In an interview , Manu stated that he believes the NPP will not allow Dr. Bawumia to run for president again. He suggested that Nana Addo had played a key role in promoting Bawumia’s rise to prominence.
Manu further claimed that with Nana Addo no longer in power, the party would use its resources to maintain control.
“As Nana Addo has left the NPP party, the party won’t allow Dr. Bawumia to stand for the president again. They feel like because Nana Addo is the president, he used his power to bring in Dr. Bawumia, so now that he is no longer in power, they would use their money and power to show him that the party was for them.
“Now, even the NPP members, when they meet Nana Addo an
d he misbehaves, they will tell him, ‘When you’re on the seat that’s when you have power, so since you’re no longer on the seat, nobody is scared of you,’” he said.
Reflecting on his past support for the NPP, Manu criticised Nana Addo’s handling of certain issues with chiefs and kings, implying that it was not appropriate.
“Sometimes, I can’t just believe that Nana Addo is not our president anymore. I remember campaigning for the NPP before, and the influence the party had in the country was strong. But the way Nana Addo handled certain things with the chiefs and kings wasn’t right,” he added.
John Dramani Mahama was officially sworn in as President of Ghana on January 7, 2025, during a ceremony at Black Star Square in Accra.
This event marked his return to the presidency, making him the first Ghanaian leader to be re-elected to the country’s highest office.
The inauguration was attended by more than 30 heads of state and prime ministers, emphasizing its importance worldwide.
In his speech, Mahama focused on key values such as democracy, hope, and unity. He promised to strengthen the healthcare system and promote gender equality during his second term.
Speaking on United Showbiz, the “Yeeko” singer urged the president to declare a state of emergency to address the environmental damage caused by the practice.
He advocated for a comprehensive plan involving key stakeholders like chiefs, politicians, and community leaders to restore the polluted water bodies affected by illegal mining.
Okyeame Kwame emphasized that the issue transcends political lines, criticizing both the NPP and NDC for failing to curb the problem.
Galamsey, or illegal mining, is a major contributor to deforestation in Ghana, affecting several regions and forest reserves.
The Ghana Forestry Commission has been intensifying its efforts through military operations and seeking more resources.
Despite these measures and revised laws, challenges such as weak enforcement, corruption, and unemployment continue to hinder progress.
Other contributing factors to deforestation include agricultural expansion, illegal logging, and infrastructure development.
“The president has the executive power to say they should end both legal and illegal mining from now to January 27 and constitute another group with a proper stakeholder mapping which includes the chiefs, politicians, and various leaders,” he said.
The rap doctor added, “If we don’t stop politicizing this whole galamsey issue, we will get nowhere. Both NPP and NDC have proven to us they are lairs, so let us set aside these political parties and end illegal mining.”
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has issued a warning to political parties against announcing election results before the Electoral Commission (EC) during the December 7 elections.
Addressing attendees at the 2024/2025 Annual General Conference of the Ghana Bar Association, held at the Great Hall of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, the President underscored that only the EC has the official authority to declare election results.
He emphasised that adhering to this protocol is essential for ensuring peace and stability throughout the electoral process and beyond.
“Political parties must refrain from declaring election results before the Electoral Commission does so, as this can lead to confusion, misinformation, and even potential conflicts.
“The EC’s role as an impartial and independent body ensures that its results reflect the will of the people, free from partisan influence.
“This assignment of responsibility is essential to maintain public trust in the electoral system and to prevent any undermining of democracy through the spread of unverified orfalse election outcomes.”
Nana Aba Anamoah, a prominent media personality, has issued a challenge to President Akufo-Addo, urging him to address the issue of deliberate misinformation aimed at discrediting John Dramani Mahama by the New Patriotic Party (NPP).
In a video shared by Nana Aba Anamoah on her X page, President Akufo-Addo discussed how, before the 2008 general elections and beyond, false and damaging information was deliberately spread about him, including allegations of drug trafficking and the murder of his ex-wife.
These stories were purportedly crafted by the opposition to undermine public confidence in his ability to govern.
Nana Aba Anamoah responded by daring the president to also acknowledge how the NPP has engaged in similar tactics against the National Democratic Congress (NDC) presidential candidate, John Dramani Mahama.
Her tweet stated, “The President just detailed how fake, scandalous stories were shared about him in previous & upcoming elections by the opposition. It would have been nice to add how his party’s machinery also widely spreads wild false stories about John Mahama. That’s fair.”
Dada KD believes that since assuming office, President Akufo-Addo has not met the public’s expectations. He specifically mentioned incidents during Akufo-Addo’s term that have portrayed him negatively.
During a discussion with Captain Smart on Onua TV, Dada KD highlighted his concerns about the Ghana Police Service arresting individuals who strongly criticize the Akufo-Addo administration. He described this as a tactic used by the president to stifle dissenting voices.
Dada KD emphasized that while the New Patriotic Party (NPP) may not be failing in governance overall, the blame for any shortcomings lies with President Akufo-Addo.
“I’m deeply disappointed. It’s not that the NPP is failing in governance, but rather it’s the Akufo-Addo administration that has disappointed us. Whether he agrees or not, we won’t support him in the next election,” he remarked.
Dada KD also mentioned the fear of being detained by national security for speaking critically, citing it as a method to suppress dissent against the government. This practice has drawn criticism from political analysts and the National Democratic Congress (NDC), particularly regarding the targeted arrests of journalists like Captain Smart.
The Ministry of Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs has stood by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo‘s practice of asking traditional chiefs to stand before greeting them.
The Minister for Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs, Stephen Asamoah Boateng, clarified that this custom aligns with Ghanaian cultural norms, emphasizing respect for authority as integral to unity and mutual respect within communities.
According to Boateng, the tradition of standing to greet elders and authorities is deeply rooted in Ghanaian culture, serving as a gesture of deference and reverence.
He stressed that the president’s request is not intended to diminish chiefs’ dignity or independence but rather to reaffirm cultural values and hierarchy.
“The tradition of showing respect for authority, deeply embedded in Ghanaian culture, is crucial for fostering unity, order, and mutual respect within communities. Standing when greeting elders, leaders, or persons of authority is a customary gesture of deference and reverence.
“This request for Chiefs to observe this tradition, especially at public events, stems from our commitment to upholding and preserving Ghanaian cultural values, including the principles of respect and hierarchy. It is important to note that the President’s position on this tradition is intended as a reaffirmation of cultural norms that underpin Ghanaian society,” the minister wrote.
He added, “The call for chiefs to stand when greeting the president at public events is not meant to diminish the dignity or independence of traditional leaders. Instead, it acknowledges their respected role in Ghanaian society by showing brotherly love and mutual respect”.
Boateng cited the 1992 Constitution, which grants the president precedence at public events, as supporting Akufo-Addo’s actions.
“It is important to remember that the Constitution, specifically article 57 (2), states that ‘the President shall take precedence over all other persons in Ghana.’ The President, as the Head of State, Head of Government, and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ghana, is the nation’s primary representative both at home and abroad,” he noted.
He also highlighted that the president respects chiefs’ sacred spaces and has never asked them to stand in their palaces.
The controversy arose after a video surfaced showing Akufo-Addo requesting chiefs to rise before greeting them at a funeral event.
Despite criticism from some quarters, including former President John Dramani Mahama, the ministry maintains that the president’s actions are rooted in cultural traditions and a commitment to upholding Ghanaian values.
Otoo condemned a viral video showing the president instructing chiefs to stand up before greeting him, stating that such actions are not appropriate for someone in his position and should be denounced.
“While President Akufo-Addo deserves respect, he shouldn’t command chiefs to stand up when greeting him,” Otoo asserted.
In the widely circulated video, President Akufo-Addo is seen gesturing to chiefs to rise as he approaches them, sparking discussions about proper etiquette for leaders.
“A president, chosen by the nation, should not link his respect to chiefs standing up to greet him,” Otoo remarked on her social media platform. “His manner of demanding respect reflects an inferiority complex resembling that of a child. It’s disappointing,” she added.
The incident took place at a funeral event, where a brief video captured President Akufo-Addo and his bodyguard signalling traditional leaders to stand before greeting them.
Watch video below:
Background
In a 12-second video, President Akufo-Addo was shown making his way to greet traditional leaders at a funeral event.
But in what should have been a routine activity, the president and one of his bodyguards were seen signalling to some of the chiefs to rise to their feet before he greeted them.
In the video, when the president reached one particular chief, who was also seated, he gesticulated at him and then, as if to communicate something to him, pointed at himself and then again hand-gestured to the traditional leader to rise to his feet.
The action has been met with public backlash.
See post below:
A president voted for by the country, has all the powers and yet somehow this short man thinks his respect is tied to chiefs standing to greet him. The way he commands, demands and orders respect shows a child with inferiority complex.
Otoo condemned a viral video showing the president instructing chiefs to stand up and greet him, expressing that such actions do not reflect well on his status and should be condemned.
“While President Akufo-Addo deserves respect, he should not command chiefs to stand before greeting him,” Otoo stated firmly.
In the widely circulated video, President Akufo-Addo is seen signalling to chiefs to stand as he approaches to greet them, sparking controversy and discussions about the appropriate conduct for leaders.
“A president, elected by the nation, should not tie his respect to chiefs standing to greet him,” Otoo commented on her social media platform.
“His manner of commanding respect displays an inferiority complex akin to that of a child. It’s disheartening,” she added.
The incident occurred during a funeral event, where a 12-second video captured President Akufo-Addo and his bodyguard signaling traditional leaders to rise before greeting them.
Background
In a 12-second video, President Akufo-Addo was shown making his way to greet traditional leaders at a funeral event.
But in what should have been a routine activity, the president and one of his bodyguards were seen signaling to some of the chiefs to rise to their feet before he greeted them.
In the video, when the president reached one particular chief, who was also seated, he gesticulated at him and then, as if to communicate something to him, pointed at himself and then again hand-gestured to the traditional leader to rise to his feet.
The action has been met with public backlash.
Watch video below:
See post below:
A president voted for by the country, has all the powers and yet somehow this short man thinks his respect is tied to chiefs standing to greet him. The way he commands, demands and orders respect shows a child with inferiority complex.
Legal practitioner and media personality Richard Dela Sky has strongly criticized President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo‘s government, accusing it of economic mismanagement amidst the ongoing power crisis, locally known as “dumsor,” in Ghana.
Sky lambasted the government’s handling of the situation, highlighting the economic hardships faced by Ghanaians due to power outages and the apparent collapse of the Cedi.
He expressed concern over the impact on workers across various sectors, noting that many are struggling to afford basic necessities and facing challenges due to frequent power outages affecting food preservation.
