2020 election to congratulate me on my victory.”
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo delivered an address ahead of January 8, 2024, Constitution Day.
Among others, he highlighted the significance of Ghana’s democracy and the need to continually defend it and consolidate the gains of the last three decades.
2024 marks the 4th anniversary of the day marked as a statutory holiday.
Additionally, the President spoke on the need for a clean and fair election come December 2024, stressing that he was ready to do all it takes to ensure the process benefits Ghana above any party or candidate.
“In the end of it all, there should be no lingering doubt about the legitimacy of the election and the winning candidates of the conclusion of the process should receive the unalloyed support of all. That is how we can strengthen our democracy and the peace and stability of our nation,” he stated.
In a moment of unexpected warmth and camaraderie, the atmosphere at the funeral of the later Enoch Teye Mensah, popularly known as E.T Mensah shifted when Asiedu Nketiah, General Secretary of the party, greeted Alan Kyerematen with a unique and lighthearted gesture.
As the seasoned politician approached, Mr Nketiah, surprised the crowd by playfully flapping his hands like a butterfly.
In a video that quickly gained traction on social media, Asiedu Nketiah, encountering Alan Kyerematen at the funeral service of the late legislator for Ningo-Prampram, Enoch Teye Mensah, was captured engaging in a lighthearted moment. The footage showed Nketiah playfully flapping his hands in a butterfly-like motion, directing attention to Alan Kyerematen amid shared laughter.
The playful gesture from Asiedu Nketiah elicited laughter from fellow NDC dignitaries who witnessed the light-hearted exchange between Alan Kyerematen and Asiedu Nketiah.
The Butterfly is the symbol for the political movement, Movement for Change.
While addressing and educating Ghanaians on his political movement, Alan Kyeremanten explained that, the butterfly is the symbol of transformation, the symbol of renewal and growth.
He believes his movement would cause a radical change in the Ghanaian political space and will carry the flag of Ghana high.
Alan Kyerematen formed Movement of Change briefly after his failure to secure the flagbearer seat for the New Patriotic Party (NPP).
While exiting the NPP to form his own political movement to contest as an independent candidate, he explained that he had to leave because the party has deviated from its founding principles and beliefs.
Come December 7, 2024, Alan Kwadwo Kyerematen would be competing against NDC’s John Dramani Mahama and the NPP’s Dr Mahamudu Bawumia and any other candidate that may turn up to contest for Ghana’s highest office.
President Akufo-Addo has paid homage to the late Enoch Teye Mensah, a distinguished Council of State member and former Member of Parliament for Ningo Prampram.
Expressing profound sorrow, the President conveyed deep sadness at the demise of E.T. Mensah, recognizing the substantial impact of his passing.
He noted that it will take him a considerable amount of time to recover from the loss.
“He was a warm, generous, gregarious man with a keen intellect and wonderful sense of humour. In his element, you could find no better company, and he was a good source of advice for me as President of the Republic. I have lost a good friend, Ghana has lost a worthy patriot,” he said.
The tribute added a personal touch to the remembrance of E.T. Mensah, reflecting the close relationship between the two.
President Akufo-Addo has conveyed a crucial message to the newly appointed justices of the Supreme Court, highlighting the pivotal role of the judiciary in shaping Ghana’s growth trajectory.
In his address during the swearing-in ceremony of the new justices, President Akufo-Addo underscored the profound impact that a respected judiciary holds on the nation’s progress.
Mr Akufo-Addo said that the growth of Ghana demands a judiciary that commands the respect of the people through the quality of the delivery of justice as well as the comportment of its judges.
He said these while swearing in the three new Supreme Court justices at the Jubilee House in Accra on Wednesday January 3.
“To our new Supreme Court judges, Justice Henry Anthony Kowfie, Justice Yaw Asare Darko, and Justice Richard Agyei Frimpong, it is extremely important for you to bear in mind that the growth of our nation demands that we have a judiciary that commands the respect of the people by the quality of the delivery of justice as well as the comportment of its judges.
“Applications of the laws of the land must occur in the words of the judicial oath that you have just taken, without fear or favour, affection or ill-will – and, therefore, without recourse to the political, religious or ethnic affiliations of any citizen of the land or any person before you,” President Akufo-Addo further said.
“When a person falls foul of the law, society demands that the person be dealt with accordingly, and law-enforcement agencies, including the Supreme Court, must ensure that this is done.
“That is the true meaning of the concept of equality before the law and I am confident that you will uphold it and distinguish yourselves in the work of the court,” the president said.
President Nana Akufo-Addo’s decision to appoint a private firm for the audit of the GRA/SML contract has left Franklin Cudjoe, a prominent figure and head of policy think tank IMANI, expressing disbelief.
In a statement, Mr Cudjoe said the move by the President is an indication that he (the President) has lost faith in the state investigative bodies.
“Clearly the President has lost faith in all the state’s investigative bodies to investigate the SML matter. Not even in his own Office of Special Prosecutor he championed with such fanfare and millions of tax payers’ money.
“I know the President is worried about mounting quarterly / monthly scandals even in his last year in office, (which he alone must be blamed for) but l had no idea he would be this erratic in asking a private company with NO constitutional power to investigate grave acts of state institutions the same private company advises for a fee and in some instances in direct competition with other clients of the same state entities it works for,” Mr. Cudjoe stated.
His comments come on the back of the directive by President Akufo-Addo to KPMG to audit the contract between the Strategic Mobilisation Limited (SML-Ghana) and the Ghana Revenue Authority.
A contractual agreement was established to bolster revenue assurance in the downstream petroleum sector, as well as in the upstream petroleum production and the value chain of minerals and metals resources.
President Akufo-Addo has tasked KPMG to complete the assignment in two weeks, and submit appropriate recommendations to him.
In a Facebook post the IMANI boss questioned why the President has mandated a body with no constitutional power to investigate the SML and GRA alleged scandal.
According to him, he cannot fathom why the President could not direct the Office of Special Prosecutor (OSP) to conduct investigation into the SML and GRA deal but rather KPMG.
“Clearly the President has lost faith in all the state’s investigative bodies to investigate the SML matter. Not even in his own Office of Special Prosecutor he championed with such fanfare and millions of tax payers’ money.
“I know the President is worried about mounting quarterly / monthly scandals even in his last year in office, (which he alone must be blamed for) but l had no idea he would be this erratic in asking a private company with NO constitutional power to investigate grave acts of state institutions the same private company advises for a fee and in some instances in direct competition with other clients of the same state entities it works for,” Mr. Cudjoe stated.
He continued: “Well, my dear friend the President listens to none these days, (recall he hasn’t bothered to respond to his party’s General Secretary’s hapless cry for a reshuffle) but I will still offer my advice- please hand over the reins of government to your Veep now to avoid further blunders.
“We can meet later to discuss what must go into your memoir- for there is still a lot of beautiful stories about you before you became President the world must know.
Tamale Central MP, Ibrahim has lashed out at President Akufo-Addo for his failure to dismiss Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta from office, despite mounting calls for his removal from office.
The outspoken MP, in an interview on Tuesday January 3, 2024, voiced his discontent over the President’s decision, highlighting concerns and grievances surrounding the Finance Minister’s tenure.
He emphasized that, despite Mr Ofori-Atta having no success story since assuming the role of Finance Minister, he still remains in office. This, according to him, is an indication that the Finance Minister wields more power than the President.
He further asserted that considering the unfolding events amid calls for his dismissal and the fact that he continues to hold office, it merely suggests that the President is afraid of him.
“I told you that Ken Ofori-Atta was not moving an inch [from office]. He is more powerful than President Akufo Addo. He has no success story yet he remains in office. In fact, tell me one success story this man can tell as far as managing the Finances of the country is concerned; inflation disaster, debt to GDP disaster, prices of items, everything is in a mess!”
He further alleged that Mr Ofori-Atta was only appointed into office to help the current administration loot the country’s resources.
“The man was appointed to aid the looting of this government Particularly the Ofori Attas. And that’s why I say he’s only the Minister of Finance and remains that because he uses [the name] Ofori-Atta and nothing else. The only thing that will move him out is when this man decides he’s going away . Nothing else can push him away,” he added.
Minority Leader, Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson, has declared that President Akufo-Addo’s directive for the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) and Strategic Mobilisation Limited (SML) to suspend their contract comes belatedly.
Dr Forson’s remarks add a sharp perspective to the unfolding developments, suggesting a sense of urgency that has long been overdue in addressing the contentious contract between GRA and SML.
This development follows President Akufo-Addo’s recent decision to appoint KPMG for an urgent audit of the transaction between the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) and Strategic Mobilisation Limited (SML). The move underscores a heightened commitment to scrutinizing the intricacies of the GRA-SML transaction, adding a layer of urgency to the unfolding situation.
A contractual agreement aimed at bolstering revenue assurance within the downstream petroleum sector, upstream petroleum production, and the value chain of minerals and metals resources.
President Akufo-Addo has set a tight two-week deadline for KPMG to fulfill the assigned task, directing the audit firm to submit pertinent recommendations upon completion. This decisive move signals a swift and time-sensitive approach to address the ongoing situation.
In a concise statement, the Minority leader characterized the President’s action as an endeavor to whitewash the contract under the guise of an audit.
“This whitewashing attempt by the President in the name of an audit will not dissuade Parliament from looking into this matter to stop the siphoning of state resources into the private pockets of government officials and their crony business partners,” Dr. Ato Forson stated.
Below is the statement by the Minority Leader Dr Ato Forson
President Akufo-Addo’s appointment of KPMG to audit the so-called revenue assurance agreement between Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) and Strategic Mobilisation Limited (SML) has come too late in the day.
Parliament has already directed the Finance Committee to audit the infamous agreement and the Committee is actively seized of the matter.
The President, who should have led this fight in the wake of this scandal, is playing catch up since Parliament has also directed GRA to suspend all payments to SML.
This whitewashing attempt by the President in the name of an audit will not dissuade Parliament from looking into this matter to stop the siphoning of state resources into the private pockets of government officials and their crony business partners.
Energy Minister, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh, has conveyed his commitment to the Ghanaian people, assuring that in 2024, he will persist in unwavering efforts to realize the vision set forth by Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
Emphasizing a dedicated focus, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh affirms that his diligent efforts in 2024 will be particularly directed towards ensuring a consistent and uninterrupted power supply, aiming to keep the lights on for the people of Ghana.
In a New Year message disseminated on social media, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh revealed his commitment to the ongoing hard work, specifically highlighting the priority placed on maintaining a reliable power supply for the people of Ghana in 2024.
