• +233 20 230 9497

Dam Spillage: Ablakwa unhappy about lack of engagement with affected people

The Member of Parliament for North Tongu and Chairman of the Assurances Committee of Parliament Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa has expressed concern over lack of engagement and interface with the affected people of the Akosombo water spillage in his Constituency.

He made this statement when he appeared before the Ad- Hoc Committee set up by Parliament to Investigate the Akosombo Dam Water Spillage at its first public hearing at Justice DF Annan Auditorium in Parliament.

In furtherance, the North Tongu Legislator posits that, the Inter-Ministerial Committee set up by Government to help deal with issues emanating from the spillage has not worked to his expectations, adding that, he is very disappointed in the thirteen Member Inter-Ministerial Committee; saying ‘’ we don’t know when the Committee is going to meet us, whether is still in force, they are still working, we don’t know when they are going to have their first meeting with us” he stressed.

He indicated that over twelve thousand people who lost their livelihoods due to the spillage without any compensation from government in his constituency will seek legal redress soon.

However, the Chairman of the Ad-hoc Committee, Suleman Adamu Sanid, MP for Ahafo Ano North Constituency in the Ashanti Region pointed out that, he is impressed with the honest submissions from the various stakeholders who appeared before the Committee.

He said ” the witnesses have been very honest, very fair with the facts on the ground and I think we are in a position to submit a very good report to Parliament.

Mr. Suleman emphasized that the Committee is in a position to present a good report that will be acceptable to all.
The Chairman has directed that, all the water and electricity bills of the affected people living in the safe havens be paid by the District Assemblies.

The District Chief Executives have been charged to pay the bills. “These are initial recommendations that we have made, and we think that this shouldn’t wait for our report but should be acted upon as quickly as possible”
The Volta River Authority (VRA) and two more District Assemblies are also scheduled to appear before the Committee soon.

Ghanamps.com

PAC directs Central Gonja District Assembly to pay workers minimum wage

The Chairman of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of Parliament, James Klutse Avedzi, has directed the Central Gonja District Assembly to pay its workers the daily minimum wage.

This directive was issued during the Committee’s public sittings in Tamale, which commenced on Monday.

Over the next two days, the Committee will review the Auditor-General’s reports for the fiscal year ending 31st December 2023.

The report indicated that the Central Gonja District Assembly has been employing contract workers and paying them as little as 100 Ghana Cedis per month, while also being in arrears for the past year.

Responding to the concerns raised, the District Chief Executive, Iddrisu Salia, assured that the Assembly has fully complied with the Auditor-General’s recommendations by recruiting permanent staff and ensuring that they are paid the daily minimum wage.

The zonal public sittings of the PAC will also review infractions cited in the Auditor-General’s report, including unearned salaries, unsupported payments, and uncollected rents from workers and institutions.

These institutions include Senior High Schools, Technical Universities, Colleges of Education, and Polytechnics located in the Northern, North East, Upper West, and Upper East Regions.

Ghanamps.com

Illegal vehicle owners to be slapped with 300 percent fine – Customs

The supervisor at the vehicle valuation unit of Customs headquarters in Accra, Mr Justice N. Magah has sounded caution to people who import vehicles into the country and refuse to use the legal means to register such vehicle to desist from such activities or else get 300 percent fine of the actual duty on the vehicle by Customs when caught up.

He explained that, anybody can bring vehicles from any county to Ghana but must take the vehicle through proper and legal means to register them at any of the customs offices within the country so as to have a peaceful mind in using vehicle.

Mr Magah refuted accusations by some vehicle importers that Custom officers usually over tax them when paying for vehicle duties. He said, most often people provide inaccurate information on their vehicles to customs especially when providing the actual date of manufacturing, people usually provide the date of first registration of the vehicle in the country of origin instead.

The supervisor, vehicle valuation unit of Customs, Mr Magah made these comments when the Ghana Revenue Authority ( GRA ) organized a workshop for the Parliamentary Press corps on the various activities of GRA and Customs and its importance to the state.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

GRA schools members of the Parliamentary Press Corps on Ghana’s tax system

Members of the Ghanaian Parliamentary Press Corps (PPC) have been taken through a day’s workshop on Ghana’s tax system.

Commissioner-General of the Ghana Revenue Authority Julie Essiam noted that the media plays a critical role in shaping public opinion and setting the agenda for public discourse, stating that organizations and individuals alike use the media as a tool in the dissemination of information.

According to her it’s on this premise that GRA is organizing this workshop for members of the parliamentary press corps to educate them on their mandate, processes and procedures to add to their body of knowledge and to help reporting devoid of distortions and misconceptions.

The challenging but engaging call to duty of reporting on the work of Parliament requires in-depth knowledge and understanding of Government and stakeholder business. Therefore, stakeholders such as the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) are happy to leverage on your expertise to work effectively, he added.