Sky also criticised the government’s response, calling it passive and warning of potential electoral consequences if urgent action is not taken to address the pressing issues faced by citizens.
In a series of posts on social media, Sky pointed out the disconnect between the struggles of ordinary Ghanaians and the perceived extravagance of government officials, citing lavish events funded by government contracts while citizens suffer.
“Contrasts with the frivolity displayed by its upper ranks, who indulge in lavish birthday festivities for a notorious figure linked to the infamous escape of tax-funded guinea fowls, a scandal symbolizing alleged mismanagement and flight.
“Such events, funded perhaps with profit from government contracts paid for by the very citizens left in darkness, while the light stays on for a lavish birthday party for just one elite, underscore a disturbing disconnect with the struggles of the average Ghanaian.
“It is profoundly insulting that this government, which rose to power on commitments to rectify a power crisis mishandled by its predecessor, now blatantly disregards the demands of its citizens for a predictable load-shedding timetable.
“Too soon, they seem to have forgotten how they came to form a government. The concerns of the citizenry no longer seem to matter to them. This neglect transcends policy failure; it is a profound betrayal of public trust,” Richard Sky stated.
He emphasized that the government’s neglect of citizen demands for a predictable power supply schedule represents a betrayal of public trust, especially considering the promises made during their rise to power.
See tweet below:
There goes our power supply again! Woga tsi dzo ake! Sad!
This NPP administration has thoroughly eroded the savings of numerous Ghanaians, thrusting them into dire economic straits through its visible incompetence and or egregious mismanagement of the national economy.
— Richard Dela Sky (rD.s) (@RichardDelaSky) April 20, 2024
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has named Joseph Abuabu Dadzie as the interim Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC),effective Thursday, May 2, 2024.
Prior to this appointment, Dadzie served as the Deputy Chief Executive, overseeing Commerce, Strategy, and Business Development at the corporation.
He will be succeeding Opoku-Ahweneeh Danquah, who assumed the CEO role in April 2022.
The announcement was made through a letter signed by the President’s Secretary, Nana Bediatuo Asante, dated Wednesday, April 3.
Joseph Abuabu Dadzie’s appointment is subject to the necessary advice from the energy minister.
“Pursuant to Section 10 (2) of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation Act, 1983 (P.N.D.C.L. 64), I am pleased to inform you that the President has appointed you to act as the Chief Executive of Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (the “Corporation”) pending receipt of the required advice of the honourable Minister for Energy, given in consultation with the Public Services Commission.”
“Your appointment is effective May 2, 2024. I take this opportunity to congratulate you formally on your appointment Kindly indicate your acceptance or otherwise of this appointment,within 14 days of receipt of this letter Please accept the President’s best wishes,” the letter said.
Professor Kwadwo Appiagyei-Atua has suggested that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is treading cautiously regarding the law, awaiting the Supreme Court’s verdict on injunctions filed against him and Parliament.
The Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill 2024, unanimously passed by Parliament on February 28, awaits the President’s assent.
However, legal hurdles have emerged with two injunction applications lodged in the Supreme Court against the bill.
Private legal practitioner Richard Sky seeks to prevent the President from assenting to the bill, “order restraining the President of the Republic from assenting to ‘The Human and Sexual Values Bill, 2024”.
According to Sky, such action “will directly contravene the constitutional safeguards of liberties and rights of Ghanaians”.
Prof. Appiagyei-Atua stressed the need to await the court’s decision before any action is taken.
“When an application for an injunction is issued against a party to a suit, we have to wait for the court to determine whether the injunction should hold or not before any action can be taken,” adding, “so it is incumbent on the Clerk of Parliament not to take any action until the court has determined the matter.
“Whether the injunction is thrown away or upheld, if it is thrown away, then what it means is that it paves the way for the Clerk of Parliament to submit the bill to the President and the President will be compelled and obliged by the constitution as well as the rules of court to accept that”.
The bill, if enacted, imposes severe penalties of three to five years imprisonment for promoting LGBTQ+ activities, and up to three years for public identification with LGBTQ+ identities.
The legal and societal debates surrounding these issues continue to intensify in Ghana’s legal and political spheres.
Renowned broadcast journalist Nana Aba Anamoah has labelled the recently Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, as the “worst finance minister Ghana has ever had.”
Expressing her dissatisfaction, Anamoah accused Ofori-Atta of betraying the trust of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, asserting that his departure was long overdue.
Anamoah, who had earlier predicted Ofori-Atta’s dismissal in a tweet, welcomed the news with enthusiasm, asserting, “I am so happy that man is gone.”
Despite considering the move a reassignment, she emphasised that Ofori-Atta’s tenure had adversely affected the President’s legacy, deeming him responsible for significant shortcomings in the country’s financial management.
Highlighting the severity of her criticism, Anamoah declared, “He has messed up the President’s legacy, that’s what that man has done.”
Additionally, she asserted that Ofori-Atta should have resigned much earlier, citing his alleged supervision of various instances of corruption and mismanagement.
In conclusion, Nana Aba Anamoah expressed her relief at Ofori-Atta’s departure, acknowledging that while some may argue it’s “too little too late,” she sees it as a positive development for the nation.
“ I am so happy that man is gone, I am so happy because. I am telling you on authority that the man is not happy about it is a reassignment, I see it as a dismissal but Ken Ofori-Atta is the worst Minister Ghana has ever had, he is the worst finance minister this country has had. He has messed up the President’s legacy, that’s what that man has done.
“Ken Ofori-Atta should have resigned long ago, he has supervised so much rot and I am so glad that he has gone, I mean some will say too little too late, it’s good it came,” Nana Aba Anamoah stated.
The presidency released a list of ministers relieved of their positions in government in a reshuffle announced on Wednesday morning.
In a statement dated February 14, 2024, signed and issued by the Director of Communications at the Presidency, Eugene Arhin, it was announced that the changes were with immediate effect.
Ken Ofori-Atta, Minister of Finance, was among those replaced, according to a statement released on Wednesday by the communications directorate of Accra’s Jubilee House.
Rumors have been swirling regarding an imminent reshuffle in President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo‘s administration, marking a significant development since he assumed office in 2017.
Numerous media outlets have speculated that several key cabinet ministerswill receive new portfolios, while others may depart from the government following the conclusion of the party’s parliamentary primaries.
In a recent tweet by Muftawu Nabila Abdulai of Joy FM, there was a suggestion that Kojo Oppong Nkrumah who was slated to replace Mustapha Ussif as Sports Minister has now been earmarked for the Works and Housing Ministry role.
Additionally, there are indications that Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta may finally be replaced by Mohammed Amin, while Okoe Boye is reportedly poised to assume responsibilities within the Health Ministry.
Meanwhile, last week, 24 Metropolitan, Municipal, and District Chief Executives (MMDCEs) were sacked and 26 others were replaced.
See tweet below:
Kojo Oppong Nkrumah was earmarked to replace Mustapha Ussif as Sports Minister, but it appears that's not happening.
He might to go Works and Housing instead.
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta is likely to be replaced by Mohammed Amin, while Okoe Boye heads to Health Ministry. pic.twitter.com/QcNu67Ore6
President Akufo-Addo stressed the potential benefits of having both the Tema Oil Refinery and the Sentuo Oil Refinery operating at full capacity, emphasising Ghana’s ability to locally refine a significant portion of its oil, thus reducing reliance on imported refined products.
Energy Minister Dr. Mathew Opoku Prempeh (NAPO) used the occasion to extend an invitation to foreign investors, urging their active participation in the energy sector to enhance productivity.
Dr. NAPO commended the Sentuo Group for its substantial investment in the Santuo Oil Refinery.
The refinery, initially processing 40,000 barrels of oil daily, aims to gradually increase its capacity to 100,000 barrels per day in its first phase.
Xu Ning Quan, the Executive Chairman of Sentuo Group, expressed gratitude for the collaborative efforts involving government institutions and traditional authorities that facilitated the establishment of the Sentuo Oil Refinery.
Despite being Chinese-owned, Mr. Xu Quan affirmed their deep commitment to Ghana’s progress, particularly in the energy domain, emphasizing Ghana as their second home.
Ghanaian gospel artistDiana Asamoah has expressed scepticism regarding assertions of severe economic challenges in the country.
During the UTV Day With the Stars event, where numerous celebrities gathered to contribute to program production, she questioned the validity of claims about Ghana’s tough economic conditions.
Asamoah pointed to the recent Christmas and New Year celebrations in Ghana as evidence that such claims might be unfounded.
She specifically credited President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s leadership and suggested that if the economic situation were truly dire, the festivities would not have been observed as well as they were.
“Looking at the way people celebrated Christmas in 2023, I have never seen such a thing anywhere. I don’t see the reason why Ghanaians are complaining that the economy is hard.
“Those saying the country is hard are lying. We should be grateful to Nana Addo because if the economy were indeed hard, Ghanaians wouldn’t be celebrating like this,” she said.
Additionally, she declared her endorsement for the Vice President and flagbearer of the New Patriotic Party, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, expressing confidence in his potential victory in the upcoming 2024 general elections.
Diana Asamoah has consistently and proudly declared her support for the NPP, actively defending the party’s policies. On multiple occasions, she has refrained from blaming President Nana Akufo-Addo for the prevailing economic challenges in the country.
The NPP, led by its flagbearer Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, aspires to “break the 8” in the upcoming 2024 general elections, aiming to become the first political party to secure three consecutive terms in office.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has established a five-member committee to oversee ex-gratia matters.
The committee’s primary responsibility is to assess the remuneration and benefits of Article 71 officeholders.
Furthermore, it will evaluate the salaries and allowances of political officeholders and other relevant positions as determined by the constitution.
The committee consists of the following members:
Dr. Janet Fofie – Chairperson
Prof. Gyan Baffour – Member
Dr. Osei-Akoto – Member
Madam Gloria Ofori Buodu – Member
Mr. Ben Arthur – Member
President Akufo-Addo while speaking at the inauguration said, “I must indicate that in recent times, [there’s been] a lot of public discourse surrounding the remuneration of public officers, except the primary of those of Article 71 office holders, and whether or not, notwithstanding the constitutional imperatives were deserving of what is being paid to us.
“In view of the challenges currently confronting our national economy. It might well be that your work should also focus on these concerns and make recommendations on how they should be addressed,” he added.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo made controversial statements during a campaign rally for the New Patriotic Party (NPP) ahead of the Assin North by-election on June 27.
In his remarks, the president alleged that a parliamentary aspirant, who was facing criminal charges, would be imprisoned and urged voters to reject him.
Legal expert Martin Kpebu, while speaking on TV3 on July 1, criticized the president’s comments, describing them as desperate and propagandist.
Kpebu emphasized that the president should not have involved himself in such claims under any circumstances.