Expressing a forward-looking perspective, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh highlighted the importance of Ghanaians commencing the year with a revitalized sense of hope, acknowledging that there are further accomplishments to be pursued and achieved in the coming months.
Tamale South Member of Parliament, Haruna Iddrisu,has entreated Ghanaians to cast resounding votes for John Mahama in the forthcoming 2024 elections.
Highlighting his conviction, he asserted that the former President is positioned for a comeback to the presidency, armed with invaluable insights that promise a positive impact on the Ghanaian economy.
Mr. Iddrisu asserts that Mr. Mahama stands as the prime candidate to navigate the economic challenges confronting the Akufo-Addo government.
He commented on Thursday, December 28, during a ceremony where he received the prestigious chieftaincy title “Sugru-Lana” or Chief of Patience from the paramount chief of Nakpanduri, Naba David Kansuk Na Golbila II, and his sub-chiefs at the palace.
“I have said that former President Mahama is coming back to the throne with two important insights and one important hindsight.
“He has been President, and he is being outside as non-president, and he will combine the two to change the destiny of this country.”
He additionally urged local chiefs and residents to throw their support behind NDC MPs, emphasising that their votes would play a crucial role in enabling Mr Mahama to bring about the necessary transformation in both the local area and the entire nation.
The vocal MP affirmed his unwavering commitment to actively contribute to the progress and growth of the country.
President Nana Akufo-Addo has openly acknowledged that Ghana continues to grapple with challenges, highlighting the nation’s ongoing journey towards overcoming obstacles and fostering growth.
Underlining the economic hardships endured in the preceding two years, President Nana Akufo-Addo shed light on the formidable challenges that have shaped Ghana’s fiscal landscape in a compelling address.
In the face of these challenges, President Nana Akufo-Addo voiced assurance in Ghana’s ongoing recovery and resilience, articulating his optimism for the nation’s future.
He stated, “I wish all Ghanaians a Happy and Prosperous 2024. Even though we are not completely out of the woods, I am confident that, with hard work and determination, Ghana will make it, and collectively, we will secure our futures.”
This message underscores the acknowledgement of the hurdles the nation has faced, coupled with the determination to overcome them.
President Akufo-Addo’s assurance reflects a commitment to fostering a spirit of unity and perseverance among the Ghanaian people.
The President’s New Year message resonates with the ongoing efforts to address economic challenges and pave the way for a brighter future.
As the country continues its journey of recovery, the message serves as a call to action for citizens to contribute to the collective effort of building a prosperous Ghana.
In the backdrop of these sentiments, President Akufo-Addo also referenced the financial support received last year, with a tranche of $600 million credited to government account.
This acknowledgement highlights the collaborative efforts made to navigate economic challenges and strengthen Ghana’s position.
As the nation steps into the new year, President Akufo-Addo’s message echoes the belief that, with concerted efforts, hard work, and determination, Ghana will overcome its current challenges and emerge victorious.
The call to secure the future collectively emphasizes the importance of unity and resilience in building a prosperous nation.
Ghanaian Reggae sensation, Blakk Rasta, has rendered an apology to President Akufo-Addo over some remarks he made about him.
Blakk Rasta made a claim suggesting that he wished the President dead.
However, he has subsequently apologised, stating that he made the comments out of frustration.
“I want to send an apology to the President (Akufo-Addo). Do you know why? No matter how you hate a man, you should never wish him dead. I was not brought up like that.
“Spiritually, mentally physically and behaviorally. I will never wish a man dead. Out of frustration, we may make some utterances. I just saw the video and told myself ‘No, this is a low blow’.
“Honorably, I apologize to the president of the Republic of Ghana. Much as you are a useless president, I don’t want to see you die. I want to see you live and suffer so that when you finally die, Satan can humbly and honestly sodomize you in hell.
“But I do not want to wish you dead. No. Even when my enemy dies, I don’t jubilate, I pray for him. It was a slip of the tongue. Useless as you are, you and your vice president do not die. Don’t visit an early grave,” he said during the UrbanBlend show on 3FM.
President Akufo-Addo has named Aloysius Adjetey as the newly appointed Chief Executive Officer of the Community Water and Sanitation Agency (CWSA). The presidential appointment signals a significant development in the administration’s commitment to addressing water and sanitation challenges across the nation.
The announcement of the appointment was communicated via a letter signed by Nana Asante Bediatuo Asante, who serves as the Executive Secretary to the President.
This appointment is in line with section 12 (1) of the Community Water and Sanitation Agency Act, 1998 (Act 564).
Aloysius Adjetey will take over from Ing. Dr Worlanyo Kwadjo Siabi, who has served the agency till date.
Profile of Aloysius Adjetey
Aloysius Adjetey is a distinguished development expert with an impressive career spanning over 12 years. He is an alumnus of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in Kumasi, Ghana, where he earned a Bachelor’s degree in Development Policy Planning. Furthering his expertise, Mr. Adjetey completed his Masters in Development Studies, majoring in Policy Analysis and Poverty Studies, from the prestigious Erasmus University of Rotterdam, formerly known as the Institute of Social Studies in The Hague, Netherlands.
Adjetey’s career is marked by significant contributions in various fields. He has extensive experience in governance and the economy of Ghana, with a special focus on Public Financial Management. His areas of expertise include economic policy analysis, project management, economic research, financial planning and management, financial programming, poverty reduction, and economic development.
Before this appointment, Adjetey held several key positions. From 2014 to 2017, he served as a Project Management Specialist and Economist at the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). He was a Policy Analyst at the National Development Planning Commission between 2012 and 2013 and a Local Governance Expert at KfW Entwicklungsbank from 2011 to 2013. Earlier, he was an Economic Planning Officer at the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning from 2003 to 2009.
Aloysius Adjetey’s academic journey includes obtaining his Master’s degree in Development Studies, focusing on Poverty Studies and Policy Analysis, from the International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University of Rotterdam between 2008 and 2010. He completed his undergraduate studies with a Bachelor of Science (Honours) in Development Planning from KNUST between 1999 and 2003.
Renowned dancehall musician Shatta Wale has delivered a cautionary message to aspiring artists, urging them not to be swayed by government promises, citing a dearth of sustainable plans for the Creative Arts Industry. The controversial artist’s words serve as a stark reminder of the challenges facing the sector and raise questions about the efficacy of current governmental initiatives.
His response follows a press briefing held on December 14, 2023, featuring Gyankroma Akufo-Addo, Director of Ghana’s Creative Arts Agency, Mark Okraku Mantey, Deputy Minister for Tourism, Arts, and Culture, alongside other industry stakeholders, addressing issues within the country’s Creative Arts sector.
In a Friday Facebook post, Shatta, born Charles Nii Armah Mensah Jr., encouraged emerging musicians to navigate the industry independently and establish their footing.
According to the designer crooner, the government has no plans for creatives.
“Upcoming artiste, please don’t let them lie to you.. I saw it and spoke about it and now I am the industries enemy,” he posted.
“They don’t have any plan for creatives, so please I beg find your way and don’t follow their ways,” he asserted.
During the press conference which was purposely held to launch the #PlayGhana initiative aimed at promoting Ghanaian music across the country and beyond ahead of the festive season, Gyankroma Akufo-Addo, called for a review of Cultural Policy and the Broadcasting Bill to ensure implementation of the 70% local content just like in other countries.
She pledged her agency’s resolve to “push Ghanaian music to the full front of our foray audiences starting at home.”
Ace Investigative Journalist, Manasseh Azure Awuni, is set shake the country with another explosive documentary.
In a tweet on Thursday, December 14, 2023, Mr Azure said the piece will shake the core of the Akufo-Addo led administration.
“What started as an open-minded documentary to investigate what was being done to curtail revenue losses in one sector is turning out to be the biggest scandal to hit the Akufo-Addo presidency.
“The cure is worse than the disease, like acid being used to treat mild sore throat. Stay tuned! Anyway, can you guess the ministry or minister involved?” he added.
AN IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT ****************************************** What started as an open-minded documentary to investigate what was being done to curtail revenue losses in one sector is turning out to be the biggest scandal to hit the Akufo-Addo presidency. pic.twitter.com/ZLDqSuFYkS
This comes after his colleague Undercover Journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, announced the premiere of another documentary, which has been scheduled to be released in January, 2024.
Anas made the revelation at the Disruptionlab Network Event in Germany where he and Stephanie Busari of CNN had a discussion on the role of the undercover journalist in combating organized crime in Africa.
He said the project, which focuses on organised crime syndicates in Ghana, will be shocking and gory.
Speaking on his latest project, Anas Aremeyaw Anas said the documentary will be shown on BBC Africa Eye.
Angel Maxine, a prominent LGBT activist in Ghana, has directed a bold challenge at President Nana Akufo-Addo, urging him to scrutinize the Jubilee House for potential LGBTQ+ individuals working there.
Angel Maxine’s call to action implored President Akufo-Addo to investigate the presence of LGBTQ+ individuals at the Jubilee House before considering the passage of the anti-LGBTQ+ bill.
He/She claimed there are some “so-called politicians, big men,” who visit secondary and tertiary schools in Ghana and employ the services of pimps to recruit young boys for their sexual pleasure.
“President Nana Akufo-Addo, check the jubilee house, check the jubilee house well if there are no LGBT people working there. All you these so-called politicians, all you these so-called big men, MPS, you drive your cars and go and park at Labone SHS, PRESEC, UPSA, and then when you park, then your pimps will arrange the boys and then bring to you. They are people’s kids,” Angel alleged.
The visibly upset transwoman also claimed some of these politicians have “abused, molested and taken advantage of” these “kids”.
“Do you think we don’t know? People you have abused, you have molested, you have taken advantage of, people who are hurt, everything is on this paper here and they are ready to speak out. Pass the bill, and I will show you your MP who is an LGBT person. All of you, your names are here. All of you, who have been texting people to get you boys to sleep with, all of you who have been begging your pimps to hook you up with people, all your chats and conversations are here,” Maxine passionately noted.
Speaker Bagbin accused of incest#INDNews Anas Aremeyaw Anas | Legon | John Mahama #UPSA Landlord | Legon | 22nd December | Bawumia | Kasoa pic.twitter.com/cQc05wNT1U
“Pass the bill. Pass the bill and I will expose your family members, I will expose your children who are gay people, who are lesbians,” he/she warned.
In a video uploaded on his/her Instagram handle angelmaxinetv with the caption, “This is a Subtle WARNING ⚠️”, Maxine as part of a broader critique aimed at several public figures, including Sam Georgeand Moses Foh Amoaning, questioned government’s focus on anti-LGBT legislation amid pressing issues facing the nation.
