President Nana Akufo-Addo has increased the budgetary allocation of Parliament following a complaint by Speaker Alban Bagbin. Mr Bagbin has expressed qualms about the earlier capping of the budget for the legislature and judiciary in the 2021 budget. Mr Bagbin had threatened that if the Executive failed to review the allocations, the House was not going to approve the 2021 budget and economic statement presented on Friday, 12 March. While the allocation for the Judiciary was slashed by some GHS70 million, that of the Legislature was reduced by GHS190 million. “Respectfully, I’m unable to accept such reduction,” the Speaker said in Parliament on Tuesday, 16 March. “The budget is not for the Executive”, he noted, adding: “We have the final power to approve or disapprove and, so, what the Constitution has done is for them to make recommendations and negotiate during the deliberations of the budget before the House”. “It’s not for the Executive to impose [a] ceiling on the Judiciary or Parliament. We’ve to do the right thing,” Mr Bagbin insisted. He said: “So far as I remain the Speaker of this House, I’ll insist that the right thing is done” and threatened not to forward the appropriation bill to the President for his assent when passed if “the right thing is not done.” “And, so, during the considerations of the [budget] estimate, particularly the committees concerned, take that on board and at the end of the day, come and explain to us the negotiated figure and not the ceiling that has been given by the president. That is not the [intent] of the 1992 Constitution”. “If you do otherwise, I, as your Speaker, will not affirm any letter for submission to the President for his assent, I mean what I am saying.” A response from the Presidency to Parliament read by the Speaker on Wednesday, 24 March 2021, said GHS523 million has now been approved for Parliament as against a request of GHS533 million. Mr Bagbin read the response thus: “The government recommends that Parliament and the parliamentary service operates within the proposed budget above while government explores opportunity to increase the allocation in subsequent budgets when revenue improves and debt has stabilised”. “Accordingly, Parliament is respectfully requested to keep the estimates of Parliament and the parliamentary service within the expenditure proposed above to enable the government to contain expenditures within the overall fiscal space for 2021.” Mr Bagbin added: “I am drawing the attention of the Special Budgets Committee to the new recommendation and to urge the committee to consider the budget estimates for Parliament and the parliamentary service along those lines”. Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093
No freeze on public sector salaries — Akufo-Addo
President Nana Akufo-Addo is appealing to the Trades Union Congress and Organised Labour to assist Government in the country’s post-COVID-19 economic recovery efforts. The President also dismissed allegations that public sector salary increment had been frozen. Speaking at the 11th Quadrennial Congress of the Trades Union Congress, on Tuesday, 23rd March 2021, President Akufo-Addo acknowledged that at the height of the pandemic, Government instituted several measures and interventions to lessen the impact of COVID-19 on lives and livelihoods. “These measures sustained the economy, restored some lost jobs and incomes, whilst opening windows of new opportunities for others. The time has now come for us to take the next set of actions required for the sustained recovery of the economy,” he said. These sets of action, he explained, have been outlined in the 2021 Budget Statement and Economic Policy of Government. “The truth of the matter is that we are not in normal times, and I appeal to all Ghanaians, including Organised Labour, to assist Government in this endeavour to help rebuild our public finances and economy. We need to mobilise additional resources to cater for the new challenges confronting us whilst meeting other statutory requirements,” the President said. He continued, “I, therefore, urge all Ghanaian workers to bear with government in these unusual and rather challenging times. I am confident that sooner, rather than later, and together, we can create the happy, progressive and prosperous nation we all desire.” Whilst appreciating the concerns expressed by a section of Ghanaians, especially, with regards to imposition of some new taxes, President Akufo-Addo reiterated that “salary increments for public sector workers have not been frozen for the next four years”. The President told the gathering that, but the onset on COVID-19, all the macroeconomic indices, between 2017 and 2020, were all pointing in the right direction, evidenced by a cut in the fiscal deficit, stability of the currency, reduced cost of borrowing, and annual GDP growth rates of 7%, with Ghana, within the period, becoming the largest recipient of foreign direct investment in West Africa. “COVID-19 resulted in a drastic slowdown in economic activity and a huge drop in domestic revenues, combined with a sharp and unplanned hike in COVID-related expenditures. In sum, this unprecedented crisis led to a sudden shortfall in Government revenues amounting to some thirteen billion, six hundred thousand cedis (GH¢13.6billion), and an