“Akufo-Addo had no business going into the Gyakye Quayson trial.
It shows a man who was desperate and was clutching at straw… and it is good the good people of Assin North showed him that his propagandist style, his desperate move amounts to nothing.
“How can the president embarrass himself like that? As a lawyer as everybody has said it, in the past the president acquitted himself as an excellent lawyer but in the last two decades he has thrown everything away on the political platform,” Kpebu jabbed.
He accused Akufo-Addo of sacrificing his hard-earned reputation as a lawyer with the desire to come into and stay in office.
“Akufo-Addo has been shredding the reputation he has built over the years… One goof to the other, one goof to the other,” he added.
The Assin North by-election
In the case of the June 27 by-election in Assin North, the Electoral Commission’s announced the NDC’s James Gyakye Quaysonas winner having garnered a total of 17,245 votes, representing 57.56% of the total votes cast.
His closest contender, Charles Opoku of the NPP received 12,630 votes, accounting for 42.15% of the votes.
Bernice Enyonam Sefenu of the Liberal Party Ghana (LPG) secured 87 votes, which represented 0.29% of the overall tally.
The by-election in Assin North was held to fill the parliamentary seat left vacant following a legal battle that questioned Quayson’s eligibility to hold office due to dual citizenship concerns.
Three residents of Ashaiman Lebanon Zone two have been brought before the Ashaiman District Court for allegedly assaulting Augustine Nyalali Ahiagbor, a journalist working with Angel FM/TV.
The accused individuals are Abass Mohammed, a 24-year-old national service person, Seth Kwame Baidoo, a 39-year-old civil engineer, and Samuel Yaw Baidoo, a 70-year-old pensioner.
They have pleaded not guilty to charges of assault and causing unlawful conduct, as stipulated under Section 54 and Section 152, respectively, of the Criminal Offences Act, 1960 (Act 29).
Presiding over the case, Mr. Derick Parden Eshun, granted the accused bail in the amount of GH¢10,000 each, with one surety for each accused person, subject to justification.
Furthermore, the court has referred the case for Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) and adjourned the proceedings to August 10, 2023.
According to the prosecution’s account, on May 25, 2023, at approximately 06:10 hours, a toilet facility at Mohammed’s father’s house collapsed, resulting in a tenant being trapped inside in Ashaiman Lebanon Zone two.
It was revealed that at around 07:10 hours, the journalist received information about the incident and went to the scene, where he encountered another journalist.
Upon the journalist’s arrival, the trapped individual had already been rescued, and some residents were attempting to transport him to the hospital for medical attention.
During this time, the complainant began recording videos and taking pictures of the collapsed toilet structure.
However, Yaw Baidoo approached him, grabbed his shirt, and demanded that he delete the recorded material while physically assaulting him.
Subsequently, approximately 10 other individuals joined in and insisted that the journalist delete the videos and pictures, subjecting him to further assault.
The accused parties allegedly engaged in a struggle with the journalist over his mobile phone, resulting in damage to the device. Additionally, they tore his shirt and singlet.
The prosecution stated that the local Assembly member, who was present at the scene and served as a witness, took possession of the complainant’s phone.
Both the Assembly member and the complainant then proceeded to the residences of Yaw Baidoo and Kwame Baidoo, intending to delete the recorded material.
However, they were unable to do so due to the phone’s damage.
Following the incident, the journalist lodged a complaint at the Lebanon Police Station, where a medical form was issued to him.
Subsequently, the accused individuals were arrested, investigated, and subsequently arraigned in court.
GCB Bank PLC (GCB) has launched the “GCB Greens Ghana for Life” initiative last Friday, as part of its 70th anniversary celebration and its contribution to the Green Ghana Project, a government-led initiative to plant 10 million trees to combat climate change and restore the country’s green environment.
The initiative aims to plant 7,000 trees in various locations of the bank across the country, in line with the bank’s environmental agenda and Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR).
The bank’s Board of Directors and Management staff joined President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and thousands of Ghanaians at the University of Ghana for the national tree planting event, which marked the Green Ghana Day.
A director of the bank, Alhassan Yakubu, told journalists that the initiative was a key CSR contribution of the bank that aligned with the government’s Green Ghana Project.
He said the bank had been supporting Ghana’s economic development for 70 years through financing projects and responding to critical social development needs.
He said in its 70th year, the bank was happy to implement one of its anniversary heritage initiatives that would help improve the country’s chances in the fight against climate change and secure a sustainable environment.
The bank was represented at the tree planting event at the University of Ghana by a member of its Board of Directors, Daniel Kwaku Tweneboah Asirifi, and other senior staff.
Other teams led by key GCB staff carried out similar exercises at almost 100 of the bank’s 186 branches and locations in the country.
One of the teams was led by the Executive Director, Wholesale and Investment Banking, Sam Aidoo, who planted trees at the GCB Learning Centre at Nungua with other executives.
Samuel Abu Jinapor, the minister of lands and natural resources, stated that the government’s efforts to establish a national integrated aluminum sector are on track and making steady progress.
He asserted he doing so in accordance with the Ghana Integrated Aluminium Development Corporation Act, 2018 (Act 976) that formed the Ghana Integrated Aluminium Development Corporation (GIADEC) to advance and develop the nation’s integrated aluminum industry.
The minister made this statement yesterday in Akosombo, in the Asuogyaman District of the Eastern Region, at the beginning of a two-day workshop on the downstream aluminum business.
The workshop, which was organised by GIADEC, in partnership with the Strategic Anchor Industries Unit of the Ministry of Trade and Industry and the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), brought together stakeholders in the aluminium industry to deliberate on policy options and an implementation plan for the downstream aluminium industry.
It follows extensive research, data collection and technical analysis of best practices across the world carried out by GIADEC and ODI.
Adding value
Delivering the keynote address at the workshop, Mr Jinapor, who is also the Member of Parliament for Damongo in the North East Region, emphasised the need to add value to the country’s mineral resources to ensure optimal benefit from them.
He said the government had, since 2017, been pursuing the path for all mineral resources, including gold, bauxite, iron ore, lithium and other green minerals.
On bauxite, the minister said while the raw ore sold for around $60 per tonne, the primary aluminium, produced from bauxite, was selling for over $2,000 per tonne.
He added that Ghana had an estimated bauxite resource base of over 900 million tonnes, capable of creating more than two million sustainable jobs and generating over $1 trillion in revenue if fully integrated.
“Unfortunately, we have, over the years, failed to make the needed investment in this area,” the minister lamented.
He expressed the government’s optimism of the contribution of a fully integrated aluminium industry to socio-economic development.
“It is for this reason that, in 2018, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo took that bold decision to establish, by an Act of Parliament, GIADEC to promote and develop an integrated aluminium industry here in our country,” Mr Jinapor said.
Achievements
According to the minister, GIADEC had, since its establishment, developed a masterplan for the upstream sector and was implementing its Four Project Agenda to expand the existing mine, build three additional mines, build refineries and modernise the Volta Aluminium Company (VALCO).
He said all four projects were at various stages of implementation.
“It is, therefore, necessary to prepare the downstream industry and make it ready to off-take products from the upstream industry,” he added.
Mr Jinapor urged participants at the workshop to bring their expertise to bear and come up with policy options and plans that would help build a robust, functioning and vibrant downstream aluminium industry that contributed meaningfully to the national economy.
Other participants at the workshop were senior officials of the Ministry of Trade and Industry, the ODI, the African Continental Free Trade Area Secretariat and companies in the upstream and the downstream aluminium industry.
The 1992 Constitution, he added, has served as the cornerstone for the most uninterrupted, stable period of free administration in the otherwise volatile history of the country. He said this without predicting the outcome of the ongoing national debate.
The Constitution, which has served as the cornerstone for the most uninterrupted, stable period of free governance in our otherwise volatile history, ought to be treated with prudence, he said.
President Akufo-Addo made the call when he swore in three members of the National Commission on Civic Education (NCCE) at the Jubilee House in Accra yesterday.
President Akufo-Addo made reference to the classical maxim: “Festina lente”, to wit “make haste slowly”, and urged the NCCE to be sensitive to the demands expressed in several quarters for wholesale or limited amendments to the Fourth Republican Constitution.
Favourite
Although the President noted that all the functions of the commission were important, he singled out for special mention the significance of the function set out in Article 233 Clause C of the Constitution: “To formulate for the consideration of government, from time to time, programmes at the national, regional and district levels aimed at realising the objectives of this Constitution.”
He added that since its establishment some 30 years ago, the NCCE had done its part in helping Ghanaians to recognise their freedoms and civic rights, even though they could still do much better in that regard.
He indicated that despite concerns raised in some quarters over the effectiveness of the NCCE in the discharge of its functions, with some going as far as advocating its ability abolition, he was of a different opinion.
In a social media post to eulogize the former Minister of Monitoring and Evaluation, Dr. Bawumia described the death as a ‘complete shock’.
Dr. Akoto Osei died on Monday, March 20, 2023.
He was the Member of Parliament for Old Tafo Constituency for 16 years and the Minister of Monitoring and Evaluation during President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s first term, from 2017 to 2021.
“His dedication to serving mother Ghana was unpaired and his fidelity to the country’s development was unquestionable”, the Vice President also wrote.
Describing the late lawmaker as his bosom friend, Dr. Bawumia reminisced how he worked closely with Dr. Akoto Osei as Vice President and during his time as Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana.
Osei worked as deputy minister for Finance and Economic Planning in May 2003 and was a major economic adviser to the government.
He was elevated to substantive Minister for Finance and Economic Planning after the death of the then Minister Kwadwo Baah Wiredu.
He served in that role until 6 January 2009 when the government was handed over to the National Democratic Congress which had won the 2008 General Elections.
In February 2017, Osei was sworn in as Minister of Monitoring and Evaluation after being nominated by President Nana Akufo-Addo and going through the vetting process in the parliament of Ghana.
The ministry of Monitoring and Evaluation was a newly created Ministry to evaluate, monitor and plan review summits and forums in fulfilment of the government’s policies on evaluating the progress of its own ministries.
In May 2017, President Nana Akufo-Addo named Anthony Akoto Osei as part of the nineteen ministers who would form his cabinet. The names of the 19 ministers were submitted to the Parliament of Ghana and announced by the Speaker of the House, Rt. Hon. Prof. Mike Ocquaye.
As a Cabinet minister, Anthony Akoto Osei was part of the inner circle of the president and aided in key decision-making activities in the country.
The Ghana Police Service will soon commence investigations into allegations by a former Minister of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation (MESTI), Professor Kwabena Frimpong-Boateng, concerning the engagement of some New Patriotic Party (NPP) bigwigs in illegal mining activities, popularly known as “galamsey,” as directed by President Akufo-Addo.