Sam George is the Member of Parliament (MP) for the Ningo-Prampram constituency in Accra and a key sponsor of the anti-LGBTQ+ bill also known as Promotion of Proper Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill 2021.
In his/her impassioned speech, Angel Maxine also accused Sam George of being a hypocrite and a failed politician, claiming that his constituency is home to many LGBT people who would potentially affected by the bill he is championing.
The names of other public figures, including Executive Secretary of the National Coalition for Proper Human Sexual Rights and Family Values, Moses Foh Amoaning, Speaker of the Parliament, Alan Bagbin, MP for Kpando Constituency, Dela Sowah, MP for Ho West Constituency, Emmanuel Bedzrah, MP for Kpando Constituency, Rockson Dafeamepkor, MP for La Dadekotopon Constituency, Rita Odoley Sowah, MP or Assin South Constituency, Ntim Fordjour, MP for Tamale North Constituency, Alhassan Suhuyini, and MP Krachi West Constituency, Helen Ntoso, were mentioned, with Angel Maxine expressing disappointment in the purported lack of development in their respective constituencies.
He/She said that they were all old criminals who had done nothing for their constituencies and the nation, and said that they were wasting their time and energy on a bill that violated human rights and dignity instead of focusing on the economic and social challenges facing Ghanaians.
Maxine also threatened to expose some of the politicians who are secretly gay and have had sexual relations with him/her or others.
He/she claimed to have evidence of their chats and claimed to have given copies to his/her lawyer, a loud influencer in Ghana, and a human rights lawyer in America for safe keeping.
The anti-LGBT bill, which seeks to criminalise and punish any person who identifies as or promotes LGBT rights in Ghana, has been met with widespread criticism from human rights groups, civil society organisations, and some religious leaders. The bill is currently undergoing is expected to be passed by parliament soon.
Renowned Ghanaian economist and businessman, Dr. Ishmael Evans Yamson, has expressed his belief that President Akufo-Addo has not effectively addressed the issue of corruption.
Dr. Yamson shared his views during an upcoming episode of PM Express on Joy News, in a conversation with Evans Mensah on Tuesday, November 7.
He discussed the topic of corruption in light of recent allegations of vote-buying during the New Patriotic Party’s (NPP) presidential primaries.
Dr. Yamson, who is a Business Management Consultant and the CEO of Ishmael Yamson & Associates, specifically highlighted Ghana’s first President as the only leader who actively opposed corruption.
He further observed that all subsequent leaders, including the current President, have fallen short in addressing this problem, ultimately leaving the nation in a precarious financial state at the end of their respective tenures.
“Every leader in this country, by the time he leaves office, Ghana is bankrupt because the leader has been very corrupt. And I am not afraid to talk about this because it’s the reality.”
The octogenarian, in particular, strongly denounced the practice of vote-buying in Ghanaian politics. He issued a stern warning that Ghana’s prospects for improvement would be severely compromised if such behavior is allowed to persist and grow, as was witnessed during the NPP’s presidential primaries.
“Helping others to buy our votes will not in any way change Ghana. It will not change this country” he stressed angrily.
The individual, recognized for his significant contributions to the expansion of Ghana’s private sector, also pointed a finger at the influence of political party financing in the widespread corruption within Ghana.
“This country, for as long as we have leaders who have come into office indebted to people and they have to pay them back, Evans I am sorry. I am painting too bleak a picture, but it’s the reality” he told the host.
When the host, Evans Mensah asked about his view of President Akufo-Addo in the fight against corruption, he responded, “If I mark him [Akufo-Addo] with the same scheme, probably it will be four out of 10.”
When the host retorted ‘That’s a fail’, “Dr Yamson responded, “Oh yes, because even if you yourself as an individual have not dipped your hands into the state coffers, what about all your followers and what have you done about them?”
Similar to numerous others, the 81-year-old retired Chairman & CEO of Unilever Ghana, who boasts extensive expertise in business and economic matters, also criticized the President’s response to the case involving the former Sanitation Minister Cecilia Dapaah. This case revolved around allegations that she had hoarded millions of cedis in her residence.
“My greatest disappointment was when recently we had a case about a Minister who had so much money in her home, and the President said he hoped her integrity would be proven in the end. Why would the President even get involved in this when there are state agencies handling the matter?”
“If you are our leader and you say you trust the person, how do you expect the people following you to go and say the person cannot be trusted; it’s not possible. I don’t think he [President Akufo-Addo] has been able to stamp down corruption in this country; he hasn’t. Because if he has, then all the scandals that come up day after day, why hasn’t he taken firm action to deal with all those things and stop them? Why isn’t any of his people who have been found culpable not in jail?” he asked.
The Ghana Bar Association (GBA) has criticized President Akufo-Addo’s efforts to combat corruption.
According to the GBA, numerous instances of corruption have not been subjected to thorough investigations, and there have been instances where individuals implicated in corrupt practices have been exonerated without any repercussions.
During a press conference held in Accra, GBA President Yaw Acheampong Boafo conveyed the association’s disappointment with the state of the anti-corruption campaign.
“If your goal in coming to government is to enrich yourself then don’t come, go to the private. The public sector is going to be about public service exactly. This undertaking gave hope to Ghanaians of the emergence of a new dawn of politics.”
“However, it is our view, with several related corruption-related incidents involving some of the political appointees and also among some public officers under the current administration and the lethargic manner with which they are dealt with and even defended and protected leaves a lot to be desired,” he stated.
Meanwhile, President Akufo-Addo has underscored the importance of dispelling the notion that individuals elected to public office are inherently corrupt and that law enforcement and anti-corruption bodies tend to show favoritism to the ruling government.
He stressed that security agencies and other anti-corruption organizations, including the Ghana Police Service (GPS), are committed to serving the public’s interests rather than the interests of any specific individual or government.
President Akufo-Addo called on everyone to reject the perception that elected officials are inherently corrupt and in office with the intention to engage in corrupt practices.
“We ought to pray for the understanding in Ghana that not everybody elected in this office is a thief. It’s an assumption in our country that people who come to political offices enrich themselves. Some of us would have been better off in the private sector. It is an assumption that we ought to work hard and try and dispel.”
“And part of dispelling will be encouraging a belief in these institutions of our state. These institutions that have been set up whether it is the police, or anti-corruption agencies are working in the interest of Ghana and not of the government of the day.
“And we should all find a way of bolstering the confidence of the people in them…We have to pray that that becomes understood and that becomes a reality,” President Akufo-Addo said when the new Chairman of the Christian Council, Rt. Rev. Dr. Hilliad Dogbe led a delegation to pay a courtesy call on him at the Jubilee House.
The Ghana Bar Association is urging President @NAkufoAddo to uphold his commitment to preventing corruption within his administration.
The association noted that recent corruption reports contradict his intentions.
A “very angry”protester identified as Nasiba, who participated in the recent #OccupyJulorbiHouse demonstration organized by Democracy Hub and concerned citizens, has unleashed a scathing attack on President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, branding him as the “worst president ever” in a passionate and emotional interview with JoyNews.
Nasibah’s anger and frustration were palpable as she vented her feelings about the current state of affairs in Ghana, with a particular focus on the suffering endured by the country’s youth and the beleaguered healthcare system.
In a voice quivering with rage, the protester recounted the heartbreaking story of a dedicated teacher who had devoted over three decades of his life to public service, only to tragically lose his 24-year-old son because they couldn’t afford the exorbitant cost of dialysis, an astounding GH¢400 per week. Her tone resonated with the collective pain of countless Ghanaians who have faced similar hardships in their quest for affordable healthcare.
“I am very angry, I am very angry. I am angrier this morning, people are dying each day, and the dialysis machine in Korle Bu got spoilt, do you know the number of people who died? A 24-year-old boy died this morning; his father is a teacher. His father is a teacher. Gave over thirty years of his life to the service could not transplant, could not afford dialysis GH¢400 a week. What do you mean?” she angrily said.
But it wasn’t just the healthcare system that came under Nasibah’s withering criticism. She accused the government of gross misallocation of funds, squandering resources on frivolous expenses while the nation grappled with pressing issues. She pointedly questioned the government’s priorities, especially in light of the heavy tax burden placed on citizens and the relentless rise in the cost of living.
” The cost of living in this country but you bring flowers to celebrate your daughter’s birthday, you bring a cake to celebrate E-Levy. God will judge the government, God will judge Akufo-Addo, it will hurt him, it will be excruciating He will be in pain. Somebody who built his career on protest, he built his career on protest, God will judge him. He will meet his death. Making people suffer, look at the Ghanaian youth, look at every one of them, and he is using the police as a tool. Had us arrested on Thursday, maltreated, beaten and lied about. Lied about it. Beat us, lied about it. Said they did not beat anybody. What is wrong with protests. This country’s independence was founded on protests. It was founded on protest. But I guess he does not know that, because he thinks government owes him. Ghana owes him something. His birthright. You work so hard to become the worst president ever. God will judge him. God will judge him,” she cried out.
The #OccupyJulorbiHouseprotests reached a climax on the final day when protesters made a daring attempt to breach a police barricade late into the night, aiming to march towards the presidency. This audacious move came in the wake of the illegal arrests and heavy-handed police tactics that marred the first day of the protests, during which 49 protesters were apprehended and detained for hours on charges of unlawful assembly. All of them were subsequently released on bail.
Days 2 and 3 witnessed no major incidents, as the police strategically cordoned off the main road leading to Jubilee House, the presidential residence, even before the protesters initiated their march towards the symbolic location.
Day 2 saw the partial blockade of one section of the 37-Accra Road, while the final day witnessed the full closure of both sides, causing significant disruption to vehicular traffic throughout the day.
Nasibah’s emotionally charged words reflect the deep-seated frustrations and grievances felt by many Ghanaians, as many have shared the video multiple times on Twitter with comments affirming her sentiments.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has asserted that he represents the best choice for Ghanaians, despite facing harsh criticism from members of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) and certain civil society organizations who have accused him of ineffectiveness and lack of competence.
“You are lucky you have me as president”, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has said.
The President declared this stance while censuring the National Democratic Congress (NDC) for overlooking specific regions of the country when they hold political office.
Speaking to Chiefs and people during his tour to the Upper West and Savannah regions over this week, Nana Akufo Addo wondered why the Yapei-Kusawgu District was still underdeveloped even though they keep voting for the opposition party NDC.
“One of the things that surprise me and I have to confess, we have to speak the truth to each other; that Yapei – Kusawgu since 1992, I have known two people who have been Members of Parliament, the first one was my very good friend Amadu Seidu, when he left, the elder brother who is an excellent young man who is a minister for Natural Resources and MP for Damango, Abu Jinapor his elder brother John then took over the MP for Yapei – Kusawgu,” President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo Addo told Chiefs and people of Yapei – Kusawgu.