unexpected and unavoidable rise in expenditures of some eleven billion, seven hundred thousand cedis (GH¢11.7billion), he said. The 2021 budget, the President explained, has set the goal of reducing the budget deficit gradually from 11.7% in 2020 to less than 5% by 2024, whilst growing the economy and creating jobs. “To accomplish this, additional sources of revenue are required, and that is the reason why the budget introduced four key revenue measures to improve on sanitation and pollution, improve the health sector, and defray the cost of the financial sector clean-up,” he added. In addition to this, President Akufo-Addo told the gathering that, towards revitalising and modernising the Ghanaian economy, and returning it to high and sustained growth for the next three years, Government has developed and is currently implementing the one hundred-billion-cedi (GH¢100 billion) Ghana CARES ‘Obaatampa’ Programme. The key projects under the CARES Programme includesupporting commercial farming and attracting educated youth into commercial farming;building the country’s light manufacturing sector;developing engineering/machine tools and ICT/digital economy industries;fast tracking digitalisation;developing Ghana’s housing & construction industry;establishing Ghana as a Regional Hub;reviewing and optimising the implementation of Government flagships and key programmes; andcreating jobs for young people, and expanding opportunities for the vulnerable in society, including persons with disabilities. Touching on the matter of lumpsum benefits to 2020 pensioners, the President assured Organised Labour that SSNIT and the National Pensions Regulatory Authority (NPRA) are working with the Ministry of Employment and Labour Relations on the imminent resolution of this matter, assuring that the matter would have been concluded by the end of the year. On the issue of the National Unemployment Insurance Scheme that was announced last year, President Akufo-Addo noted that a Committee, made up of the members of the Social Partnership Council, has been setup by the Ministry of Finance to look at the establishment of this Scheme, which will provide temporary income support to workers that are laid off. “The Ministry of Finance has already earmarked some fifty million cedis (GH¢50 million) towards its operationalisation once discussions are completed,” he added. Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093
My anti-corruption credentials ‘unmatched’ – Akufo-Addo tackles Gyimah-Boadi on ‘thoughtless loose’ talk
President Nana Akufo-Addo’s office has described as “thoughtless loose” talk, a claim by Prof Emmanuel Gyimah-Boadi, the co-founder and Executive Director of the Afrobarometer Network, that his [the President’s] anti-corruption credibility is in “tatters” and, indeed, “has been in tatters for a while”. Condemning the President’s forceful retiring of Auditor-General Daniel Yaw Domelevo in a recent interview, Prof Gyimah-Boadi said: “I see Domelevo as a victim of well-orchestrated actions by individuals who are officials and by state institutions,” he said. As far as he was concerned, “Mr Domelevo was exercising proper constitutional and legal oversight and officials and institutions that Mr. Domelevo has sought to hold to account”. “The man was doing his best to protect the public purse to claim surcharges for improperly spent public funds. “One who is trying to fight corruption is one who is being persecuted and hounded out of office,” he noted. In a response to anti-corruption CSOs on the Domelevo issue, however, the President said he found it “very disappointing to hear a very senior and otherwise distinguished member of civil society make such loose and thoughtless statements like the President’s credibility on anti-corruption is in ‘tatters’ and ‘has been in tatters for a while’, and that the compulsory retirement of Mr. Domelevo puts the nail in the coffin of the President’s credibility”. “Such statements are not based on facts and driven likely by emotions”, the Presidency said, adding: “The fact is that the President’s credibility on anti-corruption is unmatched and no amount of misconceived opinions can change that”, the letter signed by the President’s Executive Secretary, Nana Asante Bediatuo, said. In the view of the presidency, the silence of the CSOs on Mr Domelevo’s “unacceptable and unconscionable conduct” in office left much to desire. “It is noteworthy that no sound of caution or condemnation was heard from you or your colleagues in civil society when Mr. Domelevo was using his office to engage in such unacceptable and unconscionable conduct. Indeed, a less charitable perspective would be that this was a patent abuse of office. Yet, there was no chatter from our friends of Civil Society,” the statement added. According to the President, “never had he held the view that the work of Mr Domelevo was embarrassing his government”. About two weeks ago, the President asked Mr Domelevo to go home, since he has passed the compulsory retirement age of 60. In a letter dated 3 March 2021, the President, through his secretary, Nana Bediatuo Asante, said, “The attention of the President of the Republic has been drawn to records and documents made available to this Office by the Audit Service, that indicate that your date of birth is 1st June 