The President gave the directive last week, and Daily Graphic checks indicate that the Special Investigations Unit (SIU) of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) has commenced investigations into the matter.
Allegations
Prof. Frimpong-Boateng, in a recent interview with the state broadcaster, the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation (GBC), alleged that some officials of the ruling government were involved in galamsey.
He claimed that the alleged missing excavators story was used against him by his own party and other government officials involved in galamsey as a weapon to remove him from office.
He alleged that the loss of his position paved the way for some bigwigs in the ruling NPP to continue their galamsey activities.
The excavators were seized from galamsey operators at various points across the country.
Prof. Frimpong-Boateng claimed in the interview that allegations concerning the loss of some 500 excavators seized from persons engaged in illegal mining in 2020 were untrue, adding that the stories were made up by some persons in government to tarnish his reputation in order to chase him out of office.
During the interview on GBC, Prof. Frimpong-Boateng said: “There was an orchestration within the party and the government to get me out, and when I left, galamsey activities increased. Now things are coming up and we know those who are doing galamsey, even within the party and even people at the Jubilee House.”
He disclosed that the very actions of military personnel deployed to effect the arrest of illegal miners triggered the entire falsehood about him being responsible for the missing excavators at the time.
“The true story is that at the start of Operation Vanguard, the soldiers were supposed to arrest the excavators, but they went into the forest, removed the control boards of the excavators and came back to report. But when they went away, the owners went with different control boards and moved the excavators away,” he said.
Following his interview, a number of people and groups, including the Minority in Parliament, have called for investigations into the allegations made.
Investigations commenced
A highly placed source in the police told the Daily Graphic that last week the CID commenced investigations into the issues raised by Prof. Frimpong-Boateng.
According to the source, the police had dispatched a letter to Prof Frimpong-Boateng to assist the police in their investigations.
I’ll co-operate
However, when contacted yesterday, Prof. Frimpong-Boateng told the Daily Graphic that he had not received any letter from the police on the matter.
Nevertheless, he said, he would co-operate fully with any investigations into the matter if he was approached
Calls for probe
Last Friday, the Minority in Parliament called for investigations into the galamsey claims made by Prof. Frimpong-Boateng.
The Ranking Member on the Lands and Forestry Committee, Dr Rashid Pelpuo, told journalists that the allegations were grave and must be probed.
“We have reports of key government officials being key galamsey operators involved in destroying lands in forest reserves. We wish to call on the government to investigate the allegations made by the former Minister of Environment. It is also our expectation that the government must desist from joining illegal immigrants engaged in galamsey because today most of the lands destroyed have not been restored,” he said.
Ahead of the call by the Minority, the Member of Parliament for Builsa South, Dr Clement Apaak, had called for a probe into the allegations.
The MP, in a statement, appealed to the state security agencies, such as the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP), the Bureau of National Investigations (BNI) and the CID to investigate the matter.
He added that such allegations could not be swept under the carpet, and that investigations must be done to bring the perpetrators to book.
“Ghanaians expect the requisite state agencies/institutions (OSP, BNI, CID) to show loyalty to Ghana by initiating investigations into the allegations made by Prof. Frimpong-Boateng. Given his stature and previous position in this NPP government, these allegations cannot and must not be ignored,” he added.
Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani and President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo met today at Sheikh Abdullah bin Jassim Majlis in the Amiri Diwan, the Amir of Qatar’s official residence and office (Sunday, March 12, 2023).
According to a statement from the Amir’s office, the discussions took place in conjunction with President Akufo-travel Addo’s to the nation to attend the 5th United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDC5).
In addition to several areas of shared interest, they addressed measures to improve and support bilateral ties between the two nations during their discussion.
The President was among 5,000 participants that attended LDC5, including 47 Heads of State or government and 130 Ministers and Vice-Ministers.
Corporate leaders together with civil society, youth and other partners shared plans, innovations, and recommendations in several areas: from enhancing the participation of LDCs in international trade and regional integration to addressing climate change, strengthening global partnerships, supporting graduation, and leveraging the power of science, technology, and innovation.
United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries ends
The Fifth United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDC5) in Doha, Qatar ended on March 9, 2023. with member states committing to measures to deliver on the Doha Programme of Action, a ten-year plan to put the world’s 46 most vulnerable countries back on track to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Bold commitments at the conference marked a transformative turning point for the world’s poorest countries, whose development has been hindered by crises including COVID-19, climate change and deepening inequalities.
“Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals in the Least Developed Countries is a litmus test for achieving the 2030 Agenda writ large, including by ensuring that no one — and no LDC — is left behind” said UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed. “That is why the Doha Programme of Action must be seen as a vehicle for SDG Acceleration.”
Under the theme ‘From Potential to Prosperity’ the conference aimed to drive transformational change to positively affect the 1.2 billion people who live in the LDCs.
“The commitments made this week are a true embodiment of global solidarity and partnership and will pave the way for a new era of international cooperation,” said Rabab Fatima, Secretary General of the Conference and UN High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States.
“This will result in more of the Least Developed Countries achieving the goal of graduation and a more prosperous and sustainable future,” she continued.
Doha Programme of Action
Discussions at LDC5 centered around delivery of the Doha Programme of Action for the Least Developed Countries for the Decade 2022-2031, which aims to manifest a new generation of renewed and strengthened commitments between the least developed countries and their partners, including the private sector, civil society, and governments.
The Programme, agreed in 2022 after LDC5 was postponed due to the Omicron outbreak, outlines a transformative agenda to tap into the potential of the LDCs. Measures include the development of a food stockholding mechanism for LDCs; an online university focusing on STEM education, especially for women and girls; an international investment support centre; a sustainable graduation support facility; and comprehensive multi-hazard crisis mitigation and resilience-building measures for least developed countries.
Agreements reached this week will help the LDCs to address the ongoing impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, to return to a pathway to achieve the SDGs, address climate change, and make strides towards sustainable and irreversible graduation.
The Doha Declaration
The Doha Political Declaration, adopted at the end of the conference reinforces the international community’s commitment to the Doha Programme of Action.
Commitments
The Conference presented a unique opportunity to translate the vision of the Doha Programme into tangible results with countries and stakeholders showcasing a host of commitments. These commitments range from improving biodiversity and tackling malnutrition to resilience building in the LDCs.
Qatar announced a financial package of $60 million: $10m to support the implementation of the Doha Programme of Action and $50 million to help build resilience in the LDCs.
Germany dedicated €200 million in new money in 2023 for financing for least developed countries.
Canada announced $59 million to deliver Vitamin supplements in 15 LDCs and ecosystem conservation in Burkina Faso.
The EU Commission announced cooperation agreements advancing sustainable investments in Africa totalling more than €130 million of investment.
Finland announced an annual event called the United Nations LDC Future Forum in Helsinki, with the Office of the UN High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States – OHRLLS –, to ensure the latest thinking and research is being put to work to ensure progress on the most vulnerable states.
The Green Climate Fund announced a new project to give $80 million in equity to offer green guarantees to business in LDCs and bring down the cost of capital.
The United Nations World Tourism Organisation, announced a new €10 million Tourism for Development Fund for LDCs, supported by TUI Care Foundation, that will invest by 2030 to support sustainable tourism in LDCs as a key driver of development.
The government of Kazakhstan pledged $50,000 to continue their work supporting the most vulnerable member states of the United Nations.
The government of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia announced a major new loan package for the Least Developed Countries.
John Dramani Mahama, a former president, has urged Ghanaians to remove the New Patriotic Party (NPP) from power in the general elections of 2024 because of what he calls economic mismanagement and broken promises.
He claims that after pleading with Ghanaians to give him an opportunity to govern, president Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has fallen short of expectations.
On a tour of the Bono Region, John Mahama spoke to delegates in Kintampo North and said that Ghanaians could no longer afford a try-and-error leadership style and needed a leader with the necessary experience, track record, and competence.
“Someone begged us to try him and see. We believed him and gave him a chance, but look where we are now.
“He has ruined the economy. Ghanaians are struggling, and the hardship we are facing is unprecedented. We have not seen anything like this in our political history since Kwame Nkrumah’s time,” John Mahama is quoted to have said during his tour. Mahama; former Finance Minister Dr Kwabena Duffuor; former Kumasi Mayor Kojo Bonsu; and businessman Ernest Kwabena Kobeah are expected to compete in the NDC flagbearership election scheduled for May 13, 2023.
John Mahama is currently touring regions accompanied by some national, regional and constituency executives as he campaigns for the party’s flagbearership bid.
He launched his campaign on Thursday, March 2, at the University of Health and Allied Sciences in Ho, on the theme: Building the Ghana that We Want Together.”
Ghanaians have been urged by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to remember that democracy is a process that requires ongoing care rather than a static accomplishment.
“We must always remind ourselves that in the political history of our nation, the return of Parliament to its rightful place has always represented the return of power to the people,” he continued.
The request was made by President Akufo-Addo yesterday during his address to Parliament in Accra on the state of the nation.
Symbol
He described Parliament as the symbol of democracy and its values, saying that the country had chosen to travel on the path of democracy and at the heart of that journey was the idea that the government could only govern with the consent of the people.
He said after 30 years of democratic practice, Ghanaians might be tempted to take it for granted and that there was a need to remind all, including the young ones with no personal recollection, of the struggles that got to this point in its development.
“In the same way that only a small percentage of our population can recall life under colonial rule, similarly the memory of dictatorship, one-party rule and military rule is receding into the dim past and the struggles that have brought us so far are disappearing into the recesses of history,” President Akufo-Addo added.
However, he said because Parliament, directly represented the citizens, it would always be a reminder of those struggles.
He said the early years of the return to democracy were fraught with challenges but the years had seen the deepening of democratic culture to a point where a candidate of the Minority side in Parliament, presided as the Speaker.
Doomsday
President Akufo-Addo noted that given the way the numbers shaped up in this House after the 2020 elections, many cynics and sceptics predicted a doomsday scenario for this Parliament.
He said instead of a meltdown, Ghanaians had witnessed considerable cooperation and unity of purpose among all parties and factions.
“This is to a large extent a measure of the maturity of our political culture and democracy. We will need even more of such bi-partisan maturity to meet the challenges confronting us at this time,” he added.
Free speech
President Akufo-Addo said the country currently had complete freedom of expression, freedom of association, freedom of assembly, freedom of religion and political affiliation.
He said the freedom of speech had now reached such heights that even members of the diplomatic corps felt able to join in the national discourse and pronounce on matters that would be problematic for Ghanaian diplomats in their countries of origin.
“Nevertheless, it seems to me the important thing in our free speech environment is actually to try and hear each other, instead of raising the decibel level of our individual points of view,” he added.