Taxation, he noted, is a creature of statute, hence taxation is not based on common law or judicial decisions, rather on explicit legislative enactments. The mandate of GRA is therefore to administer various tax laws for effective revenue mobilization in order to support Government’s socio-economic development agenda.

“I want to use this opportunity to also encourage you to gain additional knowledge on how the Tax Laws operate so that you can report on tax cases from a standpoint of knowledge, clarity and confidence. Informed media reportage will put the GRA on its toes and live to its responsibilities, while the taxpayers and potential taxpayers are informed of their obligations and thereby comply with the Tax Laws”.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Calls to halt Shippers’ Authority Law unfounded – Importers & Exporters Association

The Importers & Exporters Association of Ghana (IEAG) has described calls from some players in the commercial shipping industry for President Nana Akufo-Addo to halt his assent of the Ghana Shippers’ Authority Law 2024 as unfounded.

According to the Association’s President, Sampson Asaki Awingobit, the law in its current form ensures that every stakeholder in the commercial shipping value chain acts responsibly and is held accountable in their operations.

For the IEAG, the law creates a more structured and regulated environment for trade, ensuring that the interests of both importers and exporters are safeguarded.

The Ghana Union of Traders Association (GUTA) and the Ghana Institute of Freight Forwarders (GIFF) have expressed reservations about certain sections of the law and have asked the President to delay assenting to it until further dialogue has taken place.

However, the IEAG asserts that the new GSA law is a significant step towards enhancing transparency and efficiency within the shipping and logistics industry, and while further dialogue is needed, the assent should not be halted.
|
The Association also emphasized the need for continuous engagement between the GSA and key stakeholders to ensure that the implementation of the law addresses the practical challenges faced by importers and exporters.

Furthermore, the IEAG has called for clear guidelines and support from the GSA to help businesses adapt to the new regulations, ensuring that the law does not become a barrier to trade but rather a facilitator of smoother and more efficient operations within Ghana’s trade sector.

Ghanamps.com

Minority urges government to release funds for marking BECE scripts

The Minority members on the Educational Committee in Ghana’s Parliament have urgently urged government to release funds to the West African Examination Council (WAEC) for the marking of the 2024 Basic Education Certificate Examination to commence.

According to the Ranking member of the Committee Peter Kwasi Nortsu-Kotoe the Minority spoke about the payment of registration to enable the West Africa Examination Council to conduct the examination for this year at the time government had to release fifty-five point nine million Ghana cedis as part of over two hundred million that they owe WAEC.

“So, we do not understand why they would say at the launch of their Manifesto that they have paid; if they said they had absorbed that would have been better but they said they have paid”.

Speaking at a press conference, he said “as we speak WAEC has to postpone the marking of the script from this month to September because they do not have the funds to do the coordination and marking which is called post examination activities, they still own WAEC for the BECE”.

“We are demanding that government pays these monies, so that the marking can be organized in time, as a result the school calendar is going to be disrupted. Again those who are supposed to go to Senior High School (SHS) this September 2024 will not be able to go and might go somewhere in December of 2024”.

The Ranking member emphasized that these things should be avoided and drew the attention of the effect double track is having on the school calendar. “We ask that government release money to WAEC as a matter of urgency for the candidates to enter SHS in good time”.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Speaker Bagbin to inspect progress of work on retrofitting of chamber block

Speaker of Ghana’s Parliament Rt. Hon Alban Kingsford Sumana Bagbin will this morning inspect and ascertain for himself progress of ongoing work at the parliamentary chamber block.
Retrofitting works are underway on the chamber for the next meeting and the ninth Parliament which would commence in January of 2025.

A visit to the chamber by Ghanamps.com on Thursday, August 22, 2024, before the close of working day, witnessed wiring of the chamber block.

On the corridors of the back entrance to the main chamber, total changes of the lighting system is also been done to give the corridors a brighter look.

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

Minority accuses government of killing businesses of tablet suppliers

The Minority has taken a swipe at government for owing suppliers of various items like food, stationery and tablets to the tune of six billion Ghana cedis to senior high schools yet at the launch of its manifesto, the ruling party boasted that it had distributed nine hundred tablets to senior high schools as part of the Free Senior High School programme.

According to the Ranking on Educational Committee Peter Nortue, the brouhaha surrounding the distribution is confusing, because some other person quoted the distribution to the tune of ninety thousand, “so I do not know which is which”.

At a press conference on Thursday, August 22, 2024, he noted that, “we in the Minority in our release said we support it very much, but when you are not prepared for it you do not have a budget allocation for it and you go into it you create problem for the supplies”.

Again, we know that one million three hundred and fifty thousand tablet were procured and the supplier has to look for a loan in dollars equivalent to cedis that means that anytime going to pay the loan back they would calculate the rate if it is eighteen cedis to the dollar, that is what they have to pay, and have been denied payment for a long time now and we do not know why government is refusing to pay.