1960, and that in accordance with article 199 (1) of the Constitution, your date of retirement as Auditor-General was 1st June 2020.” “Based on this information, the President is of the view that you have formally left office,” the President said. Mr Domelevo reported to work at the Audit Service Headquarters in Accra on Wednesday, 3 March 2021, at 8:20 despite the Audit Service Board declaring him retired. He resumed work after his forced 167-day leave ended on Tuesday, 2 March despite the Board questioning his nationality and age. The Board said his own Social Security and National Insurance Trust records show he is a Togolese and not a Ghanaian and also due for retirement. The Board, in a series of correspondence with Mr Domelevo, said he was born in 1960 per his own records and, thus, should have gone on retirement mid-2020. In a letter dated, 26th February 2021, the Audit Service Board said: “Records at the Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) completed and signed by you indicate your date of birth as 1st June 1960 when you joined the scheme on 1st October 1978. The records show that you stated your tribe as Togolese and a non-Ghanaian. That your home town is Agbatofe.” “On 25th October 1992, you completed and signed a SSNIT Change of Beneficiary Nomination form, stating your nationality as a Ghanaian and your home town as Ada in the Greater Accra Region. The date of birth on your Ghanaian passport number A45800, issued on 28th February 1996 is 1st June 1961. That place of birth is stated as Kumasi, Ashanti Region,” the letter said. In his reply, Mr Domelevo explained that his grandfather, Augustine Domelevo, was a native of Ada in the Greater Accra Region but migrated to Togo and stayed at Agbatofe. “Either my father wrongly mentioned Agbatofe in Togo as his home town to me, or I misconstrued it at the time”, Mr Domelevo explained, adding: “My mother is also a Ghanaian”. Concerning his date of birth, Mr Domelevo said he noticed that the 1960 date of birth was a mistake when “I checked my information in the baptismal register of the Catholic Church in Adeemmra.” “The register has Yaw as part of my name and also provides my date of birth as 1st June 1961 – this corresponds with Thursday or Yaw – the day of the week on which I was born.” The Audit Service Board, however, said: “Observation of your responses and explanations contained in your above reference letter make your date of birth and Ghanaian nationality even more doubtful and clearly establishes that you have made false statements contrary to law.” “Records made available to the Board indicate that your date of retirement was 1st June 2020 and as far as the Audit Service is concerned you are deemed to have retired,” it noted. “By a copy of this letter, the Board is informing the President, who is your appointing authority, to take necessary action. Additionally, the Board is making available to the President all the relevant documents at our disposal.” President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo directed Mr Domelevo to take his accumulated annual leave of 123 working days effective Wednesday, 1 July 2020 but later increased it to 167 following a protest letter from the A-G. A statement
Akufo-Addo’s corruption fight: Negatives more than positives – Vitus Azeem
Anti-graft campaigner Vitus Azeem has expressed disappointment in the Akufo-Addo-led government’s fight against corruption in the country. According to Mr Azeem, the President has not done enough to merit praises so far as the fight against corruption is concern. Mr Azeem said these in reaction to the 21-page letter from the office of the President justifying the forced retirement of Auditor General Daniel Yao Domelevo who is seen by some Civil Society Organisations as been victimized by the Presidency for fighting corruption. The Executive Director of Ghana Integrity Initiative (GII) observed on the Class Morning Show on Class91.3FM on Monday, 22 March 2021 that any new government is often more corrupt than the previous one. He told show host Charles Oppong Asamoah that: “I wouldn’t say I’ve not seen anything but the negatives are more than the positives. For example, he[Akufo-Addo] promised to establish an office of special prosecutor which he did and appointed somebody from the opposition to lead that office. That is an achievement. “The right to information bill that had been pending since 2003 was passed under his administration and that is an achievement… “In 2017/18 the government increased the allocation to some accountability institutions, so yes, anybody that comes to power is expected to do certain things so he has done somethings but they do not meet the expectations of some of us because when there’s a change in government, people voted for change because they want you to do better, so if you are not doing up to what your predecessor was doing then definitely you don’t deserve any praises. We need to do better. “And I have always had this view that anytime there is a change of government instead of being an improvement, corruption worsens not just with this government. When you look at all governments since 1992, any new government comes, corruption seems to be higher than the one before.” Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093
Ofori-Atta back home after COVID treatment