“What this tells me is that the 8 elections conducted in Ghana since 1992 have always gone to the National Democratic Congress and yet when I come here, I hear all of these demands. The young man who for a long time was Deputy Minister of power, 17 communities in his district still have not been connected to electricity grid”, he added.
However, assuring the Chiefs and people gathered at the function, President Akufo-Addo hinted that, he is going to heed their cry because he is the best Ghanaians can have.
“But Yagbonwura, you are lucky, you have me as the President of Ghana. I’m going to do it for you. In the same way, no secondary school, no Senior Technical School, in the whole of Kusawgu area, ahhh, eiiiiiii”, he wondered.
“Yagbonwura I’m not here in a campaign, but I think I have said enough for you and your people Kusawgu to think about your vote in 2024”, he added.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has proposed a debate aimed at reaching a constitutional resolution regarding the benefits of Article 71 Officeholders, in response to public concerns on the issue.
He initiated the discussion by recommending that the nation should explore the practices of other countries, including the United States of America, where these principles were initially established and were automatically adjusted based on specific objective criteria.
He further averred to the newly constituted Committee of Emoluments for Article 71 Officeholders to consider public concerns about whether or not such officeholders, notwithstanding the constitutional imperative, deserved what was paid to them in view of the current economic challenges.
President Akufo-Addo made the call when he swore in a five-member Committee of Emoluments for Article 71 Officeholders at the Jubilee House in Accra last Wednesday evening.
Composition
The committed is chaired by a lawyer and immediate past Chairperson of the Public Services Commission, Dr Janet Ampadu-Fofie.
The members are the Chairman of the National Development Planning Commission, Professor George Gyan-Baffuor; a lawyer and women’s rights activists, Gloria Ofori-Buadu; a research fellow at the Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER) of the University of Ghana, Prof. Isaac Osei-Akoto, and the Chief Executive of the Fair Wages and Salaries Commission, Benjamin Arthur.
They swore the Official Oath and Oath of secrecy.
As the terms of reference, the committee is to make recommendations in respect of emoluments and other privileges for Article 71 Officeholders as specified under the Constitution.
The committee is also to examine any other relevant matter which it deems appropriate to its work.
President Akufo-Addo indicated that in recent times, there had been public discourse surrounding the remuneration of public officers which had centred primarily on those of Article 71 Officeholders.
Public
The debate, the President explained, had centred on “whether or not notwithstanding the Constitutional imperative, we are deserving of what is being paid to us in view of the challenges currently confronting our national economy”.
He, therefore, suggested to the committee that it might well be that their work should also focus on those concerns and make recommendations on how they should be addressed.
President Akufo-Addo stated that it appeared that every President of the Republic was bound by the constitutional injunction to establish the Committee of Emoluments for Article 71 Officeholders to consider the emoluments of Article 71 officeholders.
“I think it may be worth our while to examine the practice of other jurisdictions.
For example, the American one, where the principles are established and automatically adjusted according to certain objective criteria,” he added.
Article 71
The inauguration of the five-member committee is sanctioned by Article 71 (1) of the Constitution which requires the President to set it up to determine the salaries and allowances payable, and the facilities and privileges available to his office, the Vice-President, the Speaker and Members of Parliament and a group of nine officeholders spelt out in that Article.
The recommendations of the five-member committee are subject to the approval of the President and Parliament.
The composition of the committee is done on the advice of the Council of State.
“I’ve appointed you to this committee on the advice of the council of responsible Ghanaians as eminently qualified to undertake this important function and I congratulate each and every one of you on your appointment,” President Akufo-Addo said.
He urged the committee to bring to the table the work of previous committees, namely those chaired by Miranda Greenstreet, Mary ChinneryHesse, Ishmael Yamson, Marian Ewurama Addy, Francisca Dora Edu-Buandoh and Yaa Ntiamoah Badu in the conduct of their work to be able to establish some consistencies.
The President also reminded members of the committee that the task ahead was a challenging one but it was his expectation that they would be up to it and deliver their report expeditiously.
President Akufo-Addo assured the committee of his full support for the assignment as well as his government’s assistance if needed throughout the period of their work.
Dr Ampadu-Fofie, on behalf of the committee, commended the government and the Council of State for the confidence reposed in them.
She gave an assurance that they would work diligently and expeditiously to deliver on their mandate.
Background
The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, recently reiterated that the money paid to Members of Parliament (MPs) and other Article 71 Officeholders every four years was accumulated salary arrears (gratuity) and not ex gratia.
He said at the beginning of every Parliament, most legislators, including himself as the Speaker, did not know the exact salary they were entitled to until the end of their four-year term; a practice he described as “wrong”.
The Speaker explained that whenever Ghanaians talked about budget for Parliament, they considered such budget as money earmarked for salaries and conditions of service of MPs, “especially what people refer to as ex gratia.”
“Gratuity is different from ex gratia; what they pay MPs is gratuity and it is another wrong practice because as we sit here in our third year, which is three years down, I as the Speaker do not know my salary,” he revealed.
Unstable salary
Speaking during a visit to the Graphic Communications Group Limited (GCGL), Mr Bagbin said: “My salary has not yet been fixed and so every month I am paid something based on what my predecessor was earning.’’
“But we all know from the labour front that every year they try to renegotiate with the government and so at the end of the four years then they (government) come out with your salary.”
“And that will definitely be higher than the first year and so they have to pay you arrears.
It is those arrears that balloon to what the Members of Parliament take at the end of four years and people call that ex gratia and you get the problem,” the Speaker explained.
Former General Secretary of the People’s National Convention (PNC), Atik Mohammed, has thrown down the gauntlet to Assin Central Member of Parliament (MP), Kennedy Agyapong, challenging him to follow through on the recent showdown comment.
In an interview on Peace FM, he noted that he is anticipating the showdown Mr Agyapong promised President Akufo-Addo and his Vice.
“I was expecting the showdown and I’m still looking forward to the showdown,” he stated.
During Saturday’s August 26, 2023, New Patriotic Party (NPP) Super Delegates Conference, Ken lost his cool after he received news of intimidation against some of his agents.
In the heat of the moment, he threatened to “give the President and his Vice a showdown.”
Reacting to the comment, Mr Mohammed questioned why his statement has been interpreted as advocating violence.
He argued that a showdown could mean anything including, vowing to resist any form of maltreatment against him as a candidate and any of his agents.
“Entertainers call it beef and me, I love showdown and beef. That’s why I got surprised when people took it to some absurd level that he was threatening to do something to the President.
“In the heat of the moment, you can say things and I didn’t see how the showdown constitutes violence. Showdown could mean; I won’t allow you to cheat in the election is a form of showdown, it could also mean I’ll resist any attempt to malhandle my supporters and agents; that could also amount to a showdown. I would defeat you is also a way of a showdown,” he added.
Meanwhile, Ken Agypong has been called to the disciplinary committee to respond to questions regarding the statement.
A prominent advocate against corruption, Vitus Azeem, has criticized President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo for his efforts in combating corruption, urging him to take stronger action to address the issue.
The ex-Executive Director of the Ghana Integrity Initiative (GII) called upon the President to exert greater diligence in restoring the government’s reputation.
Speaking to journalists in Accra, Mr Azeem further suggested to the President to exhibit more commitment in the fight against corruption.
“He’s not doing anything physical, there’s nothing on the ground. He’s even worse by way of always trying to exonerate some of his appointees from allegations that he has not even investigated. The best thing as a president is to call the person, and find out what has happened and if there’s a need for a committee to investigate you do that. But the president is the first person to come out and declare the person innocent. That is why he’s called a clearing agent. Apart from using it for a political game, you need to be able to investigate and sanction people that are guilty,” Vitus Azeem said.
President Akufo-Addo in his acceptance letter of the resignation of Cecilia Abena Dapaah from her portfolio as the Minister of Sanitation and Water Resources, said, “I am confident, like you, that at the end of the day, your integrity, whilst in office, will be fully established”.
Dapaah submitted her resignation letter to the president on Saturday, July 22, 2023, a day after she became the talk of town because her house helps had stolen huge sums of foreign and local currencies from her residence in Accra.
In her resignation letter, Madam Dapaah said she decided to step down “because I do not want this matter to become a preoccupation of government and a hindrance to the work of government at such a crucial time.”
Two house helps of the Minister and three others are currently facing charges before an Accra Circuit Court for allegedly stealing an amount of $1 million, €300,000, and millions of Ghanaian cedis at the former minister’s residence at Abelenkpe, Accra, in October 2022.
President Akufo-Addo, has advised judges in the nation to be cautious about excessive delays in managing cases, as it undermines the advancement and credibility of the judicial system.
He emphasised that judges should give precedence to the timing of cases and ensure their swift resolution, as delays could have serious consequences for individuals and damage the reputation of the judicial system.
Speaking at a swearing-in ceremony for some new judges at the Jubilee House, Accra, on August 29, 2023, President Akufo-Addo entreated the judicial council to be wary of delays to make the country attractive to investors.
“I [Akufo-Addo] thus urge you [judges] to be sensitive to undue delays that project the image of Ghana as a destination where litigation takes too long. This affects the attractiveness of the country as an investment destination,” he said.
He further advised the judges not to allow their religion, ethnicity, or political affiliations to influence their decisions to ensure fairness prevails in their rulings.
“Let me use this occasion to repeat that the dispensation of justice requires that application of the laws of the land must occur in the hallowed words of the judicial oath you have just taken without fear or favor, affection or ill will, that is, without recourse to the political, religious or ethnic affiliations of any persons before you,” President Akufo-Addo reiterated.
The new High Court judges sworn into office are Justices Dorothy Ayodele Kingsly-Nyinah and Ama Sefanya Ayittey.
President Akufo-Addo officially on Monday, August 28, inaugurated two new High Court Judges, urging them to administer the law with fairness, rigor, and impartiality, devoid of any bias or prejudice.
According to him, the judiciary must earn the public’s respect through the quality of the justice it delivers and the conduct of its members.
Dorothy Ayodele Kingsly-Nyinah and Ama Sefenya Ayittey have been appointed as the new judges.
The President congratulated them on their appointment during a ceremony at the Jubilee House in Accra, during which he administered the judicial oath, the oath of allegiance, and the oath of secrecy.
He urged them to stand out in their work by being honest, ethical, and knowledgeable about the law.
The President described as unacceptable “the situation where Judges proffered judgements on the basis of decisions from lower courts and cite them as law and even less so when Judges cited no authority at all for their rulings and give an order without reasons.”
They should know their case law and ensure that their decisions and judgments are motivated correctly.