According to him, when the issue came up on the floor during the approval of the formula for Ghana Education Trust Fund, the government was going to shift the payment to GETFund “and we resisted as the Committee on Education recommended that the finance and education ministries take up those payments”.

Speaker Bagbin, wrote to the finance ministry to take up the payment of nine hundred tablet and this has not been done.

“So our concern here is that why is the government refusing to pay for the tablet such that you are killing the business of the supplier; and how many schools have the tablet so far and the number of students who have the tablet so far?”

“You cannot be making noise about distributing tablets, when schools in my constituency have not received these tablets”, he added.
Minority accuses government of killing businesses of tablet suppliers

Kwaku Sakyi-Danso/Ghanamps.com

International bankers rejected Cocobod’s $1.5b request proposal —Minority

The Minority in Ghana’s parliament has noted that for the first time in thirty-two (32) years international banks have rejected Ghana Cocoa Board’s request for a prepayment loan to finance the purchase of cocoa.

The Ghana Cocoa Board in June this year issued a request for a proposal of $1.5 billion loan to purchase up to six hundred and fifty thousand 650,000 metric tonnes of cocoa for this year and next year crop year, but did not attract interest from the international banks due to the poor health of COCOBOARD and the collapse of the cocoa sector under its present management.

In a statement issued by the Minority leader Dr. Cassiel Ato Forson a production level of 969,000 metric tonnes inherited from the NDC in the 2016/2017 crop year, cocoa production has declined to just a little over 400,000 metric tonnes for the 2023/2024 cocoa season. The significant decline in cocoa production in the last eight years and the mismanagement of the cocoa sector has impacted Cocobod’s ability to meet its contractual obligations.

Again, Cocoa Board is unable to supply about 250,000 metric tonnes of cocoa and has resorted to the rollover of this contractual obligation due to the poor management of the cocoa sector which has resulted in significant decline in cocoa production under the NPP government. And was chased away from the market due to the fact that COCOBOD is no longer credit worthy, lacks credibility and are unable to produce enough cocoa to meet their contractual obligations.

The Minority Leader further added that, the banks came to the conclusion that out of the projected production of 650,000 metric tonnes of cocoa for the 2024/2025 crop year, which is doubtful, 250,000 metric tonnes will be used to service existing rolled-over contracts, leaving only 400,000 metric tonnes to honour COCOBOD’s obligations for the 2024/2025 crop year. This raised the ability to pay question for the banks, hence their refusal to participate. For seven consecutive years, COCOBOD has recorded huge losses amounting to over GHS11 billion under the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government.

Year                                Loss recorded (GHS)

2017                                395 million

2018                                78.2 million

2019                                320.6 million

2020                               426 million

2021                                2.4 billion

2022                               3.2 billion

2023                                  4.2 billion

Minority Leader in addition pointed out that, announcement by the Ghana Cocoa Board that it has taken a bold decision not to borrow from foreign banks to finance cocoa purchases after 32 years is false, unmeritorious, contrived and face-saving.

“This is to hide the fact that COCOBOD is no longer credit worthy and that a 32-year-old tradition, which has consistently cushioned and provided Ghana’s economy with the most reliable foreign exchange to support the Ghana Cedi, has been destroyed by the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government. Ghana’s cocoa sector is in crisis, needs urgent attention, competent management and a new direction”.

The NPP government has completely mismanaged and destroyed the cocoa sector. After seven years of decline in production and consecutive losses, the government has shown clearly that it does not have the competence to manage the cocoa sector which has since independence been the mainstay of the Ghanaian economy.

Ghanamps.com

PAC orders arrest and prosecution of teacher over payroll fraud

Chairman of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of Parliament Dr. James Klutse Avedzi has directed the prosecution of a teacher in Sunyani, Comfort Appiah, over a payroll irregularity involving unearned salary.

This follows a revelation from the Kintampo South District Education Directorate that a headteacher, Bismark Agyekum, who also served as a payroll validator, fled to California with a validation code, enabling him to fraudulently secure GH₵26,000 in unearned salary.

According to the District Director of Education, Daniel Yaw Appiah, Agyekum transferred the funds to the colleague teacher’s account in Sunyani after the money was deposited into his account.

The Public Accounts Committee noted possible collusion between the headmistress and the teacher and instructed that the case be referred to the Attorney-General for prosecution.

Meanwhile, during the same PAC session, Ray Ankrah, the Deputy CEO of COCOBOD in charge of Finance and Administration, revealed that GH₵200,000 out of a total of GH₵1.8 million in unpaid funds had been recovered, with efforts underway to retrieve the remaining balance.

Ankrah also disclosed that GH₵1.6 million of COCOBOD’s investments are locked with Zenith Bank due to the government’s Domestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP).

Additionally, representatives from the Ghana Police Service, Fire Service, Prisons Service, and Immigration Service appeared before the Committee to address queries raised by the Auditor-General.

The PAC’s public hearings in Accra have concluded, and the Committee will move its proceedings to the regions next week.

Ghanamps.com