The 2020 parliamentary candidate of the opposition National Democratic Congress for the Ayawaso West Wuogon Constituency, John Dumelo has called on President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to call off events earmarked for the observance of Ghana’s 66th Independence Day celebrations.
The actor in a Twitter post sighted by GhanaWeb premised his call on the current state of economic affairs in the country. According to him, calling off the celebrations and marking the day with a televised address from the president will help the country save money.
“Greetings @NAkufoAddo, respectfully we are in hard times, can you please cancel all state, regional and district Independence Day celebrations? You can do your usual ‘fellow Ghanaians’ broadcast on tv. This will save us millions of cedis. Thanks so much,” he requested.
Ghana’s 66th Independence Day celebration falls on Monday, March 6, 2023.
The day is scheduled to be marked with a national and regional activities including with the main ceremony to held in the Volta Regional capital of Ho.
President Akufo-Addo is expected to be at the event where he will deliver an address.
The family of Christian Atsu led by Nene Gabriel Kofi Tswasam on Friday, February 24, 2023, called on the Minister of Youth and Sports, Mustapha Ussif to officially inform him about the death of their son.
The meeting according to the Ministry was also to discuss the burial and funeral of the late Black Stars winger as the government had earlier promised through Vice President, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia to fund the cost of the funeral.
“On Friday 24th February, 2023 the family of the late Christian Atsu Tswasam called on the Minister for Youth and Sports, Hon Mustapha Ussif to officially inform him of the death of their son and to deliberate on the burial and funeral of the late Atsu.”
“After deliberating on the burial of the late Atsu, it was concluded that a meeting will be held with the President of the Republic of Ghana on Monday 27th February 2023 to agree on a suitable date for his burial,” part of the Minister’s statement sighted by GhanaWeb Sports read.
Background
Christian Atsu was found dead on the morning of Saturday, February 18, 2022, at the site of his collapsed apartment twelve days after a devastating earthquake hit parts of Turkey and Syria.
The one-week observation of Christian Atsu has been scheduled for Saturday, March 4, 2023, in Accra.
Christian Atsu played in the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil and four other African Cup of Nations tournaments.
In all, Christian Atsu made 65 appearances and scored 9 goals for the Black Stars from 2012-2019.
Mensah Thompson, the executive director of ASEPA, claimed that a recent assault on retired Chief Justice Sophia Akuffo was regrettable, but that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s remarks on the subject are even more troubling.
On February 15, Thompson stated to Metro TV news that it appeared the president and the presidency had approved of Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko’s attack on the former CJ.
Otchere-Darko is a stalwart of the New Patriotic Party (NPP).
“Akufo-Addo, office of president, nobody has come out to issue a statement to categorically dissociate themselves from the statement of Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko.
“What it shows is that there is a certain level of tacit approval and support on the part of government and President Akufo-Addo for the comments of Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko.
“So, you will see that Gabby was insulting the Chief Justice on behalf of the president and that is the gospel truth. But who am I to intervene in a fight between two elephants?” he quizzed.
Thompson described Gabby as delusional and a spin doctor for government.
“Gabby has always been delusional we all know and we know one job he has been doing for this government is (as) a spin doctor. If you follow Gabby on social media, he is a spin doctor.
“What he does is that, he does damage control, political calumny, tries to drive attention from substantive issues, tries to set political agenda and try to dissuade people from taking certain decisions,” he stressed.
Gabby gets served by Sophia Akuffo
The ex-Chief Justice has become topical in the last few weeks after she joined colleague pensioner bondholders who had been picketing at the Ministry of Finance since February 6 demanding total exclusion from theDomestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP.)
Mrs. Akuffo’s involvement also saw her slam government’s handling of the programme and the general economic situation of the country.
She received heavy backlash via social media from New Patriotic Party (NPP) stalwart Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko.
In her second appearance at the picket this week, she responded to Gabby’s critique among others by referring to him as a nuisance who did not matter to her and her life.
Meanwhile, government has closed the subscription window for the DDEP announcing an 85% subscription rate.
Minister of Finance Ken Ofori-Atta told picketing pensioners on February 15 that their maturing coupons will be honoured even though they had opted against signing up, as in self-exempted from the programme.
Ofori-Atta appeared before Parliament to answer questions over the programme on February 16, 2023.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo was entertained at the 2022 End of Year West African Soldier Social Activities (WASSA), which was organized by the Ghana Armed Forces on Wednesday, February 1.
Not only did the president get on the dance floor with Zanetor Agyeman Rawlings to exhibit his dance moves, but he was also blown away by the performances on the day.
Nana Akufo-Addo’s reaction to a dance performance by three plus-size women has caught the attention of many.
When the heavily-endowed women stood at the center of the grounds to wiggle their bodies, Ghana’s president screamed out ‘eiiiii’ as he couldn’t believe his eyes.
The ‘Di Asa’ dancers, with their backs facing the special guests, wiggled their bodies amidst cheers from the crowd.
Akufo-Addo’s reaction was captured by Metro TV and sighted by GhanaWeb.
They described the sight as one that will linger on the minds of those who were present at the 2022 WASSA.
The social event organized every year by the military to foster comradeship among the officers and men of the army also witnessed a performance from rapper Black Sherif.
Ghana Armed Forces organized the 2022 End of Year West African Soldier Social Activities (WASSA) with President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo as the Special Guest of Honour.
WASSA is a social event organised every year by the military to foster comradeship among the officers and men of the army.
The fun-packed event was graced by amazing performances by the live band of the Ghana Armed Forces and Ghanaian musician, Black Sherif.
Akufo-Addo could not stay glued to his seat in the face of the amazing performance and he invited the Member of Parliament for Korle Klottey, Zanetor Agyeman Rawlings, to the dance floor.
The president did not disappoint as he could be seen showing off some impressive high-life dance moves.
The two were later joined on the dance floor by other dignitaries including Defence Minister, Dominic Nitiwul and Interior Minister, Ambrose Dery.
According to him, the government is hoping that it will be able to prove to the IMF board that its debt is sustainable by finalising its move to join the Paris Club and its Domestic Debt Exchange Programme.
“I’m confident that we’ll get it (approval of the bailout by IMF board). But as I mentioned earlier, we have a deadline of the end of February for the Paris Club and so we need to be able to do that. And in between that we would have completed our Domestic Debt Exchange Programme.
“And therefore, to be able to go to board in March for this to be executed,” he said in an interview on JoyNews’ PM Express show, on Thursday, which was monitored by GhanaWeb Business.
The finance minister said that the government is working together with the IMF to ensure that Ghana’s IMF deal gets a board-approval before the end of March 2023.
“We joined the fund’s programme in July (2022) and the president said that we should do our SLA (Staff-Level Agreement) by the end of the year. And it looked impossible because it really had not been done before and between the fund and the government of Ghana, we worked hard and we were able to do that.
“So, it is in that same spirit that we are working and I expect that we should be able to do that,” he said.
Ofori-Atta added that getting the IMF deal would help resolve Ghana’s balance of payment difficulty and thus start the country’s economic recovery process.
The IMF and the Government of Ghana reached a staff-level agreement on economic policies and reforms to be supported by a new three-year arrangement under the Extended Credit Facility (ECF) of about US$3 billion on December 13, 2022.
A statement released on the Fund’s website said the IMF Mission Chief for Ghana, led by Stéphane Roudet, noted that “I am pleased to announce that the IMF team reached staff-level agreement with the Ghanaian authorities on a three-year program supported by an arrangement under the Extended Credit Facility (ECF) in the amount of SDR 2.242 billion, or about US$3 billion.”
“The economic program aims to restore macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability while laying the foundation for stronger and more inclusive growth.”
The statement also noted that the staff-level agreement is subject to IMF Management and Executive Board approval and receipt of the necessary financing assurances by Ghana’s partners and creditors.
According to the farmers, the inability of the factory to purchase the thousands of tons of sugarcane ready for harvest was a disincentive to their hard work and contractual agreement.
Consequently, the Association had apologized to distillers for refusing to sell their produce to them some months ago, as it anticipated to sell them to the factory, and appealing to all sugarcane distillers across the country to come over to buy their produce.
“We sold our sugarcane to the factory, but now they are no longer buying from us, and we want to engage you to sustain our livelihoods.”
The farmers questioned the inability of the factory to function after the visit by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo in September 2022 and declared: “we want the management and Board of the factory to know we will not sell our sugarcane to them again for disappointing us.”
He continued by saying that President Akufo-pledge Addo’s to revive the economy was a far far from becoming a reality.
“People have offered the president a variety of proposals to prevent the economy from collapsing completely, but the president is not heeding to all of these advice,” he stated.
His comment was on the back of the economic crisis in recent times.
Read the full story originally published on August 19, 2022 by ClassFM.
Jonathan Asante Okyere is of the view that the president is not in charge because he does not pay heed to many of the suggestions and ideas that have been thrown at him by all level-headed and well-meaning personalities in the country.
“People have made all manner of suggestions to the president to help save the economy from total collapse yet the president is not heeding to all these advice,” he said.
He explained that the way the economy is going down by the day does not even suggest there is an Economic Management Team in place.
Mr Okyere said many level-headed people have suggested to the president to as a matter of urgency sack his Finance Minster but he is unrelenting.
The university don said these on Accra 100.5 FM’s mid-day news on Friday, August 19, 2022.
He pleaded with African academics and decision-makers to intensify measures that would foster prosperity and growth and make Africa wealthy and resilient.
Read the entire article as it appeared on ClassFM on July 31, 2018.
Wednesday, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo urged African scholars and decision-makers to intensify initiatives that would lessen the Continent’s reliance on foreign aid.
In order to achieve prosperity and progress and make Africa prosperous and robust, they should follow a road of self-respect and take concrete actions.
“The time to pursue a path of prosperity and self-respect for the African Continent is now,” he said at the opening of the 22nd Academy of African Business and Development (AABD) Conference, at the University of Professional Studies, Accra.
The six-day conference, on the theme: “Sustainable Development Beyond Aid: The Focus for Africa,” is being attended by researchers, business practitioners, consultants, community leaders, and policy makers.
The AABD annual conferences aim at facilitating multidisciplinary research by stimulating collaborations between Africa based researchers and professionals and their counterparts around the world, by broadening and deepening global understanding of various issues relevant to Africa’s business and development, as well as advancing solutions to some of her challenges.
Africa must chart the path of self-dependence and her countries must engage with each other competitively through trade and investments and cooperate for enhanced regional and global peace and security, he said.
The Continent ought to move more towards the efficient and effective mobilisation and use of resources to grow out of the dependence on aid rather than a rejection of aid, he stressed.