President Akufo-Addo implored the judges to ensure that they adjudicate cases with fear or favour, ill will or affection, and they must at all material times, protect the fundamental rights of the citizens.
He further admonished them to be mindful of unjustified delays that portrayed Ghana as a location where litigation took an excessive amount of time, emphasising that “This affects the country’s attractiveness as an investment destination.”
In order to keep Ghanaians’ trust and maintain the country’s reputation as one where the rule of law is upheld, the President urged the judges to use technology to advance the rule of law.
“We know that harnessing the power of technology to advance the rule of law is critical in this modern era, if we are to maintain the confidence of the Ghanaian people and shore-up our country’s reputation as a country governed by the rule of law.
“I encourage both of you to take full advantage of the E-justice system in order to expedite the conduct of cases that comes before you and enhance the management of cases before the court,” he said.
Justice Kingsly-Nyinah thanked the President for the confidence reposed in her and her colleague.
She pledged that they would carry out their duties in accordance with the constitution and all other laws, and that justice would be perceived to be done equitably.
President Akufo-Addo has quelled mounting speculation and dispelled ongoing rumors suggesting that he has endorsed a candidate in the ongoing New Patriotic Party’s Super Delegates Conference.
He noted that despite receiving calls from various camps to support their candidate, he has not declared support for any.
He made the remarks after casting his ballot in the ongoing Super Delegates Conference.
” There are some who are calling on me to endorse their candidate but I haven’t endorsed anyone,” he stressed.
The President had earlier stated that he would vote for the candidate who can help the NPP beat the National Democratic Congress (NDC) candidate, John Dramani Mahama, in the upcoming 2024 general elections and help the party break the eight.
He, however, said he has not declared support for anyone.
Former Deputy Minister for Communication, Felix Kwakye Ofosu, has stated that President Akufo-Addo exhibits a lack of concern for events within his government.
According to him, previously, the president used to refute accusations of corruption, but now he disregards them.
In a Twitter post, the National Democratic Congress’ (NDC) Parliamentary Candidate for Abura Asebu-Kwamankese, stated that Ghanaians are navigating independently, suggesting the nation is on autopilot.
He criticized President Akufo-Addo, highlighting his apparent lack of concern for developments within his government, a departure from his earlier denial tactics.
“President Akufo-Addo does not appear to give a toss about anything that happens in his government.”
“Initially, he would always claim not to be aware. Now, he simply does not care!”
Kwakye Ofosu’s tweet follows the recent alleged stolen monies from the home of the former Sanitation Minister, Cecilia Dapaah.
In July, two domestic workers were brought before a court for purportedly stealing US$1 million, €300,000, and Ghanaian cedis from the former minister’s home.
Dapaah resigned following calls for her departure to allow investigations.
The Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) conducted a search at Dapaah’s residence after she was questioned about suspected corruption.
Another individual allegedly connected to the theft was granted bail, bringing the total number of those granted bail to three, including two who were released due to their status as lactating mothers.
Senior Presidential Advisor to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, Yaw Osafo-Maafo, has expressed concern that the alarming level of unemployment among graduates in Ghana is evolving into a significant national security concern.
He attributed the situation to the education system, which has shifted away from practical skills training in favor of a more theoretical approach.
“Anytime I look at tertiary education I become nervous. When I was Minister of Education, there were five or four universities belonging to government and one private but as I speak we have 95 universities almost a 100 training people but no hand on skills fundamentally very few will come out with hand on skills so what is going to happen it’s scary. We need to do some serious retrospection about the education system”.
The Senior Presidential Advisory said he is not comfortable how Universities almost all universities in Ghana continue to offer humanity courses rather than technical program.
“I am very uncomfortable about what I am seeing from tertiary education system and the outcome on the unemployment arising out of the educational system .You can’t go from five to about 100 universities in about 15 years and none of the universities is technical “
“We’ve converted all our Polytechnics into universities the reasons I don’t understand.We had Polytechnics which were doing far more humanity subjects than even technical subjects and as Minister for Education I invited all the Polytechnics and wanted to question why they were doing certain courses , when I went through the exercise with them I withdrew my complain because this was what was happening , all those who have done very well in maths and science want to do Engineering and other Science and Medicine so at the end of the A level of O level you hardly have any very good maths or science students left , they’ve all gone to other places so if you want people with maths background you won’t get “.
He therefore lauded initiative by Education Minister DrYaw Osei Adutwum to introduce students with no science background to pre-enginering programs .
Yaw Osafo Maafo suggested that stakeholders particularly churches and government need to meet over the situation to find solutions through a paradigm shift of the education system.
” the government and the churches need to sit down on the drawing board and think again we can’t continue like this, because unemployment is a serious problem and it is becoming a security problem we need to resolve it”.
The former Finance, and Education Minister Yaw Osafo Maafo said this Saturday August 19,2023 during the 23 General Meeting of Presbyterian church of Ghana at Kwahu Abetifi.
He said Presbyterian Church of Ghana having established about 2,500 basic schools, 36 senior high schools and two universities has the locus standi to sit with government address challenges making Ghana Education system counter productive.
“We need the church and the government because of your experience both in and out of Ghana to sit with government to look at education the Presbyterians are good at this because you have been the middle of good education systems in this country so when we are in difficulty in our education and we need to fall on one Christian unit it is going to be the Presbyterian Church, you have the know how you have the experience we need to sit and think again we can’t continue like this otherwise we will create a security problem for ourselves.”
The unemployment rate in Ghana is expected to reach 5.00 percent by the end of 2023, according to Trading Economics’ global macro models and analysts’ expectations.
In the long-term, the Ghana Unemployment Rate is projected to trend around 4.70 percent in 2024 and 4.50 percent in 2025, according to our econometric models, Trading Economics said.
According to Ghana’s 2022 Annual Household Income and Expenditure Survey (AHIES) Third Quarter Labour Statistics released on Wednesday 3rd May 2023 by Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) indicated that,about 1.76 million persons were unemployed in the third quarter of 2022.
Within this population, two out of every three unemployed persons were females. Across the three quarters, about 157,000 persons experienced an unemployment spell i.e. they were unemployed in all the quarters.
Close to 7.5 million persons remained employed throughout the three quarters out of the about 11 million persons employed in each quarter.
This indicates that across the three quarters about 3.5 million persons were moving in and out of employment depicting vulnerabilities.
On Friday, the 18th of August 2023, a recognition event was held by President Akufo-Addo to honor a group of enterprising young men and women.
This event celebrated their accomplishments through the Presidential Pitch initiative.
President Akufo-Addo commended these youthful entrepreneurs for defying challenges and embarking on entrepreneurial endeavors, resulting in the creation of job opportunities for themselves and fellow Ghanaians.
Since its inception in 2017, the Presidential Pitch initiative has successfully conducted three editions.
Through these editions, a total of thirty young entrepreneurs have been bestowed with monetary rewards aimed at facilitating the establishment and expansion of their businesses.
Addressing the importance of entrepreneurship in fostering economic growth and development, President Akufo-Addo emphasized its global recognition as a significant catalyst for economic transformation.
He firmly believed that the convergence of technology, entrepreneurship, and business represents the most effective approach to addressing economic hurdles and the concerning levels of unemployment.
Furthermore, President Akufo-Addo underlined that governments worldwide acknowledge youth entrepreneurship as a potent solution to contemporary unemployment issues.
He went on to highlight the positive impact of the Presidential Pitch initiative.
Under its first three seasons, a notable achievement of 702 direct jobs and numerous indirect job opportunities have been generated by the initiative’s winners.
Most notably, these employment opportunities have been established primarily within rural communities, contributing to their development.
President Akufo-Addo expressed special commendation for Christian Boakye Yiadom, the Chief Executive Officer of Pizzaman Chickenman, who secured the tenth place in Season Two of the competition.
Christian’s pizza enterprise, launched on the premises of Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, was awarded twenty-five thousand cedis (25,000) through the initiative.
This capital infusion facilitated the expansion of his business, culminating in the opening of the first Pizzaman Chickenman branch on the KNUST campus on January 17th, 2020, six months following the competition.
Today, Pizzaman Chickenman stands as a prominent and beloved culinary brand, widely recognized and enjoyed by many.
Assin Central MP and NPP presidential aspirant,Kennedy Agyapong, has rated the Akufo-Addo led administration 6/10.
Speaking in an interview on TV3’s he said President Akufo-Addo‘s administration has not faltered in its performance.
“6 is above average. He’s not failed but let me be fair to him too,” he told host of TV3’s NewsDay.
Kennedy Agyapong was Roland Walker’s guest on NewDay on Wednesday, August 16, 2023. During the show they tackled a myriad of issues relating to his political ambition, the New Patriotic Party and issues affecting Ghana.
Among other things, he asserted that politics stands as one of Ghana’s biggest woes. He said politics is destroying the country.
Mr Agyapong noted that politics has polarised the system such that politicians are unable to undertake initiatives that would be advantageous for the country in the long term.
He said if elected, he would ensure that these resources are well utilised if given the nod.
Former Director-General of the National Development Planning Commission (NDPC), Dr Nii Noi Thompson, has unequivocally condemned the use of the term “Akyem Mafia” or any language that promotes tribalism.
He made the remarks in an article dubbed: “Beware, the tribal supremacists: Myths of J.B. Danquah and the Big Six.”
“Akyem Mafia” is a term that has been used in Ghanaian political discourse. It refers to a perceived group of influential individuals from the Akyem ethnic group who are believed to have considerable power and control over political and economic affairs in the country.
President Akufo-Addo and affiliates in government, including close family members are often the bearers of this tag.
However, in the article, Dr Thompson firmly denounced the utilisation of the phrase “Akyem Mafia” or “any term that demonises an entire tribe for the folly of a few.”
He further expressed his thoughts and challenged the deeply ingrained ‘tribalistic idea’ that portrays the Akyem people as the original founders of Ghana.
He also aimed to dispel certain misconceptions surrounding JB Danquah and the prominent figures known as the Big Six.
Dr Thompson’s article comes amid public uproar over a comment made by President Akufo-Addo which suggested that renaming the University of Ghana, Legon to honor the memory and legacy of J.B Danquah, may happen soon.
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Giving his submission on the piece, he noted that: “As expected, the president’s recent suggestion that the University of Ghana might be renamed after his late uncle, Dr. J.B. Danquah, the Gold Coast lawyer and “nationalist,” has provoked a firestorm of criticism from a public that has clearly had enough of the tribal-supremacist agenda of the president and his kinsmen.