Finance Minister-designate Ken Ofori Atta has returned home from the United States where he was being treated for COVID-19 complications at Mayo Clinic in Minnesota. The former Finance Minister returned to Ghana on Saturday, March 20, 2021. Reports say he went to meet the president at the Jubilee House upon his return Saturday. Government through a statement from the Finance Ministry informed Ghanaians on February 14 that Mr Ofori-Atta had been flown out for treatment. Ofori Atta speaks Last week while partaking in a video conference on the 2021 budget, Mr Ofori-Atta expressed gratitude to God for his protection throughout the treatment. “It is in the Bible that says Peter, therefore, was kept in prison, but prayer was made without ceasing for the church and for him and I have felt how God miraculously delivered Peter from prison because the saints prayed for him”. “The doctors here have been fantastic and very dedicated, but even they acknowledge that there must be someone upstairs who is watching over me because the numbers were so critical. So thank you indeed for your earnest prayers which have saved me.” On the 2021 budget, Mr Ofori-Atta said: “Globally, countries are looking at preserving lives and livelihoods and stimulating the economy for growth amidst this pandemic and I think we [Ghana] are not doing any less. Starrfm Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093
Domelevo was loyal to Mahama not Ghana – Akufo-Addo
President Akufo-Addo has indicated that Daniel Yaw Domelevo earned his appointment as Auditor-General in 2016 “to pursue a particular agenda”. Outlining the events that led to Mr Domelevo’s appointment and retirement, the president, in a 21-page letter to the Coalition of Civil Society Organisations Against Corruption on Friday, 19 March 2021, noted that “…The former President had consulted the Council of State on appointing Dr Felix Kwame Aveh as Auditor-General. It is also clear that the consultation process was done before the December 7, 2016, elections”. “Mr Domelevo was not the intended Auditor-General prior to the election of December 7, 2016. Dr Felix Kwame Aveh was the Auditor-General that former President Mahama intended to appoint if he had won the election of December 7, 2016. But he lost the election. Indeed, in notifying the Council of State of the reason why former President Mahama was seeking to replace Dr Aveh, the then-Chief of Staff stated that ‘the change is as a result of some unforeseen developments.” “It is fair to conclude that the unforeseen developments” was no other development but the painful loss of the election on December 7, 2016. “After losing the election, it became necessary for former President Mahama to change his nomination for Auditor-General, with the sole aim of saddling the then-President-elect, Nana Akufo-Addo, with an Auditor-General whose allegiance was to former President Mahama, instead of the nation,” the letter said. On March 3, 2021, President Akufo-Addo directed the Auditor-General, Daniel Domelevo to proceed on retirement after he returned from a 167-day accumulated leave. The directive, according to a statement signed by Secretary to the President, Nana Asante Bediatuo, was because Mr Domelevo has exceeded the eligible age to remain in the workforce. Classfm Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093
Resign from your post – Gabby to Ministers pushing their presidential ambitions now
A leading member of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP), Mr Gabby Otchere Darko has asked appointees of President Akufo-Addo who are busily jostling their presidential ambition rather than focusing on their work to step down. He said, presently, the Akufo-Addo administration needs men and women to help deliver on its mandate. The time for internal elections hasn’t come yet, he added. In a Facebook post reacting reports of some appointees secretly campaigning for their presidential ambitions ahead of the 2024 elections, the former Executive Director of the Danquah institute said “The world is in crisis. Ghana is part of the world. Therefore, Ghana is in crisis. Which part of this, don’t you get, Mr Cabinet Member! “Governments everywhere have a big multi-task of fighting the virus, fighting economic hardships, fighting for food and jobs, fighting the debt and deficit and, here in Ghana, we are also fighting for transformation. “This is not the time to be planting for delegates and votes.” He added “If your focus, as a member of Akufo-Addo’s government, is to first fight for your own ambition and transformation, then, please, feel free to move over to move on. “Please note: NPP in power must first succeed for NPP to succeed NPP! “Build on this power we have now for your own power trip not to be tripped by your priority tripped wires. Be wise!” 3news Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093
You’re hiding true budget deficit of 17.5% – Minority demands correction