“We seem to have missed out on many opportunities to make Africa the continent she deserves to be, rich and resilient. But it is not too late to right the wrongs, it is time to catch them now.”
“It is time to create the future we want for our continent, and it is time to start building that future inspired by the imperative to transform our economy from raw material producing and exporting economies to value adding industrial economies.”
The President, thus, urged the conference to ensure its deliberations helped Africa’s quest to get to the point beyond aid.
The proceedings of the meeting, he implored, should contain actionable proposals for consideration.
He urged participants to also focus attention on the IMF’s unprecedented Special Drawing Rights reallocation, for which Africa shared some 30 billion dollars, much less than 100 billion dollars promised in the 2019 Paris Summit, intended to provide additional financial resources to address the vast surging inequities the pandemic has revealed.
President Akufo-Addo asked the conference to articulate policies that would help strengthen African financial institutions like the African Development Bank, AfriExim Bank, and the Africa Finance Corporation, to enable them to take over greater responsibility for the financing of Africa’s development.
They should advocate debt cancellation for African countries to provide a sound foundation for the continent’s future progress.
The President asked the meeting to propose measures to help significantly increase Africa’s capacity for domestic revenue mobilisation to finance its development potential, create opportunities for the Continent’s vibrant and dynamic youth, and develop and deliver improved livelihoods for the people.
They should re-evaluate the role of foreign credit rating agencies, which acted as gatekeepers to global capital markets and their modus operandi, including the fixing of the so-called Africa risk premium.
Additionally, participants must examine the measures available to Africa to check the illicit outflow of capital from the Continent, which is currently estimated around 100 billion dollars per year.
The conference should also place the development of Africa at the centre of the preoccupations of the African diaspora, President Akufo-Addo said.
The conference is expected to deliberate on issues relating to over 14 thematic areas: Accounting, Finance, and Investment; International Aid, Economic Policies and Strategies; Entrepreneurship, Small Business and the Informal Sector Exporting, Internationalisation and Foreign Direct Investment; Information and Communication Technology, Digital Transformation; and COVID-19 and Business in Africa.
In a viral social media video, the former policeman accused the president of failing to heed to advice in the management of the economy.
According to him, he is on the verge of losing his livelihood after he invested his gratuity in government bonds.
“President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, this morning I come in peace. My name is ASP retired Franklin Nartey. I have served Ghana through the police service for over 24 years.
I used my gratuity to purchase a two-year government bond which was supposed to mature in September this year, 2023. Your idea is that because you have misgoverned Ghana, I will not receive my money which I toiled hard to purchase the bond from a commercial bank.
“It is not an armed robber who has attacked me to take my money, it is rather the president we have voted for to look after us,” he added.
The government of Ghana is under heavy pressure following the announcement of a Domestic Debt Exchange programme aimed at varying the terms of existing government bonds.
The policy which forms part of conditions by the government to attain a $3 billion IMF loan, has received resistance from various quarters including individual holders of government bonds.
ASP Nertey in the video revealed that he invested his entire gratuity in a government bond which was expected to mature later this year.
But according to him, he stands to lose the money he gained as part of his over twenty-four years of service in the police.
“The time you were renting private jets for £18,000 an hour, people warned you but you did not listen. When you were appointing so many ministers into your government people warned you and you didn’t listen.
“Today, because of your incompetence, the gratuity I received from my toil to take care of myself is being taken away from me by you until 2033. I have no idea if it is my children or grandchildren you want to come and inherit it.
“President, in all humility, let your cousin’s bank which has benefited from all the loans you contracted use their profit to pay for your debts and give me back my money. Nana Addo, you are very wicked!” ASP Nertey said in the video.
The President received Dr. Afriyie Akoto’s letter of resignation on Tuesday, January 10, 2023, at Jubilee House in Accra.
President Akufo-Addo praised Dr. Akoto for his contribution to the government and the country, according to a statement released by the communications director at the Presidency, Mr. Eugene Arhin. He also expressed his best wishes for his future undertakings.
On Tuesday, January 10, 2023, the sector minister, Dr. Owusu Afriyie Akoto, submitted his letter of resignation to the president.
Afriyie Akoto personally informed the President of his desire to leave from his job as Food and Agriculture Minister on January 12, 2023, according to a statement released by Eugene Arhin, Director of Communications at the President’s office.
The outspoken preacher was speaking in respect of the Meek Mill brouhaha, after the American rapper was captured in photos in and around the Jubilee House in postures deemed disrespectful to the presidency.
Prophet Oduro made copious comparisons as to whether a Ghanaian musician could be fortunate to just visit the US presidency, the White House, and go as far as take photos with their president while posing with the presidential podium.
“Ghana my motherland, our forebears suffered in vain, I am telling you,” he told his congregation in a viral video, lamenting further: “Now look at the things that are going on, abuse.
“I saw this young musician who came for a visit recently, took pictures standing behind podium and doing all sorts of things. Can you do that in the White House?
“Which of our musicians have traveled to America and seen the president of America, Stonebwoy, Shatta Wale, which of them have met the president of America?” he quizzed.
“I want to ask you, there are preachers, prophets of this land, they have never stepped into the Jubilee House, so somebody gets an opportunity, don’t abuse it…. Can Ohemaa Mercy go to the White House for photo opportunities?
“Don’t abuse office, don’t abuse that office because if it leaves, you won’t get it back again,” he cautioned Akufo-Addo.
He also bemoaned how senior clergymen in the country have not had the opportunity to visit the Jubilee House yet Meek Mill had done that and, in the process, angered a wide cross section of the populace by his conduct while there.
The rapper issued an apology to Ghanaians and the presidency after footage of the Jubilee House was contained in a video he was set to release.
He deleted the promo he had posted on Instagram and absolved the presidency of knowing that he was taking videos during his visit to the place.
His visit was facilitated by Gyankroma Akufo-Addo, daughter of the president. Government is under fire to explain how the highest security installation in the country suffered such a breach.
“We are thinking of next week, assuming I’m not exaggerating,” the minister told reporters, expressing optimism.
The cheaper fuel will most likely arrive “on the 10th, 11th, and 12th of January,” according to sources from myjoyonline.com citing Energy Minister Andrew Egyapa Mercer.
He said this will “halt the escalation of fuel prices and bring relief to us all.”
After the announcement of the fuel deal with Abu Dhabi, several analysts cast doubt over its success.
Executive Director at the Institute of Energy Security (IES), Nana Amoasi VII, said “I don’t know who is advising the Energy Minister, because the venture they are undertaking is far from possibility. This is not how the energy sector works, so they should be careful.”
He was also concerned that government’s decision to secure a deal for cheaper petroleum products was not an attempt to “waste the country’s meagre resources or an attempt to enrich a few people to the detriment of over 30 million Ghanaians or a deliberate attempt to grow the energy sector debt.”
But the IES boss indicated that should the negotiations go according to plan, government must declare the full discount value which was agreed upon.
“They must tell Ghanaians what they also gave in return for that favour. And also, we must be very careful, our fear as IES is that they could be giving out something for free in order to get that discount,” he stressed.
“If there is a market that can give you a cheap discount to beat all the markets all over the world, I am sure the BDCs would have gone for it. So let us be careful of the venture that we are undertaking,” the IES executive director warned.
He claimed that the projects of Jospong are supported by the government since they help the economy flourish.
“Some people have asked why Dr. Siaw Agyepong and I are friends. We are business partners, not friends. I discovered that he is doing good for Ghana, which is why the government is supporting him. He is not the only one we are rooting for. The government is ready to assist businesses and entrepreneurs who are doing something positive to help the economy grow,” President Akufo-Addo said at the memorial service of the late Opanin Samuel Kwame Agyepong, father of Dr. Joseph Siaw Agyepong.
Read the full story originally published on September 11, 2022 by www.ghanaweb.com.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has disclosed the relationship between himself and the Chief Executive Officer of Jospong Group of Companies, Dr. Joseph Siaw Agyepong.
He quashed claims that he is friends with the Ghanaian business mogul, stating categorically that, their relationship is strictly business.
Speaking on why government is supporting his business partner, President Akufo-Addo said the projects of Jospong stimulates growth of the economy
He pointed out that government is ready to assist businesses and entrepreneurs as their success will boost the development of the local economy.
“Some people have asked why Dr. Siaw Agyepong and I are friends. We are business partners, not friends. I discovered that he is doing good for Ghana, which is why the government is supporting him. He is not the only one we are rooting for. The government is ready to assist businesses and entrepreneurs who are doing something positive to help the economy grow,” President Akufo-Addo said at the memorial service of the late Opanin Samuel Kwame Agyepong, father of Dr. Joseph Siaw Agyepong.
Opanin Kwame Agyepong died in June this year after battling short illness.
The 98-year-old deceased was buried on Saturday, September 10, 2022.
Popular media personality Nana Aba Anamoah has expressed her opinions on the Meek Mill saga, which has recently been a hot topic in the media.
Nana Aba contends that she is absolutely certain that the president was completely unaware of Meek Mill’s video shoot at the Jubilee House.
Following the release of Meek Mill’s video, in which he was seen getting cosy at some unauthorised locations at the Jubilee House, officials at the presidency, including President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, have experienced intense backlash on social media.
In the said video, the American rapper was spotted at different locations at the Jubilee House, from the frontage, through the main corridors, in the main conference hall, at a point positioned behind the presidential podium, and later in a sitting area rapping.
Some individuals who have been appalled by the development have since described it as a complete desecration of the seat of the president.
Others have launched a series of attacks on the president for enabling the act, while intermittently firing shots at Meek Mill.
But Nana Aba thinks that the government should be given some slack.
Wading into the discussion on Twitter, the popular broadcaster strongly believes that Meek Mill took those shots at the blind side of the presidency.
“I can bet my last coin that the President knew absolutely nothing about that shoot,” she wrote.
She did, however, insist that, while Meek Mill’s act is repugnant, the people who authorized it would not face any consequences.
“I however, doubt anything will happen to whoever authorized it (if they decide to investigate how Meek Mill desecrated the Jubilee House that way),” she added.
The First Couple were in attendance when the granddaughter of the late Opoku Ware II, Emily Owusu-Nyantekyi, tied the knot with her fiancé, Mr. Kwadwo Amponsah, in a plush ceremony held in Accra.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo turned up in a tan suit with brown shoes to match, while First Lady Rebecca Akufo-Addo also wore a shiny long dress in the footage sighted by GhanaWeb.
Although simple, the plush ceremony took social media by storm.
Videos that made the rounds on the internet, showed that the event exuded class, style, opulence, and royalty.
In one of the videos, the president’s vehicle with the Coat of Arms and the Ghana flag pulls up as the first couple makes their way into the church. At one point, the president is seen exchanging pleasantries as he departs.