“And none of them have articulated the rationale behind this agenda more brazenly than a relative of the president, lawyer Samuel Atta Akyea, who three years ago said the following on the television programme, Good Evening Ghana:
“If you remove the role of the Akyem people from the history of this country, we won’t have a history… The guy who named this country is from Akufo-Addo’s background. The one who wanted Ghana called Ghana… [was] J. B. Danquah….” Mr. Akyea went on to cite the Big Six, the leaders of the United Gold Coast Convention (UGCC) who were arrested by the British colonialists after the 1948 riots that accelerated the independence process, and reminded viewers that the president’s father, among the six, “was one of the individuals who are acclaimed as the pioneers of our independence.”
“With this crude concoction of facts and fiction, they tend to believe that they own the country and can do as they please. Textbooks, for instance, have been doctored and Danquah given disproportionate prominence in Ghana’s history.
This peasant aristocratic sense of entitlement, especially among people occupying national offices, is a threat to social cohesion and national development. So let us demolish forthwith a few myths about J.B. Danquah and the Big Six, and tackle other aspects of Ghanaian history that the tribalists have bastardised to drive this dangerous ideology of tribal supremacy. (For the record, I condemn the term “Akyem mafia,” or any term that demonises an entire tribe for the folly of a few).
Myth No. 1: Danquah’s research linked the Akan of Ghana to the ancient Ghana Empire.
Fact: That credit goes to Rev. J. B. Anaman, of Anomabo and Sekondi, whose research took place in 1895, the year Danquah was born.
Myth No. 2: Danquah founded the United Gold Coast Convention (UGCC).
Fact: Danquah himself described George Alfred (Paa) Grant, the wealthy Gold Coast merchant, as the “architect and founder of the UGCC.”
Myth No. 3: UGCC was the first political party in the Gold Coast.
Fact: The earliest known political parties (for municipal, not national, elections) were mainly the Accra Rate Payers Association and the Ga Manbii (Ga Nationalist) Party of Kojo Thompson in the 1920s. Lesser-known parties, such as the Asene Koo Wulu Party, later emerged in Accra and other municipalities like Cape Coast and Sekondi in the 1930s; never in Abuakwa, Danquah’s hometown. By the time the UGCC was founded in Saltpond in 1947, there were already other (if generally inactive) parties, particularly, the Gold Coast People’s League and the Gold Coast National Party. As a result, the name originally proposed by the founders was changed from Gold Coast People’s Party (GCPP) to United Gold Coast Convention (UGCC), to rein in the other parties.
Myth No. 4: The Big Six were the architects of the 28th February 1948 demo that propelled Ghana’s independence movement.
Fact: George Padmore, Kwame Nkrumah’s political advisor, stated in his book, The Gold Coast Revolution, that the Big Six did “not” initiate the demonstration. Nkrumah was away from Accra on the 28th , and Danquah and the other four initially condemned the ex-service men for the violence that had been instigated by the reckless shooting of unarmed demonstrators by a trigger-happy British officer named Colin Imray. The British arrested the six politicians – Kwame Nkrumah, Ebenezer Ako-Adjei, Edward Akufo-Addo, J.B. Danquah, William Ofori-Atta, and Emmanuel Obetsebi-Lamptey – more for their UGCC work than any direct involvement in the events of 28th February.
Who then was the architect of 28th February? That credit goes mainly to Mr. B. E. A Tamakloe, general secretary of the Ex-servicemen’s Union, who negotiated the demonstration with the governor; to whom the governor addressed all letters; and in whose name the permit for the demonstration was issued. He was supported by five other people, according to the Watson Commission’s report, making them the Real Big Six, but the five were not named.
However, all eight executives of the Union who planned the demo were named, giving us the Big Eight: (1) B. E. A. Tamakloe; (2) S. A. Codjoe; (3) R. T. Dodoo; (4) J. S. Laryea; (5) R. P. Craig; (6) F. L. Adjei; (7) J. D. Ankrah; and (8) G. E. Lutterodt. We need a proper history of Ghana.
And then there were the 29 martyrs who died from the disturbances of the 28th and the days that followed, including Sgt. Cornelius Nii Adjetey; Corporal Patrick Attipoe, and Private Odartey Lamptey, who were murdered by Imray. The Big Six, as a group, were accidental beneficiaries of history, their individual contributions to the nationalist movement notwithstanding.
Myth No. 5: Ashantis did not play any role in the independence movement because they don’t appear in the Big Six.
Fact: Ghana’s history is bigger than the Big Six, despite efforts by Danquah’s descendants to make the Big Six (and, within the Big Six, their relatives) the alpha and omega of our history. Krobo Edusei of the Ashanti Youth Association (AYA) was the chairman of the Kumasi committee of the nation-wide Anti-Inflation Campaign that was organised by Mantse Nii Kwabena Bonne (a chief of both Osu and Techiman, then part of Ashanti) in 1948.
When the Big Six were incarcerated in Kumasi, AYA plotted to storm the prison and free them, prompting the governor to whisk them to the Northern Territories, under stricter security, for fear that the hard-nosed AYA members may still make their way up north. Edusei later served nine months in jail for his political activism alongside Nkrumah. The AYA, in its militancy, had also demanded “self-government within the next five years,” compared to the UGCC’s gradualist approach of self-government “in the shortest possible time”.
The AYA, the Osu Youth Association, and the Sekondi Youth Association were among the youth groups that dragged Nkrumah from the UGCC and forced him to form the Convention People’s Party (CPP), which led Ghana to independence. They were the original foot soldiers! The proposed name for their new party was Ghana People’s Party, but Nkrumah asked that “Ghana” be reserved for independence and replaced it with “Convention” to show continuity, at least in name, from the UGCC.
Myth No. 6: Danquah named the Gold Coast Ghana.
Fact: That was simply impossible, as by 1957 Danquah’s political career was effectively over (he and Ofori-Atta having lost their seats to the CPP in the 1954 and 1956 elections). Only Nkrumah as prime minister in 1957 was in a position to propose that name, and he did. Danquah and the others criticised Nkrumah for choosing the name Ghana, and in his autobiography Nkrumah was forced to defend his choice.
Danquah, however, had a weird obsession for naming places, like the president does today. He had proposed, without any consultations, that the Northern Territories be renamed Fergusonia, after Ekem Ferguson, the surveyor from Anomabo who had done much work in the North. The idea was rejected by the British, much like his previous suggestion to rename the Gold Coast Akanland, and later Akan-Ga, when he was reminded that there were more than Akans in the colony. (He, like the president today and his fellow tribalists, was married to a Ga woman).
His most “valiant” name-changing effort was his suggestion after the 1948 riots that he and his relatives be put in charge of the Gold Coast, under the name Ghanaland. The idea of course was laughed off by the British. He pioneered the tribalism that his inward-looking descendants are now perfecting with national resources. (Remember the president’s statement, “Yen Akanfo” during his desperate struggle to win power – and destroy the country?)
Myth No. 7: Danquah was the “doyen of Gold Coast politicians”.
Fact: The Watson Commission described him as such but suggested that this was before Nkrumah came on the scene. Thus, in the 1951 election, Nkrumah won over 95% of the votes (from prison!) whilst Danquah scraped through with only 53% (and Ofori-Atta with 51%) in Abuakwa. In the 1954 election, both Danquah and Ofori-Atta, running on Busia’s Ghana Congress Party (GCP) after the collapse of the UGCC in 1951, lost to CPP upstarts, despite threats from the Okyenhene to deport anyone who voted for the CPP. Of the 104 seats, the GCP won only one – by Busia, who squeezed through his Wenchi constituency with an 11-vote victory over his CPP rival.
Danquah and Ofori-Atta again lost the 1956 elections, exposing the limits of Danquah’s purported doyenness. He was a novice when it came to political organisation and electioneering, no match for Nkrumah, the consummate organiser, strategist, orator, and man of the people. Whilst Nkrumah wore batakari, Danquah preferred his three-piece suit in the hot African sun, making him a stranger to his own people.
Myth No. 8: Kwame Nkrumah hated Ashantis.
Fact: The opposite was true. Nkrumah loved Ashanti and Ashanti loved him (and the CPP) back. One of the most fanatical members of the CPP was an Asante woman from Bekwai (but lived in Kumasi) who named herself Ama Nkrumah (the female version of Kwame Nkrumah) and pledged support to Nkrumah and the CPP with her blood. The CPP swept five of the six seats in the 1950 Kumasi municipal elections (6,210 votes versus 50 for the opposition), and would have won the sixth seat had it not been for a technical disqualification.
Ashanti was the first to benefit from Nkrumah’s Accelerated Education Programme of 1951, with the establishment of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology and Opoku Ware Secondary School in 1952, among others. Despite the terror attacks by the National Liberation Movement (NLM) in 1956 against CPP members, which led to an exodus of CPP refugees from Ashanti, the CPP won 8 seats in Ashanti, compared to 12 for the NLM in the 1956 election. The CPP won 43% of the total Ashanti vote and claimed NLM strongholds like Obuase and Asante Akyem hands down.
Suffice it to say that there is more to Ghana’s history than the Big Six, in whose shadow some now seek relevance and pre-eminence for their dead relatives. It appears that without the Big Six, they are nothing, unlike Nkrumah, whose legacy goes beyond the Big Six and stands on its own.
The public’s swift and no-nonsense rejection of the president’s loose talk about renaming UG after his uncle is a pointed reminder that Ghanaians would not tolerate the bastardisation of their history by any group or tribe, no matter how powerful or privileged they might feel.
Power, after all, in a democracy like Ghana’s, is fleeting. A word to the wise….
Director of Local Government Services at the Office of the President, Dennis Miracles Aboagye, has asserted that President Akufo-Addo’s legacy will be etched into the consciousness of Ghanaians due to his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic during his tenure.
He said despite various negative tags labeled against the President especially by the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), Ghanaians will forever be grateful to him for his remarkable feat in combatting the pandemic.
“The President said that we didn’t have resources for that situation so he admitted at one point that we needed help, we needed resources, and that he didn’t consider how much the nation would lose in terms of finances, because if he did, many people may die from the pandemic.
“He even stated that we know how to revive the economy and we don’t know how to revive a dead person and he knew very well that Ghana did not have a budget and resources for such emergency occurrences but he improvised and salvaged the situation in 2020,” Mr Aboagye noted.
He added that has earned an enviable reputation globally as one of the countries that effectively managed the COVID-19 pandemic due to the comprehensive measures implemented by Akufo-Addo to tackle the situation.
“Today the disease has been brought under control and so all of a sudden some people want to pretend as though nothing happened but the good news is that the Ghanaians that went through the situation know and they have not forgotten. So they can do all the politics and partisanship but Ghanaians who experienced the situation know that this government did well in managing COVID,” he added.