The Minority in Parliament has accused the Akufo-Addo government of hiding the correct budget deficit for the year 2020, which, in its computation and analyses, is 17.5 per cent instead of the 11.7 per cent stated by caretaker Finance Minister Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu when he presented the budget to the legislature on Friday, 12 March 2021. The Caucus said “mismanagement and uncontrolled expenditure and sheer lack of prudence accounted for the poor performance of the economy and not just COVID-19.” In a statement, the Minority noted that “for the 2019 fiscal year, the government reported a fiscal deficit of 4.8% of GDP while at the same time, as confirmed by the IMF in their April 2020 staff report, a fiscal deficit of 7.5% of GDP.” “This means an amount of about GHS8.2billion was concealed from our expenditure framework.” “We demand that the fiscal deficit including arrears for the year 2020 be corrected in the budget statement to reflect the actual figure of 17.5% of GDP. “Fiscal deficit for the year 2020 of 13.8% of GDP, as stated by the Ministry of Finance, excludes an amount of GHS6.2 billion being what the government refers to as energy sector payments.” “We demand the inclusion of the energy sector payments of GHS6.2 billion in the fiscal tables to reflect in the corresponding fiscal deficit.” On Saturday, 13 March, Bolgatanga Central lawmaker Isaac Adongo made similar claims, insisting the deficit was more than 18 per cent. According to him, the 11.7 per cent quoted by interim Finance Minister was a cooked figure. Mr Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu told the house in his presentation that “even though complete 2020 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) data have not yet been released by the Ghana Statistical Service, provisional data for the first three quarters of 2020” showed that the “targets for most of the macroeconomic indicators are largely on track”. The Majority Leader of Parliament presented the following as the summary of the domestic macroeconomic performance for 2020: a. Average overall real GDP growth for the first three quarters of 2020 was 0.2 per cent, compared with 6.0 per cent for the same period in 2019. The projected outlook for 2020 is 0.9 per cent, reflecting the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic; b. Non-oil real GDP grew at an average of 0.4 per cent in the first three quarters of 2020. The projected outlook for 2020 is 1.6 per cent; c. End-period inflation was 10.4 per cent in December, 2020 compared to the revised target of 11.0 per cent; d. The overall budget deficit on cash basis was 11.7 per cent of GDP, excluding financial sector clean-up cost, against a revised target of 11.4 per cent of GDP; e. The primary balance recorded a deficit of 5.3 per cent of GDP against a target deficit of 4.6 per cent of GDP; f. Gross international reserves accumulated to US$8.6 billion, the equivalent of 4.1 months of import cover, slightly above target. However, Mr Adongo, who expressed his wish of being future Finance Minister to steer Ghana out of her economic doldrums, disputed the figures of the Minister of Parliamentary Affairs when he spoke to Eugene Bawelle on Class91.3FM’s current affairs programme ‘The Watchdog’. In the opposition lawmaker’s view, “the Ghanaian economy had very severe underlying conditions before COVID-19 arrived”, insisting that the pandemic “just exploited the severe underlying conditions of our economy and collapsed” it. “You could not be running an economy at a deficit of 7 per cent all the way up to 9-point-something per cent and come to the people of Ghana and hide this and be telling us it is 4 per cent and when you now go to the IMF to look for money, you went saying that in 2018, you did a deficit of 7 per cent, which was the first time we were hearing that Ghana had 7 per cent deficit even though on the floor [of Parliament], when we were debating those budgets, some of us raised the point that the deficit had been cooked and that it is more than that”. “Now, they agree that it was 7 per cent. Then they said in 2019, they did 7.3 per cent and then they said in 2020 they were anticipating something around 9.5 per cent and, as we speak, they reported 11.7 per cent but I can demonstrate to you that the deficit is over 18 per cent”. As far as he is concerned, the weak economic fundamentals which, according to him, were being hidden by the government, provided a fertile ground for the pandemic to sink its teeth in. “So, you can’t have an economy like that and survive COVID-19. Obviously, that is a very severe underlying condition that is tantamount to having diabetes and seriously, your economy will collapse”, he noted, stressing: “You can’t have an economy that started growing; when you inherited it, you said the economy was terrible and yet that terrible economy gave you about 7 per cent growth. It declined in 2018 to 6.3 per cent and then by 2019, you were doing 6.1 per cent and now you are doing 0.2 per cent growth”. That, he emphasised, “should tell you that you didn’t have the kind of economy you painted, yet the president tells us that he’s been growing the economy at an average of 7 per cent”. “The data available doesn’t support that. If you read the data that we submitted to the IMF, we said that in 2018, we did 6.3 per cent, 2019 we did 6.1 per cent and we are expecting to do 1.5 per cent in 2020. In fact, 2020 ends up at 0.2 per cent. So, how can you put all these together and get an average of 7 per cent? Clearly, the President was not speaking the truth to us and that is the nature of the economy we’ve been running”, Mr Adongo said. Further, Mr Adongo said the deception of the government vis-à-vis the performance of the economy, has been