Then there is also a video where First Lady Rebecca is seen at the reception helping the couple and their parents cut the cake, after which she hugs the bride.
Aside the First Couple, the event pooled together the crème de la crème of society relative to politics, royalty and diplomacy with first lady of the Ashanti kingdom, Otumfuo-Yere Julia Osei Tutu, diplomats, royals in attendance.
The wedding was said to have started off with a church service at the magnificent Holy Spirit Cathedral in Accra and a high-octave reception at the plush Kempinski Hotel.
The Adlon ballroom of the hotel, where the reception was held, witnessed a huge transformation from an extravagant décor that turned heads on social media.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo on January 6, 2023 asked Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta to serve as the caretaker Minister of Trade and Industry.
The development came after the President accepted the resignation of Trade and Industry Minister, Alan Kyerematen after reports emerged he tendered his resignation on Thursday 5, 2023.
Another school of thought asked why one of Alan’s deputies could not be handed an acting role till the vacancy is filled.
In an explanation as to why none of Alan’s two deputies were ‘promoted’ to acting capacity, Kow Essuman, who is a lawyer for president Akufo-Addo said it had to do with what the law says and also the specific oath an appointee took.
“As Deputy Minister, you were nominated by the President, vetted and approved by Parliament and swore the Deputy Minister’s oath before the President. You were appointed pursuant to art. 79 to assist your Minister, who participated in Cabinet meetings.
“In your Minister’s absence from Cabinet, his/her colleague Cabinet Minister held his/her brief and provided reports and briefings to Cabinet and not the Deputy Minister,” Essuman explained.
Below are some of the reactions:
Although there are no clear reasons for Alan Kyerematen’s resignation, it is believed that he did so on the basis of contesting in the flagbearership race of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) ahead of the 2024 general elections.
In a statement issued by the Presidency on January 6, 2023 noted that Alan Kyerematen personally informed the President of his decision to resign from his position as Trade Minister.
The statement added that Ken Ofori-Atta will assume the position as caretaker Minister of Trade and Industry until a substantive minister is appointed for the ministry.
Meanwhile, President Akufo-Addo thanked Alan Kyerematen for his services to government, and the country and wished him the very best in his future endeavors.
President Akufo-Addo stated, “The government’s set resolution remains to develop a strong and healthy economy to face the global economic and social pressure of the time,” at the First Sky Group’s 20th anniversary thanksgiving service in Accra.
“I acknowledge that the nation’s economy has not performed as well as we had hoped, but I can promise you that my government is still committed to making every effort to improve the situation.
I am of the strongest conviction that we will turn the corner, there is indeed light at the end of the tunnel and Ghanaians will surely experience better days again,” the President said.
The Thanksgiving service, which was on the theme: “The Lord has done great things for us and we are glad,” attracted ministers of state, Parliamentarians, clergy, Judiciary, the Vice president of Liberia Dr Jewel Howard Taylor, traditional leaders and management, staff partners and other stakeholders of the company to show gratitude to God for His protection throughout the 20 years of the existence of the company.
Touching on the National Cathedral, President Akufo-Addo said he was satisafied with the progress so far and urged the Ghanaian Christian community, both here and the diaspora, all churches, faith-based organizations, companies and well-meaning Ghanaians to passionately support funding efforts to ensure completion of the National Cathedral project despite the numerous criticisms.
“My commitment to see this pledge become a reality is unwavering and I believe with the help of the Almighty God and your support, we can do it. The example of First Sky Group as a Christian business is worth emulating, as it is on record as one of the first companies to publicly support this vision and mission with an amount of Two Million Ghana Cedis.”
The Founder and Executive Chairman of First Sky Group, Mr Eric Seddy Kutortse, in a welcome address said despite the global economic, social and political developments with direct and indirect impact on the Ghanaian economy, the power of God as the underlying factor and driving force had sustained and preserved the company throughout the year.
“We did not lay off any worker or did any worker experience any pay cut, but rather improved welfare of workers and also increase in our staff strength by 410 bringing it to 5,120 total number of workers, both permanent and casual in the entire group, he said.
He said God had been faithful to the Group, leading to the building of other subsidiaries including First Sky Commodities Limited, a Licensed Cocoa Buying company operating in all the cocoa growing areas of Ghana, and Volta Serene Hotel, a 4 Star Luxury hotel.,
Mr Kutortse announced that a joint working committee from the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital and the First Sky Group had been formed and expressed the hope that by the end of the year the kidney transplant centre would be fully operational to cater for patients not only in Ghana but the entire west Africa sub region.
So far, an amount of GH¢26million has been spent on free dialysis for over 300 patients over the years in the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital.
“We will also continue with our church building project across the country. So far, 71 churches have been completed and 3 more earmarked for this year 2023,” he added.
Oduro, 38, told Al Jazeera, “I am running at a tremendous loss.” She trades in imported goods including juices, cookies, soft drinks, soaps, and chocolates, but her business is suffering greatly as a result of Ghana’s economic woes.
“Prices of goods keep soaring, and it is affecting my principal capital,” she said. “I want to close my store and find something else to do. Things are tough for me because I can’t sustain the business and I have a family to keep.”
Ghana, a country once described as Africa’s shining star by the World Bank, had the world’s fastest-growing economy in 2019 after it doubled its economic growth. But today, it is no longer the economic poster boy of West Africa. Despite being a major cocoa and gold exporter, it is currently battling its worst financial crisis in decades with inflation hovering at a record 50.3 percent, the highest in 21 years.
Ghana’s economic successes were in the limelight when the new government of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo took power in January 2017 and brought down inflation significantly. Under the previous government in 2016, it was 15.4 percent, and it fell to 7.9 percent by the end of 2019 and remained in single digits until the pandemic hit in March 2020.
Ghana’s budget deficit, which was about 6.5 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product before Akufo-Addo’s government came to power, was brought down to under 5 percent of GDP by the end of 2019.
“The growth that we experienced around 2017 to 2019 was actually coming from the oil sector,” Daniel Anim Amarteye, an economist with the Accra-based Policy Initiative for Economic Development, told Al Jazeera.
“We were so excited that the economy was growing, but we couldn’t devise strategies to ensure that the growth reflects in the other sectors of the economy,” he said. “For instance, we neglected the agriculture sector, and we couldn’t do any meaningful value-added investment in that sector. The government became complacent.”
According to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization, agriculture represents 21 percent of Ghana’s GDP and accounts for more than 40 percent of its export earnings. At the same time, it provides more than 90 percent of the food the country needs.
“Over the years, the government failed to invest in increasing output in the agricultural sector that will eventually lead to economic growth and transformation and food security. We are a major cocoa growing country, but we didn’t pay attention to increasing yields to translate into more foreign exchange earnings to drive economic growth and employment,” Amarteye said.
Ghanaian traders, who contribute significantly to the economy, mostly buy and sell products they import from Western countries and China, including home appliances, consumables, cars and second-hand clothes.
Due to the nature of their businesses, there is a persistent strong demand for the US dollar to pay for imports. This led to the continuous depreciation of the local currency, the cedi, which was recently described as the worst-performing on world markets.
As inflation surges, rising prices keep the cost of living accelerating for Ghanaians.
“Things are not the same anymore,” said Francis Anim, a vehicle spare parts importer. “I used to spend $5 a day with my wife and child on food alone early this year. Now we spend close to $10 [for the same amount of food]. Why?”
“We are feeling the heat,” he said. “The import duties are very high at the ports, so we have to pass on that burden to retailers, and eventually the consumer suffers. This has resulted in a high cost of living in Ghana, and the economy is not helping us either.”
A nation in crisis
The president conceded in a recent address to the nation that the West African country is in crisis. He blamed the situation on external shocks – the pandemic and Russia-Ukraine war.
However, analysts say the government took certain political and economic decisions that would have eventually exposed the weaknesses in the system even without those external factors.
For instance, to fulfil one of Akufo-Addo’s most expensive campaign pledges, his government launched a free education programme in public high schools nine months after he took office. It also provided free meals to students at primary and secondary levels.
Also in 2017, the governing New Patriotic Party scrapped what it called 15 “nuisance taxes”. These included the 17.5 percent value added tax on financial services, real estate and selected imported medicines. They also reduced import duties on spare car parts, abolished the 1 percent special import levy and the 17.5 percent VAT on domestic airline tickets.
“This brought a massive reduction in government revenue,” Williams Kwasi Peprah, a Ghanaian associate professor of finance at Andrews University in Michigan, told Al Jazeera. “To make up for the revenue shortfall, the government adopted borrowing. This increased Ghana’s bond market activities domestically and externally and, as a result, a high debt-to-GDP exposure, leading to the current debt unsustainability levels.”
From August 2017 to December 2018, Akufo-Addo’s government spent more than $2.1bn on what it called the “banking sector clean-up”.
The central bank said some banks were insolvent and were operating on life support, putting the interests of depositors at risk. The clean-up saw a reduction in the number of banks from 33 to 23 while more than 340 other financial institutions, such as savings and loans companies, had their licences revoked.
The government aimed to restore confidence and reposition the banking sector to support economic growth.
“The financial sector clean-up also cost the country more than anticipated in attaining a robust financial sector before 2022,” Peprah said.
He said the discovery of two more oilfields in 2019 led to the anticipation of more revenues. The government responded by issuing more domestic and external bonds, increasing its debt and raising spending on interest payments, social programmes and employment.
The government is Ghana’s largest employer, primarily in the fields of education, healthcare and security. It spends almost half of its budget on wages; this year, it raked in $8.2bn in estimated revenue and used about $4.2bn to pay salaries of public sector workers.
In 2017, the government also restored allowances for trainee nurses and teachers. President John Mahama lost to Akufo-Addo in the 2016 election partly for suspending those allowances two years earlier. They put a huge strain on the public purse. For the nurses’ allowances alone, the government paid more than $2.5 million annually.
“That was a poor political and economic decision the Akufo-Addo government made at that time because the country was faced with revenue challenges,” said Kwasi Yirenkyi, a financial analyst with Accra-based Data Crunchers. “The government was spending more than it was receiving, and at the same time, it failed to widen the tax net. We were slowly heading for disaster.”
The pandemic and debt load
There was a significant drop in revenue in 2020 coupled with a rise in government expenditures. They were mainly COVID-related as the government adopted a populist approach, provided free water and electricity to citizens and fed 470,000 households during a three-week lockdown that cost the nation $9.4m.
In August 2021 Akufo-Addo began what he later admitted was “an overly ambitious” construction project of 111 hospitals with an estimated price tag of more than $1bn. Pressure kept mounting on his government to fulfil a plethora of other electoral promises, such as the construction of roads, schools and markets, forcing the government to keep borrowing and leaving an economy dogged by high public debt. The most recent data released by the central bank put the country’s debt load at $48.9bn as of September. That represents 76 percent of GDP.