Minority Leader, Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson, has urged President Akufo-Addo to deliver a national address outlining the government’s strategies to revive the Bank of Ghana (BoG), which he characterized as facing an unprecedented collapse.
In a Facebook post, Forson emphasized the need for decisive actions to restore solvency to the central bank.
“Given the unprecedented collapse of our central bank, it is imperative for the President of Ghana to urgently address the nation. During this address, the President should outline the decisive actions that the government plans to implement in order to restore solvency to the Bank of Ghana,” Mr Forson said in a Facebook post on Monday.
Forson highlighted that when a regulated institution’s financials or liquidity position is compromised, the BoG typically enforces directives, including withholding dividend payments even in profitable situations.
“Granting of new loans will be put on hold; Appointment of new directors will be restricted; Capital expenditure will be temporarily suspended and staff recruitment will be paused, and other similar measures will be taken,” he added.
Other measures, such as suspending new loans, restricting director appointments, pausing capital expenditure, and halting staff recruitment, are also implemented.
Additionally, Forson dismissed claims by Richard Ahiagbah, Director of Communications for the New Patriotic Party (NPP), that Forson was a member of the BoG Board during the initiation of processes for the bank’s new head office construction.
Forson refuted these assertions in a press release, characterizing them as a “desperate attempt” by the NPP to defend their actions.
Forson clarified that during the Mahama/NDC administration, the Bank of Ghana never entered into a contract for the new head office’s construction nor purchased land in Accra for the building.
He criticized the decision to construct the new head office given the bank’s substantial loss and negative equity, deeming it a reckless and misguided priority.
Forson concluded by asserting that no attempt at equalization can absolve the current government and Governor Addison’s management from the historical collapse and mismanagement of the Bank of Ghana.
He maintained that the countdown to the resignation of the Governor and his deputies is ongoing.
“For the record, I was not part of the processes for the construction of this new Head Office building, and the Bank of Ghana Board never began such processes for the construction of this new Head Office building at Ridge. We maintain that the decision by the current Bank of Ghana Management and Board to construct an ultra-modern Head Office building at a time when the Bank of Ghana has recorded a loss of GhS60.8 billion and a negative equity of GHS55.1 billion; at a time when the ordinary Ghanaian is struggling to make ends meet, is a reckless and misplaced priority.”
“No attempt at equalisation can redeem the historical collapse and mismanagement of the Bank of Ghana by this Akufo-Addo/Bawumia NPP government, alongside Governor Addison and his management. The countdown to the resignation of the Governor and his deputies is still on,” Dr. Forson added.
Deputy Ranking Member on Parliament’s Education Committee, Dr. Clement Apaak, has criticized President Akufo-Addo‘s suggestion that the University of Ghana (UG) might be renamed after Joseph Boakye (J.B.) Danquah. Dr. Apaak finds this proposal unacceptable and has expressed his disapproval of the idea.
He claimed that the president has endeavored to give his forefathers a significant place in Ghanaian history during his reign.
This comes after the President hinted that the famous institution would be renamed after J.B Danquah in the future as an homage to his unshakable drive and vital role in rallying Ghanaians to create the university.
President Akufo-Addo made the remarks at the University of Ghana’s 75th Anniversary Thanksgiving Service.
Dr. Apaak, however, stated in an interview that renaming the university is not essential.
“Remember that JB Danquah belongs to the president’s family and this is not the first time that we have picked up signals that if the president has his way, UG will be named after JB Danquah.”
“I believe that that ought not to be the case. There is a general tendency that we are witnessing where President Nana Addo Akufo-Addo has tried to eulogise his ancestry and to give his forebears a prominent place in Ghana’s history,” he stated.
During the 75th Anniversary Thanksgiving Service of theUniversity of Ghana, President Nana Akufo-Addo emphasized the pivotal role played by Joseph Boakye Danquah, a former presidential candidate in 1960, in the university’s establishment.
In his speech, President Akufo-Addo conveyed his strong belief that history will remember JB Danquah favourably for his dedicated efforts in advocating for the creation of the university.
The President highlighted how Joseph Boakye Danquah’s unwavering commitment to securing Ghana’s own university ultimately led to the founding of the University of Ghana.
Furthermore, President Akufo-Addo pointed out that Danquah’s visionary pursuits extended to challenging the British recommendation for a sole university in West Africa, which was intended for Nigeria.
Instead, he rallied Ghanaians to support the establishment of their own educational institution.
The President also remarked that, considering the historical importance of Danquah’s contributions, the legacy of Joseph Boakye Danquah might even merit consideration for naming the University of Ghana after him.
He mentioned, “Indeed, in many other jurisdictions where there is less heat in their politics and more attachment to the facts of historical record, it would not have been out of place to have this university named after him. Who knows, one day it may well happen.”
President Akufo-Addo commended the University of Ghana for reaching its diamond jubilee and lauded its role in shaping the nation’s development.
“It will be wholly appropriate and not at all far-fetched to describe Joseph Boakye Danquah as the founder of this university [the University of Ghana], a fact that, on the 75th anniversary of its existence, should be vividly recalled by all of us who are being and are the beneficiaries of his work,” he said.
The President’s sentiment mirrored his previous comments made five years ago when the university initiated an endowment fund during its70th-anniversary celebration.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, on Wednesday, August 9, 2023, paid his respects to former Ivorian leader Henri Konan Bédié by signing the Book of Condolences at the Cote d’Ivoire Embassy in Accra.
Bédié, a significant political figure in the country for fifty years, passed away on August 1, 2023, in Abidjan at the age of 89.
Upon signing the condolence book, President Akufo-Addo conveyed his sorrow upon learning about Mr. Bédié’s passing.
He described Mr. Bédié as a prominent and loyal servant of the Ivorian people who contributed significantly to the country’s economic prosperity.
“President Konan Bédié was initially minister of Finance for Cotee d’Ivoire, who was part of an outstanding group of ministers Cote d’Ivoire’s first President Félix Houphouet-Boigny to create boom of the 1960’s and 1970’s that made Cote d’Ivoire the outstanding economy of the time.
“President Konan Bédié as the minister for finance played a very important role in the development his nation. He has been a faithful servant of the Ivorian people and the republic. He was also a very great friend of Ghana. He treasured very much his ancestral links to Ghana and never failed to remind me that he was also a Ghanaian.
“He was a man with whom I had very good relations and I have to tell you how sorry I am when I heard the news of his departure and that is what I has brought me here today to come and register in the name of the Ghanaian people and government our sincere condolences over the loss of this illustrations public servant of Côte d’Ivoire” President Akufo-Addo said.
Bédié ruled the West African country for six years before being deposed in 1999.
Alassane Ouattara, the current president of Cote d’Ivoire and Mr. Bédié’s longtime rival, declared 10 days of national mourning for the late leader, who had continued to influence Ivorian politics as chairperson of the Democratic Party of Ivory Coast-African Democratic Rally for the last two decades.
The National Democratic Congress (NDC) party, has voiced disappointment regarding President Akufo-Addo’s approach to the Niger coup issue.
In an official statement, the NDC made clear its non-support for hastily involving brave Ghanaian soldiers in any impulsive and poorly thought-out actions.
The NDC firmly believes that the pursuit of productive dialogue and skillful diplomacy should be continued.
“The NDC finds President Akufo-Addo‘s conduct deeply disheartening. His failure to present this crucial matter for parliamentary deliberation denies him a legitimate democratic mandate from the Ghanaian people’s representatives, which is essential for determining the country’s best interests.”
The NDC emphasizes the need for broader bipartisan consultations to establish a unified Ghanaian stance on such a sensitive issue.
The General Secretary of the NDC, Fifi Fiavi Kwetey, stated “President Akufo-Addo’s actions stand in contrast to his attempts to educate other nations about democracy. His consistent disregard for constitutional and democratic channels to shape Ghana’s stance on critical matters of this kind is concerning.”
Minority in Parliament, has contended that the border closure in Niger due to the military coup has highlighted the government’s significant shortcomings in its Planting for Food and Jobs (PFJ) policy.
Ghanaian onion traders stranded at the Benin border have urgently called on President Akufo-Addo to step in and facilitate the release of approximately 70 trucks carrying onions from Niger to Ghana via Benin.
The closure of the border as a result of the Niger coup has left these trucks and drivers immobilized at the border for several weeks.
The Ranking Member on the Food and Agriculture Committee of Parliament, Eric Opoku, responded to the situation by criticizing the government’s decision to import vegetables that were intended to be produced under the Planting for Food and Jobs program.
Opoku noted, “We are clearly unable to meet the local demand for onions in Ghana. Consequently, we heavily rely on onion imports from Niger, spending over $100 million annually. The coup in Niger and the subsequent border closure are significantly impacting traders.”
He continued, “I’ve previously stated that the Planting for Food and Jobs program has been a glaring failure. Despite substantial investment, the outcomes are negligible. Items designated under the program are still being imported in large quantities.”
Political turmoil in Niger has led to substantial price hikes in vegetables, with vegetable bags now priced between GH¢1,500 and GH¢1,600.
Industry stakeholders have expressed concerns that prices could surge to GH¢3,000-GH¢4,000 if the situation is not promptly addressed.
Renowned Ghanaian media personality Kwasi Kyei Darkwah, alias KKD, has expressed that President Nana Akufo-Addo has overseen a considerable amount of decay during his tenure as the leader in the Fourth Republic.
He particularly emphasized that corruption has escalated within President Akufo-Addo‘s appointees, leading to a decrease in the feeling of national loyalty among Ghanaians. This trend could have adverse effects on the ethical foundation of the next generation.
Discussing the deterioration in effective governance observed since Akufo-Addo assumed the presidency, KKD expressed his dismay at the absence of integrity within the Akufo-Addo leadership, even though he criticized Mahama’s administration for similar misconduct.
“During John Mahama’s time, they said his government appointees were doing create, loot and share but under Akufo-Addo, they are doin g create, loot and keep,” he said in Akan.
His comment comes after a former Minister for Sanitation, Abena Dapaah is being hounded by Ghanaians for stashing huge sums of dollars in his bedroom.
The Ghanaian veteran broadcaster also expressed disappointment in the governance of President Akufo-Addo, and hastened that the time has come for Ghanaians to speak up against the bad policies and maladministration of the NPP government especially as the economy is crumbling.
He indicated that prior to the 2016 eletions that resulted in the defeat of the John Mahama administration, Akufo-Addo made a lot of promises and spoke to the conscience of the electorates for their mandate to serve the country but has turned away from the promises.