Approving Akufo-Addo’s ministers ‘regrettable and unfortunate’ – NDC caucus to Council of Elders
The leadership of the Minority in Parliament has expressed regret over the mass approval of all the ministers nominated by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and vetted last month. At a meeting with the Council of Elders of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) on Tuesday, March 16, the two parties agreed that the incident of Wednesday, March 3 “was regrettable and unfortunate and runs contrary to the principles and values of the party”. The meeting comes exactly after the Council met the leadership of the party over the approval of some of the ministerial nominees, who were rejected by the NDC members on the Appointments Committee. Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, Mavis Hawa Koomson and Dr Osei Afriyie Akoto were the three ministers rejected in the report by the Minority members on the Appointments Committee. But at plenary, the three received overwhelming votes to be approved as substantive ministers. This came as a surprise to some staunch members of the largest opposition party, among them the National Communications Officer, Sammy Gyamfi. Mr Gyamfi took to his official Facebook page the following day to express disappointment in the leadership of the party in Parliament, casting insinuations at the Minority Leader, Haruna Iddrisu, the Minority Chief Whip, Alhaji Mohammed Muntaka Mubarak, and even the Right Honorable Speaker, Alban Bagbin, who until 2021 was an NDC MP. “Comrades, the betrayal we have suffered in the hands of the Speaker of Parliament, Rt. Hon. Alban Bagbin, the leadership of our Parliamentary group, particularly Hon. Haruna Iddrissu and Hon. Muntaka Mubarak, and dozens of our own MPs, is what strengthens me to work hard for the great NDC to regain power,” he wrote on Thursday, March 4. “They brazenly defied the leadership of the party and betrayed the collective good for their selfish interest. And we, must not let them succeed in their parochial quest to destroy the NDC, the party that has done so much for them and all of us. The shame they have brought on the party will forever hang like an albatross around their necks.” But the meeting between the Council and leadership of the Minority in Parliament sought to resolve the fracas. “The Caucus Leadership have since pledged to uphold the principles and values of the party in our collective bid to develop our country,” Chairman of the Council Alhai Mahama Iddrisu said in a press release issued after the meeting. “The Council urged National leadership of the party to resolve issues relating to the Caucus leadership in Parliament and called on the rank and file of the party to remain calm, and provide the needed support to our Caucus in order to hold the Akufo Addo government strictly to the principles of probity and accountability.” It promised that the party will emerge from the setback “more united and focused” and will take on the government squarely. 3news Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093
Deputy Ministerial list: Okraku-Mantey for Tourism, Arts & Culture, Nsiah-Asare for Health – Report
The campaign by some persons in the creative arts industry to have Mark Okraku Mantey appointed as Deputy Minister for Tourism, Arts and Culture appears to have paid off if a report by pro-government newspaper, The Chronicle, is to be taken on face value. The newspaper reported on Monday, March 15, 2021, that the celebrated music producer is part of over 40 deputy ministers appointed by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. According to the report, Presidential Advisor on Health, Dr Nsiah-Asare, will leave the Jubilee House to the Health Ministry as deputy to Kwaku Agyeman-Manu. Richard Ahiagbah, the Executive Director of the Danquah Institute will join Ursula Owusu-Ekuful as her deputy at the Communications Ministry. Trade and Industry Minister, Alan Kwadwo Kyerematen will be deputized by the former Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Free Zones Authority who is also the Member of Parliament for New Juaben South, Michael Okyere Baafi. Dr Amin Adam is set to retain his position as deputy Energy Minister while John Kobina Abbam, the MP for Mpohor, will be the deputy minister of Lands and Natural Resources. Pius Hadzide has, as per the report, been booted out of the Information Ministry with Eric Amoako Twum being his replacement. The Member of Parliament for Sefwi Akontombra Alex Tetteh Djournebuo will be the Deputy Minister for Food and Agriculture with Joseph Frimpong going to the Works and Housing Ministry. Hassan Tampuli, former CEO of the National Petroleum Authority who is the MP for Gushiegu has been appointed deputy Transport Minister. MP for Zabzugu, John Bennam Jabaah is heading to the Chieftaincy and Religious Affairs Ministry. John Kumah will be a deputy at the Ministry of Employment while Esther Nyinaa is the deputy minister for Gender, Children and Social Protection. The newspaper reports that this is the first batch of deputy minister-nominees which will be submitted to parliament within the week. Ghanaweb Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093