“Largely, the debt that we accrued were not actually prudently used to drive economic growth,” Amarteye said. “If that was done, we could have generated sufficient inflow to be able to meet repayment obligations. Borrowing is not a bad thing, but how you use it is critical. On our part, the managers of the economy failed to invest it in the critical sectors of the economy.”
The oil-exporting country produced 39.15 million barrels of crude oil from January to September, according to the 2023 budget statement read by Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta in Parliament in November. They brought in $873.25m in revenues for the eighth-largest oil producer in Africa. Although oil production declined between January and June, according to a report by the Public Interest and Accountability Committee, a surge in prices resulted in the government taking in more revenue than it had expected.
“Where did all the oil revenue go to?” opposition member of parliament Isaac Adongo asked. “The economy has been on life-support system because this government kept borrowing. We have now hit the ceiling, and there is no way out.”
In spite of the challenges, the government had been optimistic that the economy would bounce back after the pandemic. However, Russia’s war in Ukraine has derailed Ghana’s economic recovery. The cedi, its currency, lost more than 50 percent of its value between January and October 2022, causing Ghana’s debt burden to rise by $6bn.
“The war affected global economies and exposed fundamental weaknesses,” Peprah said. “Within a short period, prices in Ghana had increased, leading to hyperinflation and currency devaluation affecting both macro and micro levels of the economy. The Bank of Ghana did not have the needed dollars to pay for the country’s commitments. The balance of payment had deteriorated, leading Ghana to insolvency.”
Workers and traders protested from July to September over price hikes, which have increased the cost of electricity by 27 percent and water by 22 percent.
Activists and anti-corruption campaigners have also accused the government of mismanaging public finances.
“We have gold, oil and cocoa, yet we’re still foundering as a nation,” said Bernard Mornah, a leading member of the Arise Ghana pressure group. “The level of corruption under this government is unprecedented. There are so many revenue loopholes that must be blocked. Government officials are looting state funds and assets, so how do we develop?”
A 2021 Transparency International study on perceptions of corruption in Africa ranked Ghana ninth out of 49 Sub-Saharan African countries.
Investor confidence dims
Investors began to lose confidence in the economy as the government grappled with liquidity challenges. They started moving their money out of Ghana. In May, Minister Ofori-Atta introduced an unpopular e-levy, which placed a 1.5 percent tax on all electronic and merchant payments, bank transfers and remittances as part of measures to increase revenue. It brought in a paltry 10 percent of its targeted amount in its first month.
In the middle of this economic storm, credit ratings firms such as Moody’s downgraded Ghana to junk status, pushing even more investors away. At this point, Ghana was forced in July to turn to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for relief.
It was a difficult decision for Akufo-Addo to make after he had condemned his predecessor for mismanaging the economy and taking an IMF bailout.
In December, the government reached an agreement with the IMF for a $3bn loan. However, the West African country needs to carry out a comprehensive debt restructuring in order to receive the funds.
This means that Ghana will have to renegotiate the terms of its debt with its creditors, including extending repayment period, lowering the interest rate, or reducing the overall balance owed.
Formerly regarded as an investor favourite, Ghana has also suspended payments on part of its foreign debt to preserve the fast-depleting international reserve of the central bank. There is also a freeze in hiring into the public sector among many other measures taken to cut expenditure.
“The story would have been different but for the pandemic and the Russia war in Ukraine,” Deputy Finance Minister Abena Osei-Asare said. “We have instituted clear policies to return to economic growth. We are very hopeful the economy will bounce back.”
The economy has made some gains since Ghana reached the agreement with the IMF. The cedi is recovering against the US dollar, appreciating by 63.7 percent in mid-December, according to the Bank of Ghana, after suffering a year-to-date depreciation of 54.2 percent at the end of November. But economists and scholars such as Peprah believe the long-term solution is for the government to live within its means.
“The solution to the current problem is for the government to reduce expenditure and increase revenue,” Peprah said. “It needs to ensure efficient and effective allocation of resources backed by accountability.”
For his part, Amarteye said the government must be downsized, and he called for stringent measures to check corruption.
“We have to ensure that every cedi that is extended to government agencies are accounted for,” Amarteye said. “The Office of the Special Prosecutor should be empowered to be able to deal with corruption in the system. There should be fiscal discipline, and also we have to add value to our produce by supporting the private sector to lead that particular space.”
“If that is done, jobs will be created and also the economy will bounce back,” he said.
In Odorkor, shop-owner Oduro, like many Ghanaians, wants to see a thriving economy again, one in which she can do business and feed her family.
“I have played my part as a voter,” she said. “The government must play its part too – fix the economy. This is not the Ghana we came to meet.”
The listing, according to the member of parliament for the Effia Constituency, will increase private investment in the chosen firms and strengthen the nation’s capital market.
He revealed that “we are aiming to give Ghanaians an opportunity to participate in owning parts of chosen state-owned firms that are doing well.”
Mr Joseph Cudjoe said this at a press soiree to recount the performance of the Ministry of Public Enterprises.
He said that listing the State-Owned Enterprises on the Ghana Stock Exchange would open the companies to greater transparency and the tenets of good corporate governance.
“To be able to keep track of all that is happening, we developed in 2021, a strategic plan that is reviewed annually to ensure that we are on course in keeping with our vision to be the driving force that makes specified entities work efficiently, effectively and profitably,” he said.
He noted that the assets of these entities were still on the books of Ghana, deteriorating daily while the nation had no use for them.
He emphasised that the verification of these 17 assets had been undertaken and it was time to dispose of them to stop the unproductive costs the country incurred to keep the defunct assets.
He, however, said that it was the vision of the Ministry of Public Enterprises to embark on a special programme that would improve the business development capacities of the State Enterprises in the light of AfCFTA to achieve revenue growth.
The Ministry would, therefore, organise a business development forum to share ideas and strategies to expand the capacities of the State Enterprises to grow.
“We expect that all non-profitable SEs would develop and implement strategic and turnaround plans that would provide outcomes and impacts that can be evaluated over time”.
“The framework for oversight is expected to be significantly improved through strengthening SIGA’s oversight of the State Enterprises Agencies”, he said.
As part of the responsibility of the Ministry of Public Enterprises, more than 30 state entities were visited and the Boards and managements of these entities were engaged in the need to achieve outcomes that met the expectations of the government.
Mr Joseph Cudjoe also said that the concept of the Public Enterprises League Table (PELT) was conceived to generate competition among the State Enterprises and also served as the gold standard for highlighting the performance of specified entities based on the contracts signed with SIGA.
The policies include a State Ownership Policy, a Draft Code of Corporate Governance for all SEs, training for Board Secretaries of the SEs, organisation of meetings for CEOs of SEs in conjunction with SIGA and Ministry of Finance, capacity building for
Boards of Specified Entities and meetings with the Parliamentary Committee on Employment, Social Welfare and State Enterprises.
“Let us be clear however that there is more work to be done and we are leaving no stone unturned to achieve this outcome,” he assured.
He claimed that the Supreme Court’s judges’ perspectives were crucial for national development, particularly during these trying times, as the policy court where significant rulings on socioeconomic growth were crafted in response to the needs of the time.
Justice Barbara Frances Ackah-Yensu and Justice Samuel Kwame Adibu Asiedu succeeds two justices; the late Justice Samuel Marful-Sau, who passed away in August 2021 and Justice Yaw Apau, who retired in August 2021.
President Akufo-Addo is waiting Parliament’s approval for the remaining two nominees, Justice George Kingsley Koomson and Justice Ernest Yao Gaewu to fill the vacancies created by the retirement of Justice Clemence Jackson Honyenuga in September 2022 and Agnes Mercy Abla Dordzie who retired in October 2022.
Basis
The President noted that in the situations where judges proffer judgments on the basis of decisions of lower courts and cite them as law was not acceptable and even lesser when a judge cite no authority at all for their rulings and gave orders without reasons.
He charged the two judges to the apex court to note that it was extremely important to bear in mind that the growth of the nation demanded a judiciary that commanded the respect of the people by the quality of the delivery of justice as well as by the comportment of its judges.
“Applications of the law must take place 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 of any person before you,” he added.
President Akufo-Addo noted that as expressed in the constitution, the Supreme Court, the nation’s court of last resort was not bound to follow decisions of any other court including its own and shall have all the powers of authority and jurisdiction vested in any Court established by the Constitution or any other law.
He said with all other courts bound to follow the decisions of the Supreme court in questions of law, it was critical that the justices of the supreme court possessed a sound knowledge of the law of precedent, which was the bedrock for the evolution of common law.
Response
Justice Ackah-Yensu said it was both a privilege and humbling opportunity for the two of them to be nominated among many other persons and approved to serve as Supreme Court and noted the enormity of the task was not lost of them.
She said it was for that reason that they give God all the glory and thanked all who have made the elevation possible and assured the people of Ghana that “we shall keep faith and keep the fidelity to the constitution and shall remain committed to our judicial oaths. God being our helper.”
Professor Godfred Bokpin, an economist and lecturer of finance at the University of Ghana, has urged President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to immediately scale back his administration.
He contends that the president ought to resign if he believes he will be unable to oversee Ghana’s economy with no more than 40 ministers of state.
According to myjoyonline.com, he also said that some ministers and their ministries should be combined with other ministries because they have grown inactive.
“As a matter of urgency, a reduction in the size of ministers… if our President cannot govern with less than 40 ministers and the other reforms, he should resign and give Ghana a chance.
“.. with the number of ministers and associated calls, State Owned Enterprises, new agencies being created, some of them are actually not doing anything but their lifestyles are loaded on the public purse,” Prof Bokpin is quoted to have said on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show on Friday.
The Economist added that the president must also temporarily suspend some emoluments given to political office holders including ex-gratia.
He reiterated that if President Akufo-Addo wants Ghanaians to sacrifice to help the country get out of the current economic situation he must lead by example by cutting the government’s expenditure drastically.
On December 26, 2022, Dr. Asante indicated in an interview with Peace FM that GhanaWeb was listening to that calls for the president to fire his underperforming minister of state were long overdue.
“There is something called political cost. If your mother is dead but you keep saying she is alive, let her resurrect for us to see. The president has been saying that his ministers are performing well but you and I know that, that is far from the truth.
“Because if they were performing well, we will not be in the current situation we find ourselves in… He should close his eyes and sack his ministers who are not performing well and bring in people who can do the job.
“He should put his feet on the ground and sack his ministers who have failed so that he will leave a legacy. So that in the future if the Free SHS is mentioned other achievements will be added to honour his name,” he said in the Twi dialect.