KKD who was speaking on Inside Politics hosted by Mugabe Maase on Power FM/TV XYZ referred to an interview Akufo-Addo, then opposition leader, granted Kwami Sefa Kayi on Peace FM in the run up to the 2016 general elections where he narrated the Ghanaian challenges and proffered practicable solutions which he has failed to tackle in power.
In that interview, the NPP flagbearer then maligned the Mahama administration and tagged him and his appointees as incompetent while pointing to unemployment and rising cost of living for the average Ghanaian as the reasons he was soliciting votes from Ghanaians to serve them.
“Even now, things are hard and it looks like there are no leaders in the country,” he said in Akan while charging Ghanaians to try him. “Today as we speak, some Ghanaians have relocated to Ivory Coast to find jobs and this is because jobs are scarce in our country.”
After watching the video clip which was aired on the programme, KKD said, “I don’t know whether our president at the time was speaking about how he had planned to govern us.”
He said the issues Akufo-Addo raised are prevalent under his watch as the president of the country, adding “they were lies.”
KKD said it is disgraceful that Akufo-Addo knows no shame and did not correct the wrongs of his predecessor but has plunged the country into severe hardship than he met the country when he was sworn in as a president.
He mentioned the high cost of living, the lack of jobs for the youth, heightening corruption and impunity as well as creating wealth for a few family and friends in the NPP government as what Akufo-Addo kicked against when he was seeking the mandate of Ghanaians.
To him, Akufo-Addo has failed woefully because he knew the challenges and solutions of the country but has failed to draft policies that will assuage the plights of the people.
Kalyppo, once a refreshingly affordable option at just GHC0.50 in 2016, has undergone a startling transformation in price over the past few years, National Communications Director for the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Sammy Gyamfi has lamented.
He ascribed the situation to the economic changes that have taken place under the Akufo-Addo administration.
“The price of everything has soared under the Akufo-Addo regime,” he added.
President Akufo-Addo in 2016 earned the nickname ‘Nana Kalyppo’ after he was spotted in a vehicle consuming the drink. This was in the lead up of the 2016 general elections when he was still a presidential aspirant.
Ever since the picture surfaced in the media, many Ghanaians who were NPP members turned the story around in favour of Akufo-Addo, saying he was promoting Ghana made goods.
Some also said it was to show then President, John Dramani Mahama that he (Akufo-Addo) was medically fit than the so-called youths who run away from drinks perceived to be lased with sugar. In a show of solidarity to Akufo-Addo, many sympathisers across Ghana started taking selfies with Kalyppo drink and posting it on their social media timeline; pictures which made it to traditional media.
Sammy Gyamfi has asserted that Ghanaians can no longer engage in such challenges due to the price of the drink which has significantly soared since the Akufo-Addo government assumed office.
Speaking in an interview on Onua TV, he blamed the development on the alleged printing of huge stacks of money by the Bank of Ghana for the government.
“The unlawful printing of huge sums of money has resulted in inflation. Apart from cement which was sold at GHC27 in 2016 and is now going for GHC96, I checked the prices of goods at the Makola market and I was shocked to find out that the price of a bag of corn which was selling at GHC170 is now selling at GHC 700. A bucket of onions which previously sold at GHC15, is now selling at GHC50. The 5kg bag of Gino rice which was selling at GHC25, is now selling at GHC 185,” he said.
“Even the President’s favorite drink, Kalyppo which was selling at 50 pesewas is now selling at GHC 3.50,” Mr Gyamfi added.
The NDC is accusing the Bank of Ghana of printing an amount of GHC 80 billion for the government of Ghana. In an interview on Onua TV, Sammy Gyamfi noted that despite the “unlawful” funding to the government, there is currently nothing to show.
“More than 50 percent of the total revenue. They are living like there is no law. The impunity. After supplying the government over GHC 80 billion, let’s ask ourselves what the government used the money for,” he said.
He noted that the amount of money printed by the Central Bank for the Akufo-Addo-led government comes nowhere close to the loans that were taken by the erstwhile Mahama government.
“He (John Mahama) borrowed GHC 54 billion. This does not even include the accumulated debt of this government,” he added.
The closure of the Benin border following the coup in Niger is causing a surge in onion prices across various markets in Ghana.
Stranded onion traders at the Benin border have appealed to President Akufo-Addo for assistance by releasing about 70 trucks carrying onions from Niger to Ghana.
Due to the border closure resulting from the Niger coup, these trucks and their drivers have been stuck at the border for weeks.
Concerned onion sellers, responsible for over 70 truckloads, emphasized that without urgent action, the onions could spoil, causing a potential spike in prices.
Vegetable prices have already soared due to the political turmoil in Niger, with vegetable bags priced between GH¢1,500 to GH¢1,600.
There are fears that prices could escalate further to GH¢3,000 to GH¢4,000 if the situation isn’t resolved promptly.
Spokesperson for the onion sellers, Yakubu Apendiba, explained that “some trucks have passed through the Benin border, but some are still stuck at the Burkina Faso border. Onions that used to be sold at GH¢1,000 to GH¢1,100 are now priced at GH¢1,500. There’s a scarcity of onions in other areas as well. We appeal to the government to help us communicate with Burkina Faso’s President so the trucks can be escorted to Ghana.”
The military in Niger announced a coup on July 27, dissolving the constitution, closing borders, and suspending institutions.
The situation has led to regional instability and concerns of military intervention from neighboring countries.
ECOWAS, a West African regional group, warned of possible force if President Mohamed Bazoum was not reinstated.
The junta in Niger stated that the country’s armed forces are ready to defend the nation.
Member of Parliament for Ningo-Prampram, Sam Nartey George, has labeled President Akufo-Addo as a “sound bite President,” alleging that the President’s speeches contradict his actions.
In a scathing assessment of the Akufo-Addo-led administration, Sam George did not mince words in expressing his dissatisfaction with what he perceives as a lack of substantial progress under President Akufo-Addo’s leadership.
During an interaction with host of the AM Show, Benjamin Akapko, Mr George remarked that “Akufo-Addo is all talk and no action . He’s a soundbite president. He says the things that will give him all these citations but he doesn’t do anything.”
The legislator’s comment was in reaction to a medal of merit in leadership award conferred on President Akufo-Addo by the African Bar Association.
The award, according to the President of the Association, Hannibal Egbe Uwaifo, was conferred on President Akufo-Addo because he is “a pan Africanist, Anti-Corruption Crusader, a rare democratic leader in the field of good governance, a true African Statesman whose legacies present African leaders must emulate, and we are minded to say will stand the test of time.”
However, in a reaction, Mr Nartey George said the African Bar Association has lost its credibility for giving the award to Mr Akufo-Addo on the aforementioned grounds.
“Akufo- Addo is not a respector of democratic freedoms, he’s not diplomatic, he fights media men, leading journalists have had to run away because Akufo-Addo could not stand them. So how do you tell me that such a person is a respecter of democratic freedoms?” he said.
He further accused the President of fighting against institutions and individuals assisting in the fight against corruption. He cited for instance that the killers of investigative journalist Ahmed Suale remain unpunished while the President touts himself as a democratic leader.
“He’s not just fighting media houses, he even summoned the diplomatic Corps to Peduase and warned them to stop talking about the problems of Ghana…That’s how intelligent our President is,” Mr George added.
The Africa Bar Association has bestowed President Akufo-Addo with the Medal of Merit in Leadership Award.
The President of the Association, Hannibal Egbe Uwaifo, explained that the award recognizes President Akufo-Addo’s pan-Africanist ideals, commitment to combating corruption, outstanding governance, and enduring statesmanship.
“The Award was conferred on President Akufo-Addo because he is “a pan-Africanist, Anti-Corruption Crusader, a rare democratic leader in the field of good governance, a true African Statesman whose legacies present African leaders must emulate, and we are minded to say will stand the test of time,” Mr Uwaifo added.
Expressing gratitude for the honor, President Akufo-Addo acknowledged the esteemed status of lawyers in African societies and their pivotal role in liberation struggles.
“In all our countries, it must be a source of pride for us that lawyers were at the forefront of the fight for liberation from colonialism. Indeed, since independence, lawyers have moved seamlessly between politics and the legal profession,” he stated.
Speaking at the 2023 Annual Conference of the African Bar Association in Pretoria, South Africa, President Akufo-Addo emphasized the need for Africa to define its narrative, promote intra-African trade, and challenge colonial economic models.
He underscored the significance of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) as a historic opportunity for fostering intra-African trade, job creation, and economic growth.
The President highlighted that unity, stability, and democratic governance are vital for realizing the AfCFTA’s potential and achieving transformative industrialization across the continent.
President Akufo-Addo urged governments and businesses to provide bold leadership in embracing this pivotal moment in Africa’s journey towards prosperity.
President Akufo-Addo has embarked on an enthusiastic campaign to promote the salt mining company Electrochem operating in the Ada region.
The establishment of Electrochem had previously incited protests among residents due to concerns about the acquisition of salt ponds.
However, during this year’s Asafotufiami festival, President Akufo-Addo sought the community’s support and emphasized that the Ada-Songor Salt project led by Electrochem has the potential to drive local development.
“We want all the people in Ada to support this project because it has the capacity to transform the economy, and the lives of all the people of Ada and our country. I want all of you to continue to give maximum support to the activities of Electrochem,” President Akufo-Addo advised.
President Akufo-Addo encouraged all Ada residents to back the project, stating, “We want all the people in Ada to support this project because it has the capacity to transform the economy, and the lives of all the people of Ada and our country. I want all of you to continue to give maximum support to the activities of Electrochem.”
Earlier in June, President Akufo-Addo urged the chiefs and people of Ada to permit the salt mining company’s operations in the area.
Despite residents’ resistance and various concerns, President Akufo-Addo emphasized the significance of accepting the Ada Salt Project.
The allocation of the Songor salt concession to Dr. Daniel McKorley, chairman of the McDan Group of Companies, for mining has sparked multiple controversies, including protests and legal disputes.
Evans Aggrey-Darkoh has been selected by President Akufo-Addo to lead the Civil Service of Ghana.
He takes over from Nana Kwasi Agyekum-Dwamena.
Before assuming this role, Dr. Aggrey-Darkoh held the position of chief director at the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs.
A communication bearing the signature of Nana Bediatuo Asante, the Secretary to the President, has stipulated that Dr. Aggrey-Darkoh has a span of 14 days to formally accept the appointment.
According to the letter, “In accordance with Article 193(1) of the Constitution and Section 6 (1) of the Civil Service Act, 1993 (PNDC 327), I am delighted to apprise you of your designation as the acting head of the Civil Service. This designation is interim and awaits the constitutionally obligatory counsel from the Public Services Commission.”
The letter concludes with congratulations on the